title: Plumber
slug: plumber
aliases:
  - Pipefitter
  - Plumbing Technician
  - Steamfitter
category: Skilled Trades
tags:
  - plumbing
  - pipefitting
  - dwv
  - water-systems
  - construction
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Keeps clean water in and dirty water out, isolating the pressurized potable
  supply from the gravity-fed waste system so the two never mix and sewer gas
  never enters.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: electrician
    type: collaboration
    note: parallel trade competing for the same wall cavities in rough-in
  - slug: hvac-technician
    type: collaboration
    note: shares pipe and duct routing and often overlaps in hydronic work
  - slug: civil-engineer
    type: related
    note: designs the water and sewer mains the plumber ties into
  - slug: mason
    type: adjacent
    note: sets the foundations the underground rough-in passes through
  - slug: welder
    type: related
    note: joins large-bore and pressure pipe the pipefitter installs
specializations:
  - Service Plumber
  - Pipefitter
  - Steamfitter
  - Drain Technician
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC)
    kind: standard
  - title: International Plumbing Code (IPC)
    kind: standard
  - title: Code Check Plumbing
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      Clean water in, dirty water out, and never the two shall meet. A plumber
      exists

      to keep potable water safe to drink and human waste safely carried away,
      which

      is the single largest reason cities stopped dying of cholera. The craft
      lives in

      two opposing systems sharing one building: a supply side under pressure
      that

      must never be contaminated, and a drain-waste-vent side moving by gravity
      and

      air that must never let sewer gas — or the bacteria in it — back into the
      living

      space. The work is governed by code (UPC or IPC depending on the
      jurisdiction)

      because the failures are not visible until someone is sick or the ceiling
      falls

      in.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Deliver potable water at adequate pressure without contamination, and
      remove

      waste by gravity without leaks, clogs, or sewer gas — protecting both the

      building and the public water supply from cross-connection.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Sizing and running supply lines; sloping and venting drain-waste-vent
      (DWV)

      systems; setting fixtures and making watertight, code-compliant
      connections;

      soldering, gluing, crimping, and threading the right joint for the right
      pipe;

      locating and clearing clogs; preventing backflow into the potable supply;

      pressure-testing and inspecting before anything gets buried; and
      diagnosing the

      leak behind the wall that the homeowner only knows as a stain on the
      ceiling.

      Underneath the wrench work is constant attention to slope, venting, and
      pressure

      — the three things that, gotten wrong, cause the call-backs.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Protect the potable supply above all.** A cross-connection that
      siphons waste
        into drinking water can poison a building. Air gaps and backflow preventers are
        not negotiable.
      - **Water runs downhill, and slope is sacred.** Drain lines need a
      consistent
        fall — typically 1/4 inch per foot for pipe up to 3 inches. Too little and
        solids stall; too much and water outruns the solids and leaves them behind.
      - **Every trap needs a vent.** Without venting, draining one fixture
      siphons the
        water out of another's trap and lets sewer gas in.
      - **Test before you bury.** Pressure-test supply and water-test or
      air-test DWV
        before the wall closes. The cheap time to find a leak is now.
      - **Pipe the system, not the fixture.** Size the whole branch and main for
      the
        combined demand, not just the tap in front of you.
      - **The right joint for the right material.** Copper sweats, PEX crimps or
        expands, PVC and ABS solvent-weld, steel threads. Mixing methods or metals
        invites failure and corrosion.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **Two systems, never connected.** Supply is pressurized and clean; DWV
      is
        gravity and dirty. The entire discipline is keeping them isolated. The only
        legal connection is across an air gap.
      - **Backflow as the nightmare.** Pressure can reverse — a water main break
      drops
        supply pressure below a hose left in a bucket of chemicals, and the building
        back-siphons poison into the city main. The plumber's job is to make that
        physically impossible.
      - **The trap-and-vent pair.** Every fixture has a P-trap holding a water
      seal
        against sewer gas; every trap needs air admitted behind it (a vent) so draining
        flow doesn't suck the seal dry. Trap without vent is a slow failure.
      - **Pressure and flow are different problems.** A house can have high
      static
        pressure and terrible flow (small or corroded pipe), or good flow and pressure
        that drops when two fixtures run. Diagnose which one the customer actually has.
      - **Water finds the path and the lowest point.** A leak shows up far from
      its
        source because water travels along framing before it drips. Follow it uphill.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - Water seeks its own level and the lowest available point; the plumber
      works
        with gravity, not against it.
      - A water seal in a trap is the only thing between a living space and
      sewer gas;
        it must be maintained by venting.
      - Pressure can reverse, so any connection between potable and non-potable
      must be
        protected as if it will.
      - Heat, freezing, and corrosion all attack the joint first; the joint is
      where
        failures live.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this a cross-connection? What protects the potable supply here?

      - Does every trap on this branch have a proper vent?

      - What's the slope, and is it consistent over the whole run?

      - Is this a pressure problem or a flow problem?

      - What pipe material and joint method is correct here, and is anything
      dissimilar
        touching?
      - Where is the water actually coming from, versus where it's showing up?

      - Will this freeze? Is it pitched to drain or insulated?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Copper vs. PEX vs. CPVC for supply.** PEX for speed, freeze tolerance,
      and
        fewer joints in walls; copper where code, durability, or exposure demands;
        CPVC where chemistry or temperature rules out the others.
      - **Repair vs. repipe.** One pinhole in copper is a repair; pinholes in
      three
        places mean the whole run is failing from water chemistry and gets repiped.
      - **Snake vs. hydro-jet vs. dig.** A cable auger for a local clog;
      hydro-jetting
        for grease and root mats coating the pipe wall; excavation or pipe-bursting
        when the camera shows a collapsed or root-shattered line.
      - **Air gap vs. backflow preventer.** Physical air gap where possible (it
      can't
        fail); a tested RPZ or vacuum breaker where an air gap isn't practical.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Read and plan the layout.** Locate fixtures, the main, the stack, and
      the
         route with proper slope and venting before cutting anything.
      2. **Rough-in.** Run DWV first (it's gravity and can't be rerouted around
      supply
         easily), then supply. Maintain slope; keep the right pipe sizes.
      3. **Vent it.** Tie every trap arm to a vent that rises and connects above
      the
         flood rim.
      4. **Test.** Pressure-test supply (often 50–100 psi air or water); water-
      or
         air-test DWV. Inspect before close-up.
      5. **Set fixtures and trim.** Wax ring or gasket on toilets, supply stops,
         traps, and aerators; make the final connections watertight.
      6. **Verify and demonstrate.** Run every fixture, check for leaks under
      load,
         confirm drains carry and traps hold, and walk the customer through shutoffs.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **PEX speed vs. copper longevity.** PEX installs fast and resists freeze
      burst;
        copper lasts decades and tolerates UV and high heat. The water chemistry and
        the budget decide.
      - **Fewer fittings vs. accessibility.** Continuous runs leak less but are
      harder
        to service; planned access points cost fittings but save future demolition.
      - **Repair now vs. repipe right.** Patching a failing galvanized line buys
      time
        but throws good labor after a system that's going to fail again.
      - **Code-minimum venting vs. robust venting.** Wet vents and
      air-admittance
        valves save material where allowed but a fully vented system is quieter and
        more forgiving.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - 1/4 inch per foot of fall on horizontal drains up to 3 inches; don't
      exceed it
        or solids strand.
      - A toilet needs a 3-inch drain; a sink, 1.5 to 2.

      - If a fixture gurgles or another drains slowly when this one runs, it's a
      vent
        problem.
      - Never reduce pipe size in the direction of flow on a drain.

      - Hot on the left, cold on the right — every time.

      - Dielectric union between copper and steel, always, or galvanic corrosion
      eats
        the joint.
      - If you smell sewer gas, a trap is dry or a vent is blocked — find which.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Cross-connection / back-siphonage.** Non-potable water drawn into the
      supply
        — the most dangerous failure in the trade.
      - **Dry or siphoned trap.** Loss of water seal lets sewer gas into the
      building;
        often an unvented or improperly vented fixture.
      - **Frozen burst pipe.** Water expands ~9% when it freezes and splits the
      pipe;
        the leak appears on the thaw.
      - **Slope error.** Too flat and it clogs; too steep and solids strand on a
      dry
        pipe wall.
      - **Galvanic corrosion.** Dissimilar metals in contact corrode the joint
      from the
        inside.
      - **Over-tightened plastic fittings.** Cracks that weep slowly behind the
      wall.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Skipping the vent** because "it drained on the test" — it'll siphon
      under
        real load.
      - **S-traps instead of P-traps** — they self-siphon and lose the seal.

      - **Flux left unwiped on copper** — it corrodes the joint from outside.

      - **A garden hose left submerged** without a vacuum breaker.

      - **Using drain cleaner chemicals** instead of finding the clog — they
      damage
        pipe and don't fix the cause.
      - **Burying a joint with no test and no access.**
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **DWV** — drain-waste-vent, the gravity side of the system.

      - **P-trap** — the U-bend holding a water seal against sewer gas.

      - **Cross-connection** — any point where potable and non-potable water
      could mix.

      - **Backflow / back-siphonage** — reversed flow that can contaminate the
      supply.

      - **Air gap** — a physical vertical gap between an outlet and a flood rim;
      the
        most reliable backflow protection.
      - **Flood rim** — the level at which a fixture would overflow; vents must
      rise
        above it.
      - **RPZ** — reduced-pressure-zone backflow preventer.

      - **Sweating** — soldering a copper joint with flux and heat.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      Pipe wrenches and channel-locks; a torch and flux for sweating copper; PEX
      crimp

      or expansion tool; a cable auger (snake) and, for the hard clogs, a
      hydro-jetter;

      a drain camera to see inside the line before digging; a closet auger for
      toilets;

      a level for setting slope; and a pressure gauge for testing. The drain
      camera

      changed the trade — diagnosis used to be guesswork and excavation; now you
      watch

      the root intrusion or the belly in the line on a screen before you commit
      a

      shovel.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Plumbers share the rough-in sequence with electricians and HVAC techs, all
      three

      competing for the same wall cavities and joist bays, with the plumber
      usually

      winning the routing argument because DWV must run by gravity and can't
      bend

      around obstacles the way wire and duct can. They work to the GC's schedule
      and

      the inspector's sign-off, coordinate with the water utility on meters and
      mains,

      and on commercial work read the engineer's riser diagrams. The friction is
      the

      gravity constraint — the plumber's pipe sets the path and the others route
      around

      it — and the handoff to inspection on hidden, pressure-tested work.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      The plumber stands between the public and waterborne disease, which is why
      the

      trade is licensed and inspected. A cross-connection done wrong doesn't
      hurt only

      the customer who hired you — it can contaminate a neighborhood's water.
      The

      duties: never create a cross-connection, even temporarily, without
      protection;

      never bury untested work; tell a customer the truth when a "small leak" is
      a

      failing system that will flood them; and refuse the shortcut that saves a
      day and

      risks a backflow event. The license certifies that the public can drink
      the water

      without testing it themselves.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A toilet that gurgles and a sink that drains slow.** The homeowner
      thinks

      they're two problems. The plumber recognizes one cause: a venting fault.
      When the

      toilet flushes, the surge pulls air through the only available path — the
      sink's

      trap — siphoning its water seal and making it gurgle. He inspects the vent
      stack,

      finds a wasp nest blocking the roof vent, clears it, and confirms by
      running both

      fixtures that the seals now hold and the gurgle stops. No new pipe, but a
      correct

      diagnosis that a parts-changer would have missed by snaking a drain that
      wasn't

      clogged.


      **Repeated pinhole leaks in copper.** The third pinhole in a year. The

      homeowner wants another patch. The plumber tests the water and finds it

      aggressive (low pH, high chloride) and the velocity in undersized lines
      too high

      — classic erosion-corrosion that pits copper from the inside. Patching one
      hole

      guarantees the next. He recommends a repipe in PEX, which the water
      chemistry

      won't attack, and right-sizes the lines to drop the velocity. It's a
      bigger job,

      but the honest one — three more patches would cost the customer more than
      the

      repipe.


      **A back-siphonage risk at a commercial mop sink.** During a restaurant

      inspection, the plumber finds a hose bib at the mop sink connected to a
      chemical

      dispenser with no protection. A water-main pressure drop could siphon

      sanitizer into the building supply. He installs a tested atmospheric
      vacuum

      breaker on the outlet and verifies an air gap at the dispenser, bringing
      it into

      compliance. The fix is cheap; the failure it prevents is a poisoning event
      and a

      shut-down kitchen.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The plumber shares the rough-in trench and the joist bay with the
      electrician and

      the HVAC technician, the three trades choreographing the same walls. The
      civil

      engineer designs the water and sewer mains the plumber ties into. The
      mason sets

      the foundations and slabs the plumber's underground rough-in passes
      through. All

      work to the same inspector and the same code book.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC)* / *International Plumbing Code (IPC)*
      - *Code Check Plumbing* — Hansen & Kardon
      - UA (United Association) apprenticeship curriculum
      - *Audel Plumbers Pocket Manual*
