On the face of it the answer is as simple.
Run pipe from attic to basement.
Rigid conduit with an outside diameter of 3 4 in and a fish tape long enough to reach through the buried pipe.
Properly installed drain pipes are safe.
But if it s only on one side o.
It will be next to impossible to drill downward under the portion of the roof that slopes to the attic floor without a right angle drill.
To run a vent pipe through the ceiling first drill a test hole to make sure you won t bump into any joists in the attic.
Inside pipes can be run vertically to accommodate new plumbing.
You may need to move the hole over a few inches.
If you have a plumbing fixture in the attic and you do need to install drain pipes they may run for some distance along the floor or wall to meet a stack.
Instead of running from floor to ceiling a soffit runs across the top of a wall.
The wall inlets are connected to the power unit by tubes that can be run inside walls or through vertical pipe chases closets the attic basement or the cold air return ducts if permitted by building code.
I only have the basic idea that it s going to run inside walls and can be used in the future for running wires from basement to each floor.
Could anyone explain the benefits of this conduit.
The top plate may be doubled meaning you have to drill through 3 inches.
Run a heating duct from the attic to the basement.
Are there code issues with this idea.
The only spot i can run a pvc conduit from basement to well almost to the attic is alongside a forced air heating duct.
This allows plumbing to run from the basement to the attic.
Similar to the chase is the soffit.
The chase is most commonly used for running new vent stacks.
When working from an attic space it will be significantly easier to access a wall space on the floor below by working either an interior wall or the exterior wall that is on the gable end of the structure.