Depends how it is pumbed. All a P or S trap does is stop the smell of the drains getting back into the house. The P is best because it has less resistance to flow.
There SHOULD be water in the "P-Trap" below the sink. The trap keeps sewer gas from entering the house. It's called a "P-Trap" because of the shape, it's shaped like the letter "P" on it's side. If the water drains from the trap, it's the right level.
normally 132 Oz
Yes. Back-to-back 45's on the vertical pipe between the trap and the shower strainer will work fine.
aho 3'alasa keda :P
Well...first we need to know what war it is. :P
Either dried out P-trap or possibly no p-trap or break in drain line after p-trap
No
no, Alexander P. Kurk invented the washing machine in 1983
washing machine :P
Of course
P-trap may be cracked, nuts are loose on p-trap, or check for leak above p-trap that may be dripping down on p-trap.
Who invented the p trap
Its called a P trap because if you stand the trap up and looked at it, its in the shape of the letter P
P trap
A J trap is normally tubular and a P trap is brass and does not swivel
I would take the "P" trap apart and clean it or replace it. There are some things Drano will not remove.
If you can look under the sink, lavatory, or perhaps in the basement under the washing machine . . . a P trap is the drain pipe coming out of the bottom of the sink, or whatever. If that drain pipe goes down, then curves and goes up again, then goes sideways into the wall, then it is a P trap, so named because it look like the letter P if you hold your head just right and squint a lot. The other common trap is an S trap . . . it's the same as the above, except instead of the drain pipe entering the wall, it curves down, again, and goes down through the floor. Its shape is similar to the letter S, if you hold your head just right yada yada. If the drain pipe goes straight down into the floor or has an elbow, making it go through the wall, then there may be no trap at all. (Maybe: . . . the P trap for my bathtub may be found by tearing into the ceiling on the next floor down . . .)