Home Improvement

What Does “Plumb” Mean in Construction?

Checking for plumb in posts
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The term plumb can be used as a verb to describe the activity of a plumber running water supply and drain pipes in a building, but the more important use of the term comes in the context of general construction or carpentry.

What Is Plumb?

In construction or carpentry, the term plumb refers to a line or feature that is perfectly vertical. In technical design, it represents an imaginary line that runs straight to the center of the earth. Plumb is the counterpart to level, which means to be perfectly horizontal.

Just as floors, countertops, and pool tables must be level, vertical elements such columns, walls, and uprights must be plumb for proper construction and load-bearing capacity.

The Meanings of Plumb

For architects, builders, and carpenters, plumb can be used as a verb, and an adverb—or even a noun. It's an adjective when it describes something that is perfectly vertical: "The wall is plumb." It's a verb when it identifies the action of making something plumb: "You must plumb the post before pouring the footing." It's an adverb is usages such as "Check the fence for plumb."

Finally, plumb also serves as a noun when it described the small pointed weight that hangs at the bottom of a plumb bob—the simple tool that is used to mark or check for plumb.

The Importance of Plumb

In construction, a framing member or wall installed so it is perfectly vertical, or plumb, will transfer its supporting load directly downward (compression stress), giving it maximum load-bearing capacity. By contrast, if vertical elements are not installed exactly plumb, some of the weight is off-center and can apply considerable additional stress (shear load) to the member. Wood studs, concrete pillars, steel beams: All these materials have much greater compression strength than they do shear strength, hence the importance of structural members being plumb. The enormous load-bearing of steel beams installed perfectly plumb, experiencing compression load rather than sheer load, is what keeps massive skyscrapers upright. A few degrees out of plumb and entire buildings can come toppling down.

How to Check for Plumb

The traditional tools for determining plumb are the plumb bob and the carpenter's level. If you're working from a line or surface that is verifiably level, you also can easily set something plumb by squaring off of the level plane using a square. Builders today often use laser levels to project plumb lines of light onto surfaces or building elements.

The plumb bob is the oldest, simplest, and still one of the best tools for establishing plumb. It consists of weight (the plumb) hanging at the end of a strong string. The plumb weight is always shaped symmetrically so it hangs evenly, and it often comes to a point to allow accurate reading and marking. The user suspends the weight from the string at a fixed point. Gravity pulls the string taut, and when the weight is perfectly still and no longer swinging, the line created by the string is plumb, every time.

Often, it takes two people to use a plumb bob. For example, one person might hold the string up to a mark on the ceiling or the bottom of the beam and suspend the plumb just above the floor. The other person steadies the plumb and lets it come to rest, then marks the floor just below the point of the plumb. In this way, the marks on the floor and the ceiling (or beam) are in perfect alignment and create an imaginary plumb line.

Checking posts, walls, and other vertical structures for plumb is usually done with a carpenter's level, sometimes called a spirit level. Most levels have two liquid-filled vials near each end, and you can check for plumb by looking at either vial. When the bubble in the plumb vial is perfectly centered within the vial, the vertical member or structure is perfectly plumb. Levels come in many lengths, from short nine-inch torpedo levels to four-foot-long mason's levels. Digital levels are even available for easier reading.

Plumbing Posts

When checking a post or column for plumb, you have to use the level on two adjacent sides of the post (or one-quarter of the way around a cylindrical column). This is because a post can be plumb from left to right without being plumb from front to back. For this reason, there's a handy tool for checking square fence posts or deck posts. Called a post level, this simple tool has a right-angle frame with level and plumb vials on the two adjacent sides of the frame. It also has a strap for securing the tool to a wood post, as well as magnets for holding it to metal posts. When attached to the post, the post level is hands-free and allows you to check both sides of the post for plumb at a glance, without the need to move the level.