I'm not saying they don't have their applications, just that pumping traps are used in a lot of places where they aren't necessary. The vast majority of HVAC heaters can be piped such that stall won't be an issue, even without a pumping trap. Air heating applications were successfully installed for 100 years before pumping traps hit the market. In those rare applications where "you can't get there from here" on a new installation, or as the most economical fix for an installation that was wrong from the beginning - those are the times for a pumping trap. Most often, however, if the installation is designed & installed by people who know steam, and understand stall, there are no problems. Spirax Sarco's "Hook-Ups" has a section on this, and the piping schematic to go with it. Pumping traps cost far more upfront than conventional traps, and the maintenance costs are proportionatly high.