Well, the key to getting rid of those pesky little gnats is to create a simple trap. Just take a small container, pour some apple cider vinegar or fruit juice in it, and add a drop of dish soap. The gnats will be attracted to the sweet smell, but the soap will make them unable to escape. Place the trap near where you see the most gnats, and soon you'll have a gnat-free space to enjoy your day.
That drain pipe is meant to remove condensed water from the chmber where the air is blown through the system, if there is air coming through there it just means there is no water in the line that has condensed. many units turn the drain tube upward slightly so a little water always stays in the pipe pereventing the escape of cold air. It works like a P trap on your sink.
Begin by placing the trap in a place sure to be seen by several of the leprechaun clans. Then litter the trap with oranges - leprechauns love oranges.
Organisms such as plants, or producers, trap the energy from the sun, making its own food. This process is called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is a food that plants such as flowers make their own food from the recourse all around themmydickisbigg yeahyeah
I am not sure about gas or oil. A foul odor could be from the sewer system. All of the drains in your home have a trap that keeps water in the pipe. This water prevents sewer gases from coming into the home. If you pour water into each drain (sinks, tub, shower, toilet, and any other drain in the home), you may find that the smell goes away.
For Reproductional purposes.
P-trap is to prevent gasses from passing thought the pipe. For example, in a residential setting, a p-trap is installed on all residential drains in order that sewer gases do not use the pipe as a conduit and enter the home.
An S trap is a length of water plumbing pipe used under sinks. The pipe is shaped like an S and prevents the pipe from becoming air locked. An air locked pipe cannot drain.
The trap is built into the toilet itself, you shouldn't put one in the drain.
You CAN'T have a p-trap under the toilet! The p-trap is built into the toilet!
It doesn't. A grease trap collects grease, a pipe just conveys it there.
The trap in your toilet is the " U" shaped pipe that supposedly catches all of the germs. It is also found on sinks.
In plumbing, a trap is a U-, S-, or J-shaped pipe located below or within a plumbing fixture.
of course you ding bat
Normally local codes prevail BUT I normally go no more then 24" from the trap and the trap located no more then 2ft from the vent
As long as the pipe going into the wall is straight, the rest of the drain pipe can be routed however it needs to be. Very often the trap is at an angle to the pipe in the wall.
your sewage pipe is broken and the worms are getting in it, crawling through the water trap and into the toilet bowl - call a plumber.