Plumbing, what you should know
Indoor plumbing is one topic that homeowners rarely distress themselves over—until they find out that the house has flooded, lost water, or they have to take a cold shower. When the time has come to remodel or ad another room to the house, it becomes evident that a plumbing contractor may come into play. There are times when a do it yourself mentality is fine, but a remodel or addition is not one of them.
Plumbing Basics
Water pressure is primary for the entire plumbing system. Making sure there is ample water pressure is the plumber's main goal. Plumbing fixtures, pipes, hoses, toilets, showers and tubs, are designed to operate within an unchanging range of pressure, and it is the job of the plumber to ensure that each receives that specific pressure without any variation. The plumbing contractor and designer rely on the internal diameter of the water pipes to control and maintain water pressure. The smaller the pipe diameter is, the greater the pressure and rate of the water passing through it.
Gravity is the driving force pushing drainage and waste removal through the plumbing system. There must be proper venting in the plumbing system to release air pressure, or it will lose its ability to flow. For this reason, you may hear plumbers refer to it as the "DWV" (drainage, waste, and vent) system. So basically in short, when fixing a leaky faucet or changing a shower head, go ahead and do it yourself, but when considering the bigger projects come by Homeshow Daily and find a plumbing contractor you can trust.

