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Building Utilities Reviewer Comprehensive

This document defines various types of bathrooms based on the number and type of fixtures present. It also defines common plumbing terms like valves, traps, pipes, and systems. Various topics in acoustics, electricity, fire classification, and plumbing materials are also covered at a high level. Key terms defined include full bath, 3/4 bath, half bath, globe valve, gate valve, check valve, angle valve, conduction, radiation, centralized air conditioning, P-trap, drum trap, vent pipe, waste pipe, stack, and soil pipe.

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Reynald Harris
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
101 views

Building Utilities Reviewer Comprehensive

This document defines various types of bathrooms based on the number and type of fixtures present. It also defines common plumbing terms like valves, traps, pipes, and systems. Various topics in acoustics, electricity, fire classification, and plumbing materials are also covered at a high level. Key terms defined include full bath, 3/4 bath, half bath, globe valve, gate valve, check valve, angle valve, conduction, radiation, centralized air conditioning, P-trap, drum trap, vent pipe, waste pipe, stack, and soil pipe.

Uploaded by

Reynald Harris
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BUILDING UTILITIES REVIEWER

 Full bath or 4/4 bath has a sink, toilet, shower and tub. A bathroom that has a shower over the tub is
considered a full bath as long as there is also sink and a toilet.
 ¾ bath has a sink, toilet and shower.
 Half bath, also known as a powder room, consists of a sink and a toilet.
 Quarter-bath denotes the room includes only one fixtures instead of the complete set of fixtures in a full
bathroom.
 Acoustics is a science that concerns with transmission of sound, effect of sound waves and generation of
sound.
 Globe valve- a valve in which the flow of water is cut off by means of a circular disk that fits against the
valve seat. The plane of movement of the disk is parallel to the normal direction of flow water, which is
turned through a tortuous passage to direct the flow normal to the face of disk.
-are used for regulating flow in a pipeline, instead of having the “all or nothing” function of gate
valve. Globe valves regulate by the position of a movable disk (or plug) in relation with the
stationary ring seat.
 Gate valves, the most common type of valve in the industry, are valves that open by lifting a gate out of
the route of the fluid. Gate valves are designed to be fully open or closed; they are regularly used as a
block valve for isolating pipe systems.
 Check valve- a valve that close to prevent backward flow of liquid.
 Angle valves are structure so that center lines of the entrance and exit of the fluid intersect
perpendicularly.
 Polarization- the act of dividing something, especially something that contains different people or
opinions, into two completely separate groups.
 Convection-the transfer of heat through a fluid (liquid or gas) caused by molecular motion.
 Conduction-the transfer of heat or electric current from one substance to another by direct contact.
 Radiation-energy that is radiated or transmitted in the form of rays or waves or particles.
 Battery of fixtures-any group of two or more similar adjacent fixtures which discharge into a common
horizontal waste or soil branch.
 Curve Surface -Creep is the phenomenon whereby sound travels ins a curve surface.
 What is/are the advantages of a circuit breaker over a fuse?
 It can act as a switch
 Its position can be easily detected (close/open)
 It can be used again after-fault has been corrected.
 The following characterizes centralized air-conditioning system.
 It uses ducts
 Has cooling tower
 Provided with air handing unit
 Gooseneck, or P-trap- curved pipe prevents sewer gases from entering the home by securing a small
amount of water in its lower curve.
 Drum traps-do the same thing, but instead of just having a dip in the pipe to create a self-scouring P-
trap, a drum trap consists of an enlarged ‘’vessel’’ that holds a large volume of water. Drum trap were
commonly used at bathtubs and occasionally at laundry sink.
 Running trap-a depressed U-shaped section of pipe in a drain; allows the free passage of liquid, but
always remain full, whatever the state of the pipe, so that it forms a seal against the passage of gases.
 The following affects the room acoustics
 Shape and proportion of the room
 Room cavity
 Seating and other furnishing
 Vent pipe- waste-vent pipe is part of a system that allows air to enter a plumbing system to maintain
proper air pressure to enable the removal of sewage and grey water from dwelling.
 Waste pipe-a pipe for draining away the waste of the building other than those from water closets
(sinks, shower, washing machine or bath).
 Stack- a general term used for any vertical line of soil, waste or vent piping.
 Soil pipe-a soil pipe is designed to carry soiled water from the toilet, urinal or bidet to the sewer.
 Current- It is analogous to pressure in water flow.
 Plumbing- the art and science installing in buildings the pipes, fixtures and other apparatus for bringing
in water supply and removing water and waterborne waste.
 Alternating current is characterized as having
 Positive and negative polarity
 Average value of zero
 Frequency
 Ball valve- a valve in which the flow of liquid is controlled by a rotating drilled ball that fits tightly against
a resilient (flexible) seat in the valve.
-a one-way valve that is opened and closed by pressure on a ball which fits into a cup-shaped
opening.
 Float valve- an automatic valve whose opening and closing are controlled by a float at the end of a lever.
 Types of valves
 Gate valve
 Check valve
 Globe valve
 Angle valve
 Butterfly valve- is a rotary valve in which a disk-shaped seating element is rotated 90degrees to
open or close the flow passage
 Foot valve- is a type of check valve that is typically installed at a pump or at the bottom of a pipe
line (hence the name).
 Safety valve- is a valve that acts as fail-safe. An example of safety valve is a pressure relief
valve(PRV), which automatically releases a substance from a boiled pressure vessel or the
system, when the pressure or temperature exceeds preset limits.
 Carpet- material would exhibit the highest sound absorption coefficient (SAC) value.
 Series circuit- a circuit type where components are electrically connected end to end
-a series circuit is made by connecting the end of one device to the beginning of another
 Parallel circuits- in parallel circuits the same terminals of both devices are connected together.
 Trap- a fitting or device designed and constructed to provide, when properly vented, a liquid seal which
prevents backflow and passage of foul air and gasses without materially affecting the flow of swage or
wastewater through it.
 Pipe fittings- also known as pipe connectors, attach one pipe to another in order to length the run or
change the flow direction in a plumbing system.
 Waste stack- a vertical which conveys only wastewater or liquid waste.
 Cables are conductors that are
 Larger that wires
 Stranded (no.6 AWG and larger)
 Soil pipe- any pipe which conveys the discharges of water closet, urinal or fixtures having similar
function, with or without the discharges from other fixtures to the building drain or building sewer.
 Cooper as a conductor has the proper/properties of being ductile & malleable,
 Ductile-able to be drawn out into a thin wire.
-able to be deformed without losing toughness; pliable, not brittle.
 Malleable-able to be hammered or passed permanently out of shape without breaking or cracking
 The over-all covering of underground feeder and branch circuit cables shall be fungus resistant &
corrosion resistant.
 Class B fire- a fire involving flammable liquid, as gasoline oil and grease, which must be extinguished by
excluding air and inhibiting the release of incombustible vapors.
-flammable & combustible liquids; gasoline, oil, grease, acetone.
Memory Tip: Can Boil
 Class A-soil combustible materials (not metals); wood, paper, cloth, trash, plastics.
Memory Tip: Leaves an Ash
 Class C- energized electrical.
Memory tip: Can carry a Current
 Class D- Combustible metals; potassium, sodium, aluminum, magnesium.
Memory Tip: used in producing Dynamite
 Class K- oil and fays used for cooking
Memory Tip: usually present in the Kitchen
 The rustling of leaves in breeze is said to be with the threshold of hearing.
 The sound travel in a vacuum is false.
 The velocity of sound is affected by temperature, kind of medium & material density.
 Temperature- sound travels faster in higher temperatures.
 Kind of medium- of the three phases of matter (gas, liquid, and solid). Sound waves travel the slowest
through gases. Faster through liquids and fastest through solids.
 Material density- Thus, sound will travel at a slower rate in the denser object.
 Mho as used in electrical systems calculation is defined as the reciprocal of ohm.
 The Siemens (symbolized S) is the standard International (ISI) unit of electrical conductance. The archaic
term for this unit is the mho (ohm spelled backward).
 Septic tank- a water tight receptacle which receives the discharged of the sanitary plumbing system or
part thereof, designed and constructed to retrain solids, digest organic matter through a period of
detention.
 Cesspool- a non-water tight lined excavation in the ground, which receives the discharge of a sanitary
drainage system or a part thereof, designed to retain the organic matter and solids discharging
therefrom.
 Privy- an outhouse or structure used for the deposition of excrement.
 Cistern- a waterproof receptacle for holding liquids, usually water. Cisterns are often built to catch and
store rainwater. Modern cisterns range in capacity from a few liters to thousands of cubic meters,
effectively forming covered reservoirs.
 Siamese connection- an eye connection used on fire lines so that two lines so that of hose may be
connected to hydrant or to the same nozzle.
 Parallel Circuit- circuit arrangement which are commonly used in building.
 Soporific effect- an effect brought about by a low-steady sound.

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