Plumbing Repairs
& Sewer Repairs
Acqua
Plumbing - Definition Washington's #1 smart Plumber
Acqua Plumbing & Sewer is
Family owned and operated sewer, drain cleaning, and plumbing
company. Smart, trusted, friendly, informative, experienced in all
fields of plumbing and Plumbing services in the
greater Puget
Sound region.
Acqua Plumbing would like to take a brief
moment of your time and help you where the plumbing system
originated from and its workings. Please take a look here
and come to know your plumbing like your smart plumbers.
The Plumbing System
Plumbing is the system of pipes, drains fittings, valves,
valve assemblies, and devices installed in a building for
the distribution of water for drinking, heating and washing,
and the removal of waterborne wastes, and the skilled trade
of working with pipes, tubing and plumbing fixtures in such
systems. A plumber is someone who installs or repairs piping
systems, plumbing fixtures and equipment such as water
heaters and backflow preventers. The plumbing industry is a
basic and substantial part of every developed economy due to
the need for clean water, and sanitary collection and
transport of wastes. The word "plumbing" comes from the
Latin plumbum for lead, as pipes were once made from lead.
Plumbing is usually distinguished from water supply and
sewage systems, in that a plumbing system serves one
building, while water and sewage systems serve a group of
buildings.
Water systems of
ancient times relied on gravity for the supply of water,
using pipes or channels usually made ofclay, lead,
bamboo, wood, or stone. Hollowed wooden logs wrapped in
steel banding were used for plumbing pipes, particularly
water mains. Logs were used for water distribution in
England close to 500 years ago. US cities began using
hollowed logs in the late 1700s through the 1800s.
Present-day water-supply systems use a network of
high-pressure pumps, and pipes in buildings are now made of
copper, brass, plastic (particularly cross-linked
polyethylene called
PEX, which is estimated to be used in 60% of single-family
homes), or other nontoxic material. Due to its toxicity,
lead has not been used in modern water-supply piping since
the 1930s in the United States, although lead was used in
plumbing solder for drinking water until it was banned in
1986. Drain and vent lines are made of plastic, steel,
cast-iron, or lead.
The straight sections of plumbing
systems are called "pipes" or "tubes". A pipe is typically
formed via casting or
welding, whereas a tube is made through extrusion.
Pipe normally has thicker walls and may be threaded or
welded, while tubing is thinner-walled and requires special
joining techniques such as brazing, compression
fitting, crimping,
or for plastics, solvent
welding. These joining techniques are discussed in more
detail in the
piping and plumbing fittings .
History of Plumbing
Sanitation in ancient Rome and History of plumbing
Roman lead pipe with a folded seam, at the Roman Baths in
Bath, England
Plumbing originated during ancient civilizations such as
the Greek, Roman, Persian, Indian, and Chinese cities as
they developed public baths and needed to provide potable
water and drainage of wastes, for larger numbers of people.
Standardized earthen plumbing pipes with broad flanges
making use of asphalt for preventing leakages appeared in
the urban settlements of the Indus Valley Civilization by
2700 B.C. The Romans used lead pipe inscriptions to prevent
water theft.
Improvement in plumbing systems was very slow, with
virtually no progress made from the time of the Roman system
of aqueducts and lead pipes. Plumbing was extremely rare
until the growth of modern densely-populated cities in the
1800s. During this period, public health authorities began
pressing for better waste disposal systems to be installed,
to prevent or control epidemics of disease. Earlier, the
waste disposal system had merely consisted of collecting
waste and dumping it on the ground or into a river.
Eventually the development of separate, underground water
and sewage systems eliminated open sewage ditches and
cesspools.
Most large cities today pipe solid wastes to sewage
treatment plants in order to separate and partially purify
the water, before emptying into streams or other bodies of
water. For potable water use, galvanized iron piping was
commonplace in the United States from the late 1800s until
around 1960. After that period, copper piping took over,
first soft copper with flared fittings, then with rigid
copper tubing utilizing soldered fittings.
The use of lead for potable water declined sharply after
World War II because of increased awareness of the dangers
of lead poisoning. At this time, copper piping was
introduced as a better and safer alternative to lead pipes.
Due to all of these
problems, sewers,
toilets, and drains need cleaning, repair and replacement services
from experts.