Have you ever looked at your gas furnace or gas water heater and wondered what the short piece of gas pipe going to nothing was for.
Sediment trap furnace.
The clear space and distance to combustible materials around the furnace unit shall comply with the manufacturer s installation instructions.
The sediment traps at my furnace and water heater were completely empty.
The photo below shows eighteen years of sediment accumulation at the first sediment trap at my own house which is located on the main gas line just before the pressure.
The reason for this is to ensure safe operation of an appliance by keeping debris.
Sediment traps have been required for approximately forever and they re still required today by the minnesota state fuel.
Most water heaters do not have a sediment trap in them.
It is actually a very useful component of the gas line known as a sediment trap.
Sediment traps are intentionally installed to help prevent sediment in the gas piping from getting into the gas valve or burner area of an appliance and fouling things up.
Different areas have different contaminants in the gas and the traps help catch these.
Sediment traps sometimes mistakenly referred to as drip legs are designed to catch sediment in natural gas before it enters into the water heater or furnace gas valve.
The sediment trap shall be either a tee fitting with a capped nipple in the bottom opening of the run of the tee or other device approved as an effective sediment trap this means that all gas furnaces water heaters boilers unit heaters and gas packs are required by code to have a sediment trap in the gas line ahead of the equipment.