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No Vinegar In AC Condensation Drain Lines
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Thanks, good info
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I believe there are other problems with running the copper lines through a conduit under the slab. |
"All of the copper plumbing under the slab is encased in a continuous plastic sleeve as required by the Florida state building code."
COPPER PIPES PROS AND CONS « all pro plumbing and drain cleaning . |
I'm planning on flushing my AC condensor line as a semi-annual preventive maintainance chore...
I see the PVC output but where the heck is the input? Where and how do you introduce the warm water to the drain. We've never had central AC in our home as we're from the NE. Thanks! |
You should see a white pvc pipe near the front of the unit, with a plug in it that has 2 wires running to it. The plug is actually a safety switch that will shut the unit off if water is present to prevent flooding. The plug can be pulled out which gives you access to the drain line for flushing.
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Bill :) |
Many thanks Mulligan and Bill for the info. I see exactly what you mean.
After running warm water through the line, do you think it would help to attach my wet vac to the output to purge it even more? |
philnpat, you're welcome! :wave:
Personally, I wouldn't bother with the vacuum part......but that's just me. The line will have enough slope to it that it'll pretty much just drain naturally - gravity will do its job. Also, as the O.P. mentioned, I extended the PVC pipe where the condensation drain terminates outside our house. As installed when the house was built, it stopped right between where the outdoor unit sits and the slab of the house (maybe 6" away from the slab)........and the turf did stay constantly wet there. After extending it, the drain pipe now runs out to the far side of the outdoor unit so it's about another 3' ft. beyond where it was before. Did it in such a way that the lawn mowing crew won't whack it while they're doing their job. Termites and other bugs like moisture so moving the drain line farther away from your slab is a good idea. Bill :) |
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Probably so but even on those units with the copper lines up the wall the Sun Kool tech told us not to use vinegar to rinse out the drain line as it can also dissolve the glue in the pvc joints but I had never heard of that before. Have worked with a lot of PVC but never had an occasion to run vinegar through it before so I am not sure whether it possibly will or will not dissolve the glue in the joints. Acids in the concrete could also damage copper if it is in contact with it. [/QUOTE] Those Sun Kool techs should get their information checked. A Sun Kool tech advised me to use vinegar. I think I will stick to soap and water. |
I've talked to several techs in the past few years. It seems the newer guys say no vinegar or bleach down the pipes per new AC standards. The older guys say still put the vinegar down, but never bleach. Be sure to follow it up with 2 cups of hot water. So, guess the best way is to do what you're comfortable with. For now, I've gone the 1 cup hot water down the pipes and nothing else.
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We just had Munn's service our furnace and A/C and the technician also said to use warm/hot water to flush the lines - NO VINEGAR - He also advised to put a piece of plastic pipe to move the drain line away from the foundation.
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