Hydrostatic loop

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A hydrostatic loop, though not often used in plumbing practice, is an arrangement of pipes formed into a vertical loop to prevent backflow of water within the plumbing potable water system. Since a siphon has a maximum height that it can work (about 33 feet), a hydrostatic loop is built higher than 33 feet. There are several ways to prevent siphonage and an undesirable backflow of the water in a plumbing system. The design relies on gravity and atmospheric pressure rather than mechanical devices, making it a passive method of backflow prevention.[1] However, due to its impractical height and space requirements, the hydrostatic loop is rarely used in modern installations, where mechanical backflow preventers or air gaps are preferred.

  • Vented loops [2]

References

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  2. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).

See also

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