Yes the outlet for the dishwasher should be on the same side as the disposal,so the disposal can handle the waste water from the dishwasher.
each needs a separate 20 amp feed
Yes but the breaker would be at your electrical panel, they do not have a breaker connected to the garbage disposal but they do have a reset button on the bottom of the garbage disposal. Most modern homes also have a GFI outlet linked to the garbage disposal. If your disposal is tripping breakers or GFI outlets I would consider that something is very wrong with your disposal, or you installed one with to much power!
More like a plumber. The new disposal should have a plug end on it to plug into a wall outlet
Yes. To install a garbage disposal into a sink you really only need a few things. First, make sure that you have an electrical outlet to plug the garbage disposal into. If you have this along with all of the plumbing materials to hook up your drain pipe you can install it very easily.
A gulley trap will have a water seal and connects each drainage line from the building to the first manhole. One manhole will have one or many drainage line inlets and one outlet that is used to carry drainage water to long distance for disposal.
Yes. Call a plumber to cut open the wall behind the sink and lower the sanitary tee.
AWG 12/2 wire on a 20 amp breaker. There must be 2 kitchen outlet circuits and each circuit must be protected with a GFCI outlet. Each of these items must be on it's own dedicated 20 amp circuit. Garbage disposal, dishwasher, microwave, refrigerator. This will require 6 dedicated 120 volt 20 amp circuits plus a 240 volt 60 amp circuit for the range.
Any outlet that is on a wall or counter back splash that is used for your convenience to plug in anything that is to be used in a temporary situation such as a toaster, mixer, radio etc.is a convenience outlet. All 120 volt outlets, in the US and Canada, that are not designated for a specific usage.On the other hand a designated outlet is for a specific usage such as for a washer, dryer, dishwasher, garbage disposal, oven or etc. that is plugged in and stays plugged in.
yes.
In the USA, a typical electric dishwasher plugs into a standard household 110/115 outlet. Exactly like an American toaster, television, clock radio, etc. No special outlet required, like some room a/c units with the L shaped prongs. Good luck. Cheers.
Not sure what you mean by dishwasher vent hole, but you probably mean the air gap fitting. Some dishwashers connect directly to the disposal, with the tube going up a little to prevent stuff from going back to the dishwasher. But as for removing the air gap fitting, if you have it already, it may depend on where you are. California plumbing code requires a dishwasher air gap fitting above the flood level rim, even if you have a disposer, but I'm not sure if the national code also requires. In any case, if a code requires it, it may be a good idea not to remove the air vent. I would check your local code. You may want to consider a faucet with a built in sprayer instead.
Both dishwasher and toilet are sharing the same outlet pipe/drain it is possible when disahwasher is in use it is blocking of the drain somehow so the toilet water has nowhere to go - you need to have a look at the outlet pipe of the toilet and dishwasher the problem lies in a conflict there.