T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
201.1 | | MRMFG1::D_BROUILLET | | Fri Jan 17 1986 12:34 | 12 |
| I'm not sure if yours is set up like mine, and I don't know the technical
names of the parts of the assembly, but here goes:
I had exactly the same problem after a couple of years in my house. There
is a sliding plunger attached to a couple of rods, connected to the lever
that opens and shuts the drain. There is a screw adjustment on the lowest
rod for just this type of situation. Remove the plate that holds the drain
lever, pull the assembly out, and it should be easy to figure out how to
adjust it.
-db
|
201.2 | | CRVAX1::KAPLOW | | Fri Jan 17 1986 19:03 | 3 |
| If all else fails, get one of those rubbermaid or whatever disks and stick it
over the drain after closing it and before adding the water. It is a cheap easy
fix for problems like this.
|
201.3 | | MORGAN::MAJORS | | Mon Jan 20 1986 14:33 | 1 |
| THANKS! THAT SHOULD DO IT!
|
201.10 | Green stain in bathtub; how to remove? | ANT::MORRISON | Bob M. LMO2/O24 296-5357 | Tue Jul 22 1986 19:19 | 13 |
| I have an 80-year-old enamel bathtub. There is a green stain running
down the front from where the faucets have dripped onto the overflow
fixture down to the drain. I have no idea how long the stain has
been there. My guess is that there is an impurity in the water that
reacted with the metal in the fixture; maybe the fixture has nothing
to do with it. The town water has algae in the summer and is hard
year round. I have tried Tilex; no luck. I don't want to use Ajax
because it will ruin the finish. Any suggestions? Do you think
oxalic acid would work? I know it takes out some kinds of stains in
bathtubs.
I don't want to put a lot of money into this. The landlord has
hinted he might replace it and that's what I want, but he won't do
it just because of a cosmetic problem like this.
|
201.11 | How green is green (copper stain)? | HEADS::OSBORN | Sally's VAXNotes Vanity Plate | Tue Jul 22 1986 22:18 | 16 |
| Remember that the Statue of Liberty is GREEN, right? Does her
complexion coloring match that of your bathtub? Then I bet your
water has COPPER in it; most water does; most PLUMBING does, too!
Anyway, what to do now? I recommend two options, to be tried SEPARATELY.
WARNING: do not mix vinegar acid with chlorine substances: ~ MUSTARD GAS.
(1) Use Comet, the abrasive cleanser with the chlorine bleach. Wet
the stained surface, apply the Comet, do not scrub, just let it rest.
The chlorine may draw out the stain. Then rinse. Two applications
may be appropriate. This also works well for Formica counter tops.
(2) Use straight household vinegar. Just wet the stained
surface. You can use cornstarch to make a paste to hold the
vinegar to a vertical surface. The acetic acid may dissolve the
calcium deposits, which may release the copper stain.
|
201.12 | Vinegar works | ANT::MORRISON | Bob M. LMO2/O24 296-5357 | Mon Jul 28 1986 11:09 | 1 |
| I tried the vinegar and it worked. Thank you for your help.
|
201.13 | Re-Finishing a Bathtub,DO IT!!! | MRMFG1::A_PEIRANO | I like IT | Thu Oct 09 1986 11:34 | 15 |
|
If anyone is thinking of having their bathtub re-finished/painted
I would suggest they go ahead and do it!!I just had mine done in
my new/old house....I changed the hopper and sink to a light grey
and had this UGLY pinkish-beige tub that I was going to hide with
shower curtains or something...but,my girlfriends brother-in-law
suggested I swap the kitchen cabinets I ripped out to his brother-
in-law for the tub re-finisning job!!
I had him match the grey as close as possible and it looks like
I put in a new tub.There are some rules to follow during the first
30 days,(real easy) and the finish will last 10 years,so he says.
I don't think I'll be there that long,but again it looks GREAT!!!
(of course,next to what I had...anything is an improvement)!!
Tony....
|
201.14 | tub painting | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Oct 09 1986 12:40 | 7 |
| we painted our tub a few years back - and discovered
1) you can't use scouring pads - it tears the paint
2) you have to paint the whole thing - or it peels from the top down
can anyone suggest a solvent for this (epoxy) paint - would like to
strip whats left and take a fresh shot at it (its a fiberglas tub)
thanx /j
|
201.15 | Tub Genie | ROLL::CIAVOLA | | Thu Oct 09 1986 17:36 | 9 |
|
I suggest you call Bath Tub Genie out of Marlboro! We had our 75
year old tub refinished by them. They did a great job. We had
no enamel left whatsoever, and there were meny rust/iron stains.
It cost about $260. but it was well worth the money
\
pam
|
201.16 | More info on 0? | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Thu Oct 09 1986 17:55 | 6 |
| re .0
Who did your work for you?
Or did you DIY?
herb
|
201.17 | This is how its done | MRMFG1::A_PEIRANO | I like IT | Fri Oct 10 1986 10:45 | 17 |
| Re -1...I had a friend do it.I had something he wanted,so we traded
his services for it.However,he told me the job runs around $175.(It
must cost about $100 for the masking tape :-) ).He also said they
will do a hopper ....if it not connected as the coating ALWAYS peels
due to the cold water (moisture).I know he would be interested doing
more work,so if anyone is interested I will post his name and number.
BTW,my tub was NOT fiberglas.The material (paint) they use is very
close to the porcelain finish on a tub.It takes about an 1 1/2 to
re-grout and mask off everthing......the finish is stripped/prepped
then a primer coat is applied and then 3 coats finish coating is
applied.You can't enter for 6 hours VERY important... this is done
to eliminate as much dust as possible,then you can't use for 72
hours,then for the first 30 days nothing can be put on the tub as
it will dent....it takes that long to completely cure.Like I said
in .0 I'm very satisfied,but I'm easy too!!!
Tony....
|
201.18 | Does Resurfacing Work Over The Long-term? | FULTON::GUTNICK | | Fri Oct 10 1986 13:13 | 16 |
|
I've heard from a few people that bath resurfacing doesn't work
over the long-term. One of these people that most strongly objects
to resurfacing is the owner of Besco, an antique and reproduction
plumbing supply house in Boston. He refuses to get tubs resufaced
and uses a lye-based liquid to get rust spots off of old tubs.
Since I have an old claw-foot that I'd LOVE to use in an attic bathroom
I'm considering, do you all know something I don't? How long have
you had your resurfaced tubs? Anyone out there have a resurfaced
tub for 3 or more years without seeing paint bubble or chip?
Thanks,
Bonnie
|
201.19 | Worked fine, lasted a long time... | CYGNUS::DARRYL | | Fri Oct 10 1986 14:10 | 11 |
| I had a bath tub and surrounding tile wall done, then put 4-5 years
use into it before selling the house. I was very pleased with the
durability. We had three little ones running around, and they would
ocaisionally pound on the side of the tub with a very hard object
(spoon edge, for example), and the coating was nicked in that location.
There were never any bubbling or cracking problems. We had a small
peeled spot in the middle of the soap dish (built in to the tile
wall with a handle on it), but the guy told us that might happen
because he couldn't get in there with his sander to rough up the
surface for good bonding. I'd do it again if I was redoing an old
bathroom again - used Bath Genie mentioned earlier.
|
201.20 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Fri Oct 10 1986 17:37 | 2 |
| re: .4
whats a hopper?
|
201.21 | A "hopper is also known as a "Commode"!!! | MRMFG1::A_PEIRANO | I like IT | Mon Oct 13 1986 11:10 | 2 |
|
|
201.22 | A "commode is also known as a - Toilet!" | SARAH::MCWILLIAMS | | Thu Oct 16 1986 07:05 | 1 |
|
|
201.23 | more info please | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Tue Oct 21 1986 13:33 | 8 |
| Tony:
Please post the name and nr. of your friend who does tubs.
thnx
herb
|
201.24 | Who I used. | MRMFG1::A_PEIRANO | | Tue Oct 21 1986 15:31 | 12 |
|
The name and number of the guy I used is
BOB STICKNEY 663-9215
BTW,I'm not sure if I mentioned this,but I live in Shrewsbury
and if you want to take a look at his work give me a call.
842-5286 I have an answer machine when I'm not home,so leave
a message.DTN is 297-5211
Tony....
|
201.280 | Firming bottom of installed tub | TRACTR::DOWNS | | Tue Nov 04 1986 07:49 | 13 |
| I have a fiberglass, one piece tub/shower unit and the bottom seems
to be rather bouncy. I was thinking about ways to firm up the bottom
and had an idea that maybe someone out ther has already tried.
I don't want to rip out half my sheetrock sidewall to access the
bottom of the tub but thought of drilling a easily repairable 1"
hole to insert the application tub of one of those foam in a can
expandable materials. I never used the stuff before and wondered
if I can skirt it under the tub, will it expand into a firm base
which would solve the bouncy problem? Also can you somehow extend
the application tube on these foam-in-a-can units?
Thanks in advance!
|
201.281 | Go for it | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Tue Nov 04 1986 08:15 | 5 |
| Yes, it probably will help. I used the foam to firm up the sides of our tub
(between the tub and the studs) when we put ours in, and it works well. As to
extending the tube, any piece of �" tubing ought to work.
Paul
|
201.282 | | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Tue Nov 04 1986 09:20 | 5 |
|
I don't think the foaming insulation will have enough compressive
strength to support a tubful of water/person. And it doesn't bounce
back. Seems like after a few baths, you'll have a lot of compressed
foam and a gap equal to the flex of the tub bottom.
|
201.283 | | MAXWEL::BROSNIHAN | BRIAN | Tue Nov 04 1986 09:22 | 3 |
| I would imagine that it would take an awful lot of cans to fill
that area. That foam will fill every crack and crevice it can find
and will probably find its way up the walls .... no?
|
201.284 | References for tub flex | BARNUM::PHURD | | Tue Nov 04 1986 10:58 | 6 |
|
Check out notes 102.6 and 102.9, which talk about flex in these
types of units ....
Phil
|
201.285 | Your unit has a bounce does it... | AMULET::YELINEK | | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:28 | 31 |
| I also have a one piece fiberglass tub/shower unit manufactured by Lasco
Industries. When my house was purchased it was only totally finished
on the first floor except the second floor did have a complete
bathroom, well at least when you were in it with the door closed.
From the outside all the studs showed exposing the electrical and
plumbing and the backside of the tub/shower unit. The tub bottom
is constructed with a series of small boards (~1 X 6 pine) embedded
within the fiberglass material which I assume make for a more rigid
bottom. There is approx. 3/4"-1" spacing between the boards under the
bottom of the tub and the plywood floor. I required a represenative
from Lasco to come to my home and repair a small crack on the tub
side, something the plasterer left behind when he stepped all over the
tub edge while plastering the ceiling. Anyway... I too was concerned
with the bounce as slight as it was and asked the rep if it would help
if I slid a couple of 1 X's under the tub to stiften it. He indicated
that the installation was performed properly and it probably wouldn't
hurt, placing boards under the tub floor but it really wasn't
required. Sooooo.... I guess unless the whole family wants to shower
at the same time......you needn't care about adding any additional
support.
Mark
n.b. - My only other concern with the unit was the grime which builds
up on the surface over time. It's tough keeping the unit
looking clean without keeping after it quite often. My plumber
told me about this cleaner called "Gel Gloss" which can be
purchased at most plumber supply houses and a few select
hardware stores. The stuff works great on the fiberglass
and seems to last a bit longer than waxing which is what
the tub manufacturer recommends!
|
201.286 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Nov 04 1986 12:59 | 12 |
| I think the foam idea might work. Per square inch the stuff certainly
doesn't have much compressive strength, but I think there's a good
chance the tub bottom would distribute the load enough so the foam
wouldn't just squash down. My impression is, you're not planning
to try to fill the *entire* cavity, just put foam under the bottom
of the tub. I think the idea has at least a sporting chance of
working.
Putting some wood shims of the proper thickness under the tub is
certainly the best bet, but short of creating major damage you
probably can'd do that....
Steve
|
201.287 | Just A Couple Of Thoughts | BEEZER::HALL | So long and thanks for all the fiche | Tue Nov 04 1986 17:03 | 13 |
|
two things I would bear in mind if you are going to use foam:
Can you go in to the cavity through the side of the cladding, this
may be a little tidier than through the unit.
Also: if the idea does not come off, you are going to have One Hell
Of A Job getting the damn stuff out again to put something in its
place.
just a thought,
Chris H
|
201.288 | $.02 | SEINE::CJOHNSON | My heart belongs to Daddy! | Wed Nov 05 1986 07:35 | 9 |
| Rather than drilling a hole in the bottom of the tub, you might
be able to access the bottom by removing either the drain or the
diverter cover and using an extended tube for the foam application.
If your tub is on the first floor [don't remember if you mentioned
this or not] sometimes the plumbers will have cut a gaping hole
in the drain area itself that you might be able to gain access from.
Charlie
|
201.289 | Maybe I thought wrong? | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Wed Nov 05 1986 08:10 | 4 |
| I just assumed that he would cut a hole in the sheetrock surrounding the tub.
How would you go about repairing a hole in the tub itself?
Paul
|
201.290 | providing support for tubs | ISBG::POWELL | | Wed Nov 05 1986 13:03 | 33 |
| I'm facing a similar situation, and in the course of doing other
remodeling plan on fixing this as well. My experience with the foam
is that it defnitely will not work, for the reasons (compressing,
inability to get enough in, inability to fill every crevice) given
by others. Most important is the concern over what to do next if
you do use the foam and it doesn't work: you're in deep sneakers.
Also, I would never do anything to the tub itself - it will be
impossible to repair and make watertight.
So, what do I plan to do? Part of my other remodeling plans call
to take out the sheetrock in the ceiling of the room below. this
will expose the underside of the underlayment under the tub (if
the builder even bothered to put underlayment under the tub. Either
way, I can easily gain access to the areas where the tub rests,
and insert shimming. Due to the weight of water and people on a
concentrated area, I would 1-by-s cut to 6" lengths rather than
the usual thinner shimming, so that they stay in place forever.
An alternative to shimming is to cut 2 2x4s into 18-24" lengths,
and another into 14" (if you have joists on 16" centers), and build
bridging which can then be nailed into place between the joists
to provide lateral support (depends on which way your tub runs relative
to the joists).
Final warning - when putting in the shims, be very careful about
their thickness, and plane them if necessary to reduce their thickness
to just a hair greater than the open space between the tub and the
support you want to fill. Don't overcompensate and raise the bottom
of the tub higher than what it is when empty, or you will end up
with the reverse problem - humps in the tub bottom - which may
damage/crack the tub.
-reed
|
201.291 | Drop a glop | MAGIC::COTE | | Fri Nov 07 1986 11:10 | 8 |
| In recent new construction I've seen, the builder has poured in
a big glop of concrete before installing the unit. This makes the
space between the unit bottom and underlayment solid, however, it
seems to me that in a retro-fit application, this technique might
be a real pain.
Bill
|
201.292 | Phenoseal did it for me | CYGNUS::VHAMBURGER | Vic Hamburger IND-2/B4 262-8261 | Mon Nov 10 1986 16:29 | 22 |
| I installed one of these fibreglass units about 9 years ago nowand
had a leak. Second floor bathroom, it dampened the kitchen ceiling
until I ripped out a hole to see where the leak was. Couldn't find
a leak for love nor money, ran the water and looked from below and
no drip.......Didn't get a leak until I put weight in the shower
unit and the drain stayed the same height but the shower floor
compressed slightly, then a leak developed at the drain joint.
(anyone care to guess how long that took to find????? MOre than
a few minutes is a good guess, not not long enough!)
Solution was to drill a series of holes, 1/4 " all around the bottom
of the shower stall, and use Phenoseal glue/sealer to fill the area.
Squirt in until it oozed out 2-3 other holes, then seal then off
and start filling another empty hole adjacent to the full holes.
Took about 2 tubes to add 1/4" deep pool of this stuff under shower,
let stand for 2 dasy and it never dripped again.
Don't tell me about removing the shower years from now. It either
is gonna be some other person's headache or I'll use a sawzall and
drop the whole damned affair into the kitchen. The unit was a horror
show to get upstairs into the bathroom originally, it ain't coming
out that way again! 8^)
|
201.293 | plaster of paris | SVCRUS::KROLL | | Thu Nov 20 1986 12:04 | 2 |
| What ever happened to the plaster of paris. They put it under shower
stalls will that work under a tub?
|
201.51 | Painted bathtub disaster | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Sat Dec 06 1986 00:32 | 19 |
| When we moved in 5 years ago, one defect we accepted was the bathtub.
Seems the bottom had previously cracked, and the owners had only the
bottom replaced. So the bottom was a bit dull, and the ring about the
bottom where the new bottom was attached to the old tub was very dull.
(this is all fiberglas)
So, following some (poor) advice, we went out and got some epoxy tub
paint for about $9, and repainted the tub bottom, and since we had
some extra, painted up the sides.
Funny thing about the paint. It absorbs (green) mineral stains, and
rips apart very nicely when you take steel wool to clean it. The
upper sides tear and peel quite well too. So, after five years, we
now have a green-stained bottom, and serrated and peeling sides.
H E L P
What can I do now to restore this to something reasonable without
spending a mint? All suggestions appreciated.
|
201.52 | REPAIRING TUBS | OFFRT9::JOHNSON | | Mon Dec 08 1986 08:32 | 11 |
| MY HUSBAND IS A PLUMBER IN STOW (A&C, INC), ONE OF THE GUYS WHO
USED TO WORK THERE REPAIRS TUBS (CHEAPLY). THE GUY IS AN OLDER
FELLOW WHO LIVES IN HUDSON. HIS NAME IS BOB TURNER (I BELIEVE
EX-COP/TOWN OFFICIAL.) I UNDERSTAND HE DOES A FANTASTIC JOB REPAIRING
SHOWER AND TUB STALLS, ETC. ]
CAN'T HURT TO GIVE A CALL.
DENISE
|
201.53 | get it fixed | KIRK::GOSSELIN | | Wed Dec 10 1986 07:50 | 6 |
| If I were you I would have a fiber-glass repair place come in and
fix it. Pay now or pay later. I had one come in and repair nicks
and scratched in our tub and he was gone in less than an hour. That
was last year and it cost $50. Thgere is one in Leominster.
Ed
|
201.54 | better explanation | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Sat Dec 13 1986 19:54 | 5 |
| I think I explained myself badly: The fiberglas itself is fat and
happy. its the *damn* paint. On the sides - it has peeled many
places, and on the bottom, it has happily absorbed many stains. I
could clean it up and repaint it - but what do I do at the edges of
the current paint - and where do I get a better type of paint? thanx/j
|
201.303 | Retrofit tub wall liners??? | CLOSUS::HOE | | Mon Jan 26 1987 17:15 | 13 |
| Fiberglass or preformed tub wall liners.
We have a 13 year old bath room that needs the tile height added
to keep water from splashing on the walls above the tile line when
our 16 yearold nephew is showering there.
We want to use these new three piece, install over exsisting ceramic
tile type sold by Sears for $79 to $129. Has anyone installed this
type of tub liners?
Any pro/con about them?
/cal hoe
|
201.304 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Jan 27 1987 08:05 | 10 |
| I installed one over sheetrock; worked fine. I was a little stingy
on the glue so it buckled a little (not obvious to anyone except
me who knew where to look!) so I suggest gooping it up real well
when you install it. After all, the adhesive is cheap!
Buy a good-quality one; it will be heavier, and probably stand up
better.
I don't know about intalling one over tile. I can't think of any
problems offhand.
Calk the top edge well so the water doesn't have a chance to get
down in back of it.
|
201.305 | just a word of caution ... | FSTVAX::FOSTER | Frank Foster -- Cincinnati Kid | Tue Jan 27 1987 09:07 | 7 |
| The fiberglass liners that have the pebbled texture are
*extremely* hard to clean if allowed to get the least bit
dirty (like when you buy a house from a family of pigs).
If you are not meticulous housekeepers, stay away from a
textured surface on these things.
Frank
|
201.306 | EDGES? | MAHLER::SAMARAS | Advanced Vax Engineering LTN | Tue Jan 27 1987 09:34 | 8 |
| How do you finish the edges on these wall liners?? What about
the color match. Does it look funie if the tub and walls are not
the exact same color??
thanks,
..bill
|
201.307 | We love ours. | MRMFG1::C_DENOPOULOS | | Wed Jan 28 1987 08:07 | 11 |
| We put a five piece enclosure in our house and I love it. As far
as putting over tile, the only thing I would worry about is how
well the tiles are stuck to the walls. As mentioned earlier, use
plenty of adhesive and caulk the edges. White will go with anything.
One thing to remember, some of them come with a little bar over
the built in soap dish to hang face cloths on. People tend to use
these as handles when trying to get up after taking a bath. This
could either pull the panel away from the wall, or worse than that,
break off and cause an injury.
chris d.
|
201.308 | The fewer the pieces the better... | ALIEN::PETROVIC | If you don't do it, no one will | Wed Jan 28 1987 09:30 | 14 |
| I put in a 3-piece fiberglas unit into our bathroom and can say it's the
best move you can make to ensure a long lasting tub area. As a
suggestion, look for the best 3-piecer you can find. The fewer the seams
the better...no place for water to leak in behind and no place for
mold/mildew to begin growing.
BTW...we got ours from Montgomery_wards on sale for about $125 two years
ago.
Oh, one more thing...although the hand-holds are nice touches, they can
be quite annoying...my father-in-law installed one that has handholds
and niches to put soap, etc. and with the intrusion thay make into the
tub area, you find yourself always brushing up against a cold, wet
shower curtain...
|
201.309 | Clean Liners | FDCV19::FISHMAN | | Wed Jan 28 1987 15:51 | 4 |
| Regarding keeping them clean. I received the reccommendation to
clean the inside once and then coat it with turtle wax. That way
anything on top of it comes off easy. (I have not tried this
because I don't own one).
|
201.310 | more than one way to skin a cat? | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Thu Jan 29 1987 11:29 | 16 |
| re .0
Have you considered putting in a few additional courses of tile?
It was necessary to retile the tub area of our bath room several
years ago shortly after we bought the house. (loose tiles, holes
in the wall, wet, carpenter ants, the whole bit)
It was impossible to find tile to match the rest of the bathroom
-a pale blue- so we bought white tiles speckled with blue for the
tub enclosure. Where the two different colors come together we put
in a course of *black* tile. We also topped of the shower enclosure
with a course of black tiles. It looks very nice, and saved hundreds
of dollars and many hours from retiling the entire bathroom.
herb
|
201.55 | epoxy paint softener? | ZEN::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Sat Apr 25 1987 15:55 | 7 |
| Well - I'm halfway there....One day, after cleaning the (epoxy
painted) tub, i took a razor blade to it, and discovered that the
paint scraped off fairly easily, for a while. Apparently, some
combination of cleansers I used softened the paint, but I've been
unable to recreate it.
What would you use to soften epoxy paint prior to scraping?
|
201.56 | try this | BASHER::HALL | So long and thanks for all the fiche | Sat May 02 1987 05:13 | 5 |
|
try celulose thinners or acetone
Chris H
|
201.234 | Cleaning fiberglass tubs | NETCOM::HANDEL | | Thu Jul 09 1987 10:53 | 7 |
| I have a question about fiberglass tubs - can bleach be used to
clean them safely and effectively?
If not, what will clean them well? I don't think the scrub stuff
really does the job.
Thanks!
|
201.235 | GEL GLOSS | DSTAR::SMICK | Van C. Smick | Thu Jul 09 1987 13:49 | 10 |
| GEL GLOSS is a product specifically developed for fiberglass and
it works very well. You can buy it at many plumbing stores for about
$5, or some discount places for about $2.50. I have heard that
Spags sells it for less than $2.50, if you are willing and able
to shop there.
Good luck
VCS
|
201.236 | Spag's has it cheap | CLT::ZEHNGUT | | Thu Jul 09 1987 14:15 | 4 |
| re .2 Gel Gloss
Spag's has it for $1.99. I've seen it a Somerville lumber for over
$4.00.
|
201.237 | See note 858 for a long discussion on this | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu Jul 09 1987 14:34 | 1 |
|
|
201.238 | Bleach is OK | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Tue Jul 14 1987 11:45 | 4 |
| We had a stain on the bottom of our white fiberglass tub from a
colored skid mat. Half a tub of warm water and a pint of bleach
left overnight took it right out, also brightened the white skid
mat we now use, and had no apparent effect on the septic tank.
|
201.239 | Did you ask the microbes? | TASMAN::EKOKERNAK | | Tue Jul 14 1987 12:32 | 8 |
| re: .5 "...no apparent effect on the septic tank."
Bleach kills the bacteria that makes your septic tank break down
solids. I would not recommend this method if you have a septic
tank.
Elaine
|
201.240 | Occasional use of bleach won't hurt | VIDEO::GOODRICH | Gerry Goodrich | Tue Jul 14 1987 13:13 | 16 |
| re .6
I have used bleach many times and have had no problems in
15 years with a 1000 gal septic tank. I only use it
sporadically and never regularly.
Bleach will be neutralized (used up) by reaction with many
organic compounds. Septic tanks are large and I don't believe
that a single, modest dose can possibly sterilize 1000 gallons
of the type of stuff found in such places. Surviving critters
can reproduce very quickly.
I restrict this opinion to occasional uses, If you bleach
diapers every day things might be different.
- gerry
|
201.241 | | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Tue Jul 21 1987 10:15 | 4 |
|
Agree with .6 - We use bleach to whiten the tub and for the occasional
load of dirty white socks, and have never had a problem with the
septic tank.
|
201.242 | how often is not very often? | ARCHER::FOX | | Tue Jul 21 1987 17:52 | 4 |
| Since everyone's defination of "occasional" is different, and the
people who build and install these things say don't use bleach, I
would tend to stay away from the stuff.
John
|
201.25 | Stripper wanted | AKOV76::BROWN | The more the merrier! | Mon Aug 03 1987 15:49 | 20 |
| This isn't a DIY question - I definitely want someone else to do it!
I have two old-fashioned, claw foot bathtubs that need to have their
outsides repainted but I haven't found anyone to do that work. The
places I've called (like Bath Genie, Marlboro) just do refinishing
and they want big bucks to do inside and outside. I don't need the
inside refinished and all I want on the outside is paint, not shiny
porcelain. Stripping off the old paint is the part I'm avoiding --
any leads? I'd prefer to have someone do the stripping and repainting,
although just the stripping would also be acceptable.
I'll even do the delivery and pickup myself, except for the unloading
part. Anywhere in the southern NH/northern MA area is fine, and I'll
consider driving even further as I become more desperate.
Having spent only $75 for one of the tubs I really can't see spending
$550 for the refinishing -- ouch!!!
Jan who_may_someday_have_the_Victorian_bathroom_she_wants
|
201.26 | | CLOVAX::MARES | | Thu Aug 06 1987 06:40 | 8 |
| I would check with auto body shops. Find one who has sandblasting
capability to remove the old paint. Given that their spray paint
work for automobiles is usually high quality, I would speculate
that the paint job they could do for you would be limited only by
your imagination.
Randy
|
201.322 | Narrow tubs or old fashioned tun enclosures | USWAV1::LASHER | Ben Lasher Boston Software Services | Sun Oct 25 1987 11:04 | 21 |
| I am completely remodeling a very small bath room...about 5' by
6'. I was all set to order a standard size (60"x30"x14") Standard
American tub when I realized I don't have 30" (width) to work with
before hitting the side of the toilet.
Here's my question:
Does anyone know anything about the availability of narrower
bath tubs? The only info I have so far is that several manufacturers
do NOT have narrower tubs available unless you want cast iron.
I am looking for PVC or Fiberglass for cost and weight (installing
myself) reasons. However, the places I have talked to so far don't
sell American Standard.
OR:
Right now I have an old fashioned free standing, four legged
tub. Does anyone know anything about enclosures that can be used
to surround such a tub? Then I could go ahead and tile or buy a
tub surround to enclose the tub area as planned and still use my
existing tub which is only about 26" wide.
|
201.323 | Just a thought ... | PAXVAX::NAYLOR | Mark E. Naylor | Mon Oct 26 1987 20:49 | 8 |
| How about building a frame around the existing tub, then cover the
frame with tile to match the tile on the wall ? Or maybe cover
around the sides of the tub with some wood to match the design of
the bathroom ?
Mark
|
201.324 | Undecided at best | USWAV1::LASHER | Ben Lasher Boston Software Services | Tue Oct 27 1987 22:53 | 23 |
| Yup, a frame for around the tub is what I am starting to think
about. After boxing it in, i should be pretty much free to do what
I want to finish it off, whether it be tile, a tub surround, or
just a shower curtain all the way around like I have now for the
free standing tub.
I've talked with more places, and there just doesn't seem to be
ANY tubs narrower than 30". The negative aspect of using the current
tub is that it is old and really needs some cleanup work or it will
stand out like a sore thumb in a remodeled bathroom. It sounds
(according to other notes) like that will be a non-trivial project
all by itself (which I was not planning on).
I don't know.....I was all set to order my new tub. This hitch
has thrown me off. I have to step back momentarily and re-think
what my options are. I could actually fit a new 30" wide tub in
the space I have, but it would practically be hitting the toilet
bowl.
I could always blow out the outside wall of the bathroom, that would
give me plenty of room!
Ben
|
201.325 | | WELFAR::PGRANSEWICZ | Auhhhhh, I've been slimed! | Thu Oct 29 1987 12:06 | 3 |
| I've heard that these companies that re-finish tubs do a good job.
Is that a possibility?
|
201.326 | REFINISH TUB/OLD FASHIONED LOOK POSSIBLE | USWAV1::LASHER | Ben Lasher Boston Software Services | Fri Oct 30 1987 11:20 | 8 |
| YES, IT IS A POSSIBILITY NOW THAT I REFINISH THE TUB AND GO WITH
AN OLD FASHIONED LOOK IN MY BATHROOM AS OPPOSED TO A MODERN LOOK.
I'VE HEARD VARIOUS COST ESTIMATES FROM 150 TO 500 DOLLARS. IF I
CAN GET THE TUB REDONE FOR A REASONABLE PRICE, THAT MIGHT BE THE
ROUTE I TAKE.
BEN
|
201.327 | | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Tue Nov 03 1987 13:26 | 1 |
| if you do have the tub done please let us know the results.
|
201.256 | Mineral stains in our tub | SQM::SULLIVAN | | Wed Nov 18 1987 16:41 | 5 |
|
We have mineral stains in our tub at home. Can anyone recommend a product
that I can either make myself or purchase that will remove them?
Thx. - Ed
|
201.257 | Lime a-way should do the trick... | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Wed Nov 18 1987 22:04 | 5 |
| Use LIME AWAY it works very well on most stains esp those from hard
water but be sure to use gloves or it will eat at the skin.
-j
|
201.258 | scrub-free (can be hazardous... | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Nov 19 1987 00:16 | 2 |
| Scrub Free does a good job, but be sure to use it in a well-ventilated
area (they ought to have a warning label on it!)
|
201.259 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Nov 19 1987 09:11 | 4 |
| Spag's (of course!) and some plumbing supply places sell some stuff
called Iron-Out, which works very well if the stains are from iron.
It would probably work on other kinds of mineral stains too.
(Side note: Iron-Out is the best toilet bowl cleaner I've ever seen.)
|
201.260 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Nov 19 1987 21:10 | 4 |
| re: -.2
I use tang in my dishwasher, but could never get it to do anything but
make a mess on my tub - how do you use it?
|
201.261 | Citric Acid Crystals...supposed to work... | BEING::PETROVIC | If you don't do it, no one will | Fri Nov 20 1987 09:27 | 5 |
| Just a sidelight, but the owner's manual for our Sears D/W make mention
of removing yellow stains by using a helping of 'citric acid crystals'
which they claim are available from you local druggist.
Still looking...
|
201.262 | They taste good too! | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | It's better in the Bahamas. | Fri Nov 20 1987 10:01 | 3 |
| re: .7
Try your high school chem lab.
|
201.263 | | TOLKIN::RIDGE | | Fri Nov 20 1987 11:47 | 3 |
| I get a green stain from the water. Is this Minerals? I thought
it might be salt. Would Tang work on this also? The inside of the
dishwasher is also stained a green color.
|
201.264 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Fri Nov 20 1987 12:42 | 5 |
| re: .9
It sounds as though you are getting copper stains from your copper
pipes, probably caused by your water being slightly acidic.
I can't say if Tang would do the trick, but it wouldn't cost much
to give it a try....
|
201.265 | Tang again | SALEM::MOCCIA | | Fri Nov 20 1987 13:19 | 10 |
| Re last few
If you check the ingredients list for Tang, you'll find that it
is primarily citric acid crystals. A lot cheaper than buying the
stuff at the drug store.
We just load up the detergent cups and run the dishwasher empty.
pbm
|
201.266 | Soapy film | OPUS::STYLIANOS | | Sun Nov 29 1987 20:53 | 5 |
| Not quite mineral stains BUT you know that soapy film??? no matter
how thick is easily removed with Mineral Spirits...Realy a suprise
to me but it works GREAT.
Tom
|
201.267 | Tang works on earth too! | ANGORA::WATSON | World Renowned Zymurgist | Mon Nov 30 1987 06:58 | 16 |
|
Even with an automatic back-flushing soft-water conditioning
filter system on my well water, i still get mineral stains
on the tub, toilet and dishwasher - though not as badly as
before the filter.
desperate to clean up the dishwasher stain, i tryed running
Tang thru a full cycle. I was impressed. the dishwasher
is white again.
i didn't get as good a result from using it in the tub like
a scouring powder. It's a fiberglass unit and it may already
be permanently beyond hope but i think i'll draw up a Tang
bath and let it soak awhile.
bob
|
201.62 | REMOVING BATHTUB WATER SPOUT | SETH::IVANY | | Tue Dec 29 1987 06:55 | 11 |
| I am in the process of installing a new tub surround unit and
ran into a small problem. I am having trouble getting the chrome
spout off. I believe it should screw off the copper pipe, but it
seems to be rusted or corroded on and will not budge easily. Any
suggestions or hints on getting it off without breaking or
damaging the copper water supply plumbing? If I have to I will
apply a big wrench, see what gives first and repair the damages,
but I'd rather not take this approach for obvious reasons.
Thanks Wayne
|
201.63 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Tue Dec 29 1987 07:45 | 9 |
|
It really should not matter if you ruin the pipe that attaches
to the spout. It should be about a 5" pipe that is threaded on both
ends and should be easy to replace. I would put a pipe wrench on
the spout and make it come off !
-Steve-
|
201.64 | no gorilla touch needed | AIMHI::BERNARD | | Tue Dec 29 1987 12:38 | 31 |
|
Caution!!!! Sometimes "Putting the wrench to it" may end up causing
more headaches than you can to imagine.
Some history is needed to fully assess your situation, like how
old is the plumbing etc..
I'll make assumptions that it's more than 10 yrs. old since you
are changing the surround. The little nipple that goes from the
watter supply to the spout is usually soldered, not threaded to
the supply pipe, then as you mentioned, the exterior spout is threaded
into the nipple. HOWEVER, I've seen many cases where the nipple
is threaded at both ends. If this is the case, and the threads going
to the supply pipe strip out, then you will need to fix that pipe.
You also run the risk of cracking the joint where the nipple and
supply pipe meet and causing a slow leak that won't be apparent
until well after your brand new surround is installed.
What I would do is to heat the spout and GENTLY work it with your
big wrench. If it's corrosion, the heat will loosen it and
then the spout will come off without damaging anything else.
You should also check under the spout to see if there's any sort
of locking pin that prevents it from spinning.
As for -1, I'd take his advice only if he would commit to pay for
the consequences.....
Good luck
JMB
|
201.65 | Try using a hammer handle! | SALEM::ISAACS | | Thu Dec 31 1987 10:37 | 5 |
| Instead of using a wrench to get the spout off try puting a piece
of wood such as the handle of a hammer in the spout to use as a
lever to turn the spout. That's what I did with mine and it came
off quite easily, but my plumbing isn't very old either. Just a
suggestion to avoid wrench marks.
|
201.66 | | MENTOR::REG | It was 20 years ago next May | Thu Dec 31 1987 14:05 | 14 |
|
This maybe too obvious to mention in such a knowledgeable
community, but if something that is screwed/rusted on real tight
and won't budge, it sometimes helps to try tightening it first.
The reasons seem to be:-
i) It may in fact be a left handed thread where you least expect
it, not saying that is the case here.
ii) It has the effect of helping to break some of the micro bonds.
Since nothing is totally rigid (yeah, *NOTHING*) flexing in
the opposite direction distributes the forces differently and
this can actually loosen it up just enough.
Reg
|
201.67 | | SETH::IVANY | | Mon Jan 04 1988 07:20 | 8 |
| I got it off over the weekend, thanks for all the suggestions.
I sprayed it with penetrating oil for a couple of days, and was
able to get it off without too much trouble. I'm not sure if the
penatrating oil helped or if I was just too nervous about breaking
the plumbing and didn't apply enough force when I first tried to
get it off. Again, thanks for the suggestions.
Wayne
|
201.57 | In case somebody is browsing. Try f5f | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Thu Jan 21 1988 18:06 | 2 |
| F5F does a *superb* job of cutting epoxy paint
|
201.58 | | MILT::JACKSON | Postcards from paradise | Fri Jan 22 1988 08:09 | 8 |
| I think you got the F and the 5 Mixed up.
The product you mentioned is called 5F5, not F5F!
fingers going faster than the brain, eh?
-bill
|
201.59 | yup 5F5 not f5f | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Fri Jan 22 1988 09:39 | 4 |
| re 7 5f5 INDEED
thnx for correction
|
201.60 | Will 5F5 eat fiberglass? | CNTROL::JULIEN | | Fri Jan 22 1988 10:07 | 4 |
| RE: .6
I would be a little leery using a paint remover on fiberglass,
Don't really know what it would do, but you may end up with a much
bigger problem than you started with.....
|
201.61 | | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Fri Jan 22 1988 10:25 | 7 |
| > I would be a little leery using a paint remover on fiberglass,
> Don't really know what it would do, but you may end up with a much
> bigger problem than you started with.....
For a good chuckle on this subject, see note 147.40
Paul
|
201.68 | Problems getting HW in bathtub | TOLKIN::MENDES | | Mon Jan 25 1988 12:38 | 10 |
| I am having a problem getting hot water in my downstairs
bathtub/shower. The water flows readily from both the faucet and
shower head when the dial is toward COLD, but as the dial is turned
toward HOT the flow becomes less and less and ultimately slows to
a trickle when the dial is all the way towards HOT. The flow from
the sink in the same bathroom is fine, however.
Any ideas on what could be wrong and what can be done to fix it?
Thanks for you help.
|
201.69 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Jan 25 1988 12:47 | 7 |
| How long has this problem existed? "Forever", or has it happened
just recently? Did it just start happening one day, or has it
been gradually getting worse?
One obvious idea:
Is the hot water shutoff valve in the line feeding the shower turned
off? (it's probably in the basement)
|
201.70 | | TOLKIN::MENDES | | Mon Jan 25 1988 13:31 | 11 |
| This has been going on since we bought the house in August. At
first, the dial would have to be almost all the way toward HOT before
being at a comfortable temperature, but the pressure was fine.
Then, the pressure and the ability to get hot water got progressively
worse to the point where the tub/shower cannot be used (it's on
the first floor so it gets little use, which is why I'm only getting
around to fixing it now).
I followed the hot water line from the tub to the basement. The
line feeds both the tub and the sink. As I mentioned, the sink's
pressure/hot water is fine.
|
201.71 | Skip this reply if your're not a Licensed Plumber :-) | CHART::CBUSKY | | Mon Jan 25 1988 13:49 | 7 |
| I sounds like something is wrong with the faucet. Shut off the supply
to the tub and take the faucet apart looking for broken and/or
dislodged parts. Then you can begin looking for replacement parts
and/or the whole valve assembly. Warning: be prepared not to turn this
water back on for a while. :-) One of the joys of plumbing.
Charly
|
201.72 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Jan 26 1988 09:54 | 4 |
| re: .3
Ditto. No bright ideas about any specific cause; just take the
faucet apart and look.
|
201.73 | need more info please | ATEAM::COVIELLO | | Tue Jan 26 1988 12:21 | 10 |
|
do you have hot water heater or tankless and also how old if
tankless. do you have well or town water. the reason for the water
coming out better in the sink is the smaller diameter pipe. my in
laws have the same problem we have narrowed it down to it being
the heating system being 25+ yrs old w/tankless hot water that all
the coils have been getting smaller in dia. he is on well water.
hope this helps
paul
|
201.74 | previous owner was a miser | HARPO::CACCIA | the REAL steve | Tue Jan 26 1988 15:15 | 10 |
|
I had the same problem in the house I just moved into. The sink
shower was fine, the kitchen sink was fine the washer feed was fine
but ht ebathroom sink sank.
took apart the valve and found a rubber flow restrictor - not a
gasket but onr of the water miser thingies. No more trickle now
we get a good full flow.
|
201.75 | Do you get HOT water for the bath? | MTBLUE::MITCHELL_GEO | ya snooze...ya lose! | Wed Jan 27 1988 13:13 | 7 |
|
Its in the mixing valve. If its a major "namebrand" you can
probably get new parts....if not, spring for a new one...about
$100
___GM___
|
201.76 | | TOLKIN::MENDES | | Thu Jan 28 1988 13:06 | 13 |
| re .5:
Yes, it is a tankless system with well water. It is only three
years old, however.
re .7:
Please excuse my ignorance, but...what exactly does a mixing valve
look like? I looked in my "Readers Digest fix-it book, but could not
find this part detailed.
|
201.77 | | MILT::JACKSON | You gotta have LUNCH WITH ED | Thu Jan 28 1988 14:42 | 25 |
| Is it a "Temptrol" Valve? (they're the most common single valve
shower fixtures that I've seen)
If so, remove the handle, then unscrew the plastic cap (right under
the handle, it's about 1.5 inches across). The brass thing underneath
is the mixing valve.
The temptrol valves will not allow any water to flow if one of the
other supplies is shut off, so I seriously doubt that you have a
restriction in the Hot supply line. I'd take the valve apart and
check to see if there's any junk in the valve. You may also want
to take the mixing valve out and turn the water back on to try
to flush out the housing just in case there's something inside.
Next, when you put it back together, there's a small screw on the
face of the housing. That adjusts "how hot" the water can get.
Turn it all the way out, then turn the water on to the hottest you'd
like to see it. Next turn the screw in until it stops. This will
ensure that you don't scald yourself by hitting the faucet by accident
It sounds to me like there's either something in the mixing valve,
or the mixing valve is bad.
-bill
|
201.78 | Do we need another topic? | CHESS::KAIKOW | | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:18 | 13 |
| re: 1898.8
>I looked in my "Readers Digest fix-it book, but could not find this
>part detailed.
Is there a topic somewhere in this conference that discusses recommended
"fix it yourself" books?
There are so many on the market, I'm so confused!
If there is no existing topic, then we should start one rather than reply to
this note.
|
201.79 | | MENTOR::REG | Not B-M-B '88 disqualified; ...YET ! | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:51 | 3 |
|
I'd bet its the anti scald valve.
|
201.80 | mixing valves described | CENSRD::SCANLAND | Elvis needs boats | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:28 | 29 |
| re: mixing valve
Yep they exist and that's what they're called. Real common on older
"tankless" systems and I guess they may be used on some newer units.
My 35 year old American Standard for example. The tankless system is
mounted in the top half of the furnace. Cold water enters the coils and
is heated very hot (>200 degrees). Leaving the furnace it enters the
mixing valve :
Hot water to sinks, showers etc
^
|
Very Hot water |
from furance >--------[ ] mixing valve
|
^
<--to furnace-----|----< cold water
The mixing valve is MANUALLY adjusted to mix cold with the very hot
leaving usable (ie 125-140 degree) hot water. This is somewhat
problematic in that varying cold input temps (winter vs. summer) cause
a slight varience in household hot water temp.
these things can clog with age and do have repalceable innards (tehnical
plumbing term, that).
Chuck
|
201.81 | no go... | TOLKIN::MENDES | | Mon Feb 01 1988 14:53 | 8 |
| Over the weekend, I flushed the housing, fiddled with the anti-scald
valve, and flushed the mixing valve with water...still no go. The
mixing valve (the one in the Temptrol valve, not the one described
in .12) seems to be a pretty basic part. Aside from the accumulation
of dirt, what can go wrong with it? It's a relatively expensive
part ($25), so is there something else anyone can think of before
I open my moth-infested wallet?
|
201.82 | | 3D::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Tue Feb 02 1988 07:39 | 8 |
|
Have you tried taking the shower head off and checking for
obstructions or is this a problem with the bath water spout
also ?
-Steve-
|
201.83 | If it doesn't rattle, it's frozen | CIMNET::NMILLER | | Tue Feb 02 1988 08:16 | 19 |
| RE: 13
I just played with (and fixed) a Temptrol this weekend for a bath
tub that stopped giving much in the way of cold water. Once you've
got the mixing valve out, give it a shake. If it doesn't rattle,
it's frozen. Give it a whack or two and see if it frees up. I soaked
mine in vinegar for a day, whacked it a few times and it came back
to life. Since I've got two of these valves in the house, I may
decide to buy a spare so that I don't have to shut down a bathroom
during the requisite overnight vinegar treatment. Give it a try
and good luck.
BTW, as you are removing or reinstalling this valve, put the mixing
handle back on and make sure you can turn the valve as you are
tightening/loosening (i.e., don't have it turned all the way to
on or off). Also, be careful not to put your wrench near the
adjusting screw on the face of the valve - I once destroyed one
of these beggars by torquing the housing around the screw.
|
201.84 | | TOLKIN::MENDES | | Tue Feb 02 1988 12:12 | 1 |
| Re .14: It happens with both.
|
201.85 | Another mixing valve story | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Thu Feb 04 1988 00:10 | 13 |
| We recently had a similar problem which was due to the mixing valve
described in .12. We were told that this valve actually has a
thermostat in it; not sure if I believed that. I found that when the
water in the shower wasn't hot, jiggling the mixing valve (which
sometimes resulted in an audible -ping- from the valve) would
fix the problem for a while (sometimes for a couple of weeks,
sometimes just for the morning).
This problem affected all the domestic hot water supplied. The
most unusual part is the fact that when I finally got around
to calling the oil company to come service the thing, the guy
showed up 20 minutes later. (He had just finished another service
call in the same town.)
|
201.86 | More ideas | ULTRA::STELL | Doug Stell, LTN2-2/C08, Pole J9, DTN 226-6082 | Thu Feb 04 1988 10:33 | 23 |
| I'm a little confused after reading the initial problem and all
the correspondence since. Therefore, I'll start at the top.
If the problem is limited to the shower and not any place else,
I'd look closely at the shower valve. The anti-scald valve in
the show control is the first thing to go after. Some shower controls
also have separate restriction valves on the hot and cold lines
and the hot side could be turned off. (The show I just put in has
these.)
If the hot water anywhere in the house is hot for a while and then
cools off under heavy usage, I'd go after the common elements.
The mixing valve, descussed previously, in one candidate. Another
is scale on the heat exchanger in the boiler which provides an
insulating layer inside the pipes. In a privious house in Acton,
I had to flush the heat exchanger out with acid several times a
year. It was often enough to justify putting in the valves and
connections so that I could do it myself without having to call
anybody or take anything apart. I would have to take apart and
clean the mixing valve with about the same frequency.
doug
|
201.87 | Clean out inside of valve | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Fri Feb 05 1988 23:50 | 17 |
| The standard mixing valve used in showers (the Symmons Temptrol is
the most popular) does NOT have a thermostat. What it does is
balance the PRESSURE between the cold and hot lines. This way
if you have a sudden pressure change in one line (say by flushing
a toilet), it simultaneously reduces the pressure in the other
line, keeping the temperature stable.
Now these things work with a little piston that slides back and forth
inside the valve. This piston can get stuck. When I installed one,
it was stuck at first, and I could only get hot water out. With
a big enough pipe wrench, I was able to disassemble the thing, clean
out the piston cylinder (it had gotten some plastic pipe shards
inside), and put it back together - worked like a champ.
I would suspect a similar problem.
Steve
|
201.311 | After Caulking The Top and Bottom... | STAR::GEORGES | John Georges | Thu Feb 11 1988 17:46 | 4 |
| How do you finish off the two outside (vertical) edges of the tub
liner? Just make sure to put plenty of adhesive near the edges?
-John-
|
201.312 | Installing a 2 piece tub/surround | SALEM::PAGLIARULO | | Thu Feb 18 1988 12:49 | 26 |
| I'm installing a 2 piece tub and surround unit for the first time
and need some ideas/tips/pointers etc. I've torn everything down to
the studs. I imagine I just attach the upper section to the studs and
don't need to sheetrock behind the surround.
Am I right or do I need the sheetrock to provide a backing for gluing
the surround to? I plan to tile from the top of the surround
to the ceiling and so will have to sheetrock (green) this area anyway.
Should I just go and do the whole thing?
As far as the floor goes I had to pull up the complete subfloor
and am going to put down a new one. Should the tub go in first?
The tub I pulled out sat on the floor joists. Does the fiberglass
tub do the same?
A lot of these questions may be answered with installation instructions
but I haven't taken delivery of the unit yet and so don't know if
it comes with any.
Thanks for any help
George
Thanks for any help
George
|
201.313 | Installation of 2 piece tub/shower | SALEM::PAGLIARULO | | Mon Feb 22 1988 22:40 | 13 |
| Let me try this one more time. The 2 piece tub/shower unit was
delivered today - without instructions. After looking at it
installation of teh tub seems pretty straight foward, not too much
different from installing a traditional tub but I still have a couple
of questions. After I install the tub, when I install the upper unit
should I caulk between the two? Do I put a line of caulk between
the two halves before I assemble them or do I caulk the gap after
their together? Do the upper and lower unit need to be screwed
to each other at perimeter where they join?
Thanks,
George
|
201.90 | Removing bathtub adhesive | BRUTUS::JULIEN | | Tue Apr 12 1988 12:06 | 2 |
| Does anyone know how to remove those adhesives that
are sometimes put on the floor of bathtubs to prevent slipping?
|
201.91 | | AIMHI::FLECCHIA | | Tue Apr 12 1988 15:48 | 2 |
| I used finger nail polish remover. Worked great.
|
201.92 | Acetone | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Tue Apr 12 1988 16:22 | 6 |
|
.1 beat me to the answer. The active ingredient in fingernail polish
remover is acetone, a good non-polar solvent.
-tm
|
201.93 | check tub material | NSSG::FEINSMITH | | Wed Apr 13 1988 10:02 | 4 |
| ref .1 and .2, thats probably fine for a porcelain tub, but I'm
not sure what acetone will do to a fiberglass type tub.
Eric
|
201.94 | | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Wed Apr 13 1988 10:48 | 10 |
|
Re: .3
Good point. Acetone "eats" many plastics, so I wouldn't use it
on PVC or Fiberglass withouth testing first. Sometimes mineral
oil/baby oil can be used to help remove gummy residues from many
types of stickers. I would try that first if I had a platic tub.
-tm
|
201.243 | Refinish fiberglas? | CHOVAX::GILSON | | Thu Apr 14 1988 13:03 | 17 |
| After trying many of the suggestions supplied in previous notes,
I've concluded that our tub surround was permanently damaged by
whatever our builder used to clean paint off the unit while the
house was under construction. It was built on spec and we did not
find out until recently that vandals spray painted. The builder
had to replace the vanity cabinet but used some kind of solvent
to clean the fixtures. The fiberglas looked fine when we move in
but has become very grimy looking and stained and nothing I've tried
makes an appreciable difference. We will have to wait a very long
time and have little chance of getting recourse from the builder
since he is in bankrupcy.
Is there a way to refinish the fiberglas on the premises? I would have
tear out the doorway and enlarge the opening to get it in and out.
Morale: If you buy a house built on spec, ask the neighbors if
it was ever vandalized during construction.
|
201.27 | 2 inch crack in bottom of fiberglass tub | YACC::DAVIDSON | | Wed May 11 1988 18:15 | 4 |
| There is a small crack in the bottom of my fiberglass tub/shower
enclosure. Can this be repaired, or do I need a new tub?
|
201.273 | Leaky Tub! | DECSIM::TAYLOR | | Mon May 16 1988 15:05 | 29 |
|
Argh! I have a second floor bathroom leak. The layout of the room
is :
+------------------------------------+-+
| +---+ | | | |
| +---+ |B| o C |D| Closet
| 0 | | | |
| +-+---------------------|_|-------------
| x
|
| E Master Bedroom
|-------------------------+
| +-----+ | |-| A = vanity and sink
| A | o | | | | B = wall
| +-----+ | | | C = tub
+-------------------------| | | D = wall
E = doorway
The leak occurs at point x, water coming from under the doorway
frame. Tonight I'll check whether filling the tub, draining the
tub, or running the shower causes it. There is no leakage through
the ceiling (thank goodness) which I'd expect if there were a drain
leak rather than getting water at the opposite end of the tub.
Anyone have any guesses?
Mathew T.
|
201.274 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Mon May 16 1988 16:19 | 10 |
|
Is there any other plumbing on the other side of the door
or in the closet? The toilet and the drain for the tub are
both on the left side of the diagram indicating plumbing would
be in wall "B", making leaks from the piping unlikely near the
door. What kind of material is the tub made from, fiberglass
or enamel? Have you checked to see if something is leaking
in the attic (if you have one) above wall "D" and making its
way down to the second floor? Does it leak all the time, only
when it rains, or only when you use something in the bathroom?
|
201.275 | | SHOREY::SHOREY | a legend in his own mind... | Mon May 16 1988 17:33 | 12 |
| i'll hazard a guess that the shower head is at the 'x' end of the
tub. if so, that's where i'll bet the leak is coming from.
if the head is at the other end of the tub you could almost count
that out.
if you do confirm that the problem is in the shower head, you can
probably get at it through the closet.
good luck,
bs
|
201.276 | Caulking okay? | DECWET::MCWILLIAMS | Brian @ DECwest, 206.865.8837 | Mon May 16 1988 19:28 | 9 |
| I don't know if this is relevant in your situation or not, but double-check
your caulking around the tub. Even the tiniest little gaps or holes can
result in substantial leakage during a leisurely shower.
Not too long ago I cut a hole in a wall thinking my plumbing had sprung a leak,
only to find that caulking was the problem. Seems the weight of a person
in the tub/shower was enough to create leaks in the caulk not seen otherwise.
-Brian
|
201.277 | caulking hint | NSSG::FEINSMITH | | Tue May 17 1988 10:53 | 7 |
| Re .3, an trick taught to me by an old plumber was to fill the tub
before caulking. That way, when the water was let out, the caulk
was under compression (which it does well), rather than caulking
while emply and when water is in it, the tub goes down slightly,
causing the caulk to be under tension (which it does poorly).
Eric
|
201.278 | Tub in the Twilight Zone!!! | DECSIM::TAYLOR | | Tue May 17 1988 14:27 | 17 |
| The shower head is on the toilet side.
Well - last night, I tried as hard as I could to re-create the
situation. First - filled the tub - no leak. Then let the water
out - no leak. Then ran the shower - no leak! Then - pointed the
showerhead at the opposite wall and ran it at full blast for 7 minutes
or so - no leak!!!
I think somebody's playing games with my head. I have some caulk
and there were gaps in the tile by the soap dish handle so I recaulked
anywhere I saw there might be a need. I'll write again as I
get more info.
I'm confused.
Mathew
|
201.279 | Get someone to watch underneath | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue May 17 1988 14:46 | 12 |
| Get someone to watch from below while you take a bath, shower, or
whatever seems to cause the problem - we did this one, and the problem
turned out to be the pipe going up to the shower head from the mixing
valve - we thought the drain pipe was leaking because that was where
the water would appear (for some reason, it is real unusual for
someone to be in the laundry room when someone else is in the shower
- just doesn't seem to be a normal combination of events!). Boy,
that was a mess to replace, too - after we had already recaulked
the tub, etc., figuring we knew where the water was coming from
- although there was already an access hole cut in the wall (over
a stairwell- real good planning on someone's part: you have to balance
a ladder on the steps to work on it!), at least!
|
201.95 | paint thinner | VOLGA::J_BENNETT | Janice Bennett DTN 241-3522 | Thu May 19 1988 13:20 | 7 |
|
I've had much success using paint thinner to remove gummy residues on
the plastic shower unit, glass panels, vinyl flooring, etc. Be
careful to clean up the oily residue thinner leaves behind on flooring
- it can be slippery.
JB
|
201.96 | nail polish isn't acetone anymore... | YODA::BARANSKI | The far end of the bell curve | Wed Jun 15 1988 17:13 | 0 |
201.97 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Wed Jun 15 1988 23:46 | 5 |
| Re: .6
If you get "oily" nail polish remover, it is still acetone.
Steve
|
201.199 | How to get past trap to clear tub clog? | TLE::THORSTENSEN | | Tue Aug 02 1988 14:14 | 11 |
| My tub drain is clogged. It's the kind with the metal arms
inside the pipes - with no visible way to disassemble it
without losing the pieces down into the pipes.
I've tried DRAIN-O, a thin wire snake, and a plunger. No
luck so far. the trap is somewhere in the ceiling of the
floor below and I don't feel like making holes in the
plaster to find it.
From the sound of the water, I suspect that the clog is
within 1 foot of the drain. Any suggestions?
|
201.200 | 353 | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Tue Aug 02 1988 14:55 | 13 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. These topics were found
using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you may find other notes relating
to this subject by examining the directory yourself.
If for any reason, after examining these notes, you wish to continue the
discussion here, send me mail.
Paul [Moderator]
|
201.201 | This note reopened by request of the author | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Wed Aug 03 1988 15:22 | 19 |
| This mail was sent to me by the author, and I thought I'd post it as it gave
more information.
I read note 353 as you suggested and it isn't very helpful. I don't
like the idea of pouring sulfuric acid down my drain --- especially
since DRAINO is an acid and it didn't work. Calling roto-router isn't
a good solution, either. The last time I did that they socked me
for $125 and went through the trap.
The problem is that I don't want to ruin the downstairs ceiling by
digging out the trap and since the problem is close to the drain
stopper, there *must* be a way to disassemble the drain stopper
to allow a regular pipe snake to fit in. The drain mechanism looks
to be thee kind of thing that if you unscrew the screws you'll lose
pieces into the pipe. But I can't believe that drain construction
would be so poorly designed as to require removing pipes and traps
in the event of a plug.
|
201.202 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Aug 03 1988 15:40 | 11 |
| I think Draino is alkaline (lye), not acid, but that's a nit....
I don't know of any way of getting all that stopper stuff
out of the drain other than by disassembly, mostly from
the outside (i.e. what is hidden in your ceiling). There
may be a way, but I don't know about it.
Did you let the Draino sit for a while, like overnight?
If the clog is hair (and it probably is), it will take a
while to break down. Of course, if you've got kids and
one of them dropped a plastic toy down there....
|
201.203 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Aug 03 1988 15:42 | 3 |
| I assume you've discovered that the plug will pull up and
out of the drain to some extent, although it will remain
attached to the metal arm business.
|
201.204 | soap is made from lye & fat | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Resident curmudgeon | Wed Aug 03 1988 16:02 | 6 |
| In my bathroom, the trap is also hidden and the pipe is slow. Lye
(Liquid Plum'r, Drano, etc.) helps a little but not a lot. I'm
told that the typical problem on OLD pipes like mine is that soap
crud accumulates. Since soap is alkaline, Drano doesn't dissolve
it. Boiling water didn't, either. Is there any alternative to
sulfuric acid? And if not, how does one SAFELY use it on old pipes?
|
201.205 | Coat Hnager | CURIE::BBARRY | | Wed Aug 03 1988 17:48 | 2 |
| Have you tried a bent coat hanger or is that what you call a thin
wire snake. Put a small hook in the end to catch any hair.
|
201.206 | | SMURF::WALLACE | Life's a beach, then you dive! | Wed Aug 03 1988 17:59 | 9 |
|
RE: 0
You should be able to disassemble the drain plug in the overflow
tube if it is the type of drain where the plug is located ver-
ically in the overflow tube. If it is the type where the plug
is in the drain shoe, then I believe your only option is to
disconnect the drain.
|
201.207 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | Dry, sober and home with his wife | Thu Aug 04 1988 14:49 | 12 |
| Ah, the fun times of trying to undo a clogged tub drain.
Here's what's always worked for me. Try your trusty old toilet
plunger! You have to make sure that you hold something over the
overflow opening on the front of the tub (a small sink plunger works
very well for this by the way), fill the tub with enough water and
then plunge away. You'll be able to hear the water sloshing back
and forth in the pipe, and lots of goo will come up into the tub,
but you WILL break up the clog.
-bill
|
201.208 | he who takes the plunge, return it by tuesday | HPSTEK::EKOKERNAK | | Thu Aug 04 1988 16:37 | 3 |
| re: .8 I second the plunger method. It worked for me!
Elaine
|
201.209 | if the 'normal' plunger fails | CADSYS::BRUEN | | Thu Aug 04 1988 16:46 | 13 |
| I had a nasty clog that I was unable to effectively get at
with a snake, and disassembly was also not an option. The
'normal' plunger trick also did not work; however I found
that Taylor Rental rents a 'kinetic water plunger' that was
quite effective. The 'kinetic water plunger' uses air
pressure and/or water pressure to release clogs. They rent
the tool for about $15 per day and you only need it for about
five actual minutes. Very easy to use and VERY quick at solving
the problem.
If you have already used a liquid or crystal drain opener
be careful, no matter what method you decide on, not to get
any splash back in your eyes etc.....
|
201.210 | | SHOREY::SHOREY | a legend in his own mind... | Mon Aug 08 1988 11:44 | 4 |
| i've had good luck putting the hose on my shop-vac over the opening
and vaccuming out hair and whatever else is stuck in the drain.
bs
|
201.211 | My tub overfloweth... | JULIET::MILLER_PA | Have you hugged your Logistician? | Mon Aug 08 1988 12:11 | 20 |
| There is another way to get the clog out using common household
items...
Take your garden hose and wrap the end with an old towel (leave
about two/three inches of the hose extending beyond the towel wrap).
Block any overflow openings and turn the hose on, holding the exposed
end down the drain and holing the towel part tight against the opening
of the drain.
It is better to have someone help you on this one,i.e. to turn the
hose on and off.
This works on sinks, tubs, and toilets.
But remember...
COVER ALL OVERFLOW OPENINGS. or you will have a real mess.
PATRICK
|
201.212 | horror story | SKINUT::GROSSO | | Mon Aug 15 1988 14:04 | 24 |
| Well, I don't mean to be discouraging but would like to share my
experience. I had a slow tub drain when I bought my house. Real
slow. Like don't take two showers the same day. It was one of
those drains where the stopped was a real long articulated affair
and there was no seive or cross hair. I tried plunging and snaking.
Never tried the garden hose trick though. I eventually went to
the basement and removed the bottom from a drum trap which allowed
me to get a snake in the line. After much effort I succeeded in
pushing a shampoo bottle cap up into the tub. That sucker was nearly
a perfect fit.
So gleefully I closed up the trap, cleaned the snake and put away
all my tools and took a shower. Water still didn't drain. Repeat.
Like total repeat.
Previous malicious tenants had shoved TWO shampoo caps down that
drain.
|
201.213 | | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Mon Aug 15 1988 15:40 | 21 |
|
-.1> It was one of those drains where the stopped was a real long
-.1> articulated affair and there was no seive or cross hair.
-.1> Previous malicious tenants had shoved TWO shampoo caps down that
-.1> drain.
I can sympathize with your situation, but really, that could easily
happen accidentally. A couple of times I've had the cap to a tube of
toothpaste fall into the sink drain. I could easily envision a tenant
unscrewing the cap from a shampoo bottle putting it on the floor or tub
edge, and then having it fall in. The first cap probably didn't even
cause a problem. Many tenants don't call a landlord when things like
this happen, out of fear of having the rent raised (for being a
nuisance), losing deposit money, etc.
Never attribute anything to maliciousness before ruling out accidents,
stupidity or laziness (my house is living proof of this rule).
-tm
|
201.214 | caps, caps, have we got caps! | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | or my evil twin stealing my account | Tue Aug 16 1988 17:21 | 12 |
| re:.13,.14
You want toothpaste caps?
I own a condo (rented) which, when I bought it, had a very old bathroom
with a very slow drain. I had it renovated and put in a new sink.
When the old sink was removed (it too lacked cross-hairs), the pipe
(past the trap) was FILLED with toothpaste caps. And the stub left
going into the wall was FILLED with them. After they were removed,
there were STILL caps in the wall going down, leaving a slow drain.
I doubt it will ever be really fixed.
fred
|
201.28 | Is This a DIY Project? | KAOFS::MUNROE | | Tue Aug 23 1988 15:57 | 4 |
| Is refinishing/resurfacing a tub, a do-it-yourself project? Or, is
it too difficult?
Terry
|
201.215 | Better late than never... 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Fri Oct 14 1988 10:57 | 9 |
| Ok, so... I'm a little late! This is a BIG file! 8^)
I assume the problem was corrected by now, but for future reference, if you
need to disassemble the stopper, and fear losing the small hardware, a cow
magnet becomes an invaluable tool!
Just an idea...
Bob
|
201.216 | Moooo! | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:34 | 4 |
| RE .-1
> a cow magnet becomes an invaluable tool!
Are these sold at feed stores?
|
201.217 | You mean they don't GROW inside the cow? | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Mon Oct 17 1988 12:34 | 6 |
|
Not sure where you can buy them fresh, but your local slaughter house
will usually have a bunch of used ones around!
Bob
|
201.218 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Tue Oct 18 1988 04:32 | 5 |
| re.17
Feed stores carry them.
-j
|
201.219 | Cow Magnet??? | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Tue Oct 18 1988 10:54 | 4 |
| What the bull (pun intended) is a cow magnet?
Ed..
|
201.220 | | MTWAIN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Oct 18 1988 11:20 | 2 |
| It's a magnet you feed to a cow to attract and hold any bits of
wire, etc. that the cow may ingest, so they don't hurt the cow.
|
201.221 | you're kidding.... | FDCV14::DUNN | Karen Dunn 223-2651 | Wed Oct 19 1988 12:54 | 8 |
|
let me get this straight.
You feed a cow a magnet so it will sit in its stomach and collect any
metal that it ate so it won't pass through it's intestines and hurt
it??
I guess that makes sense.
|
201.222 | I've heard of 9 lives, ut 8 stomaches? | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Wed Oct 19 1988 13:00 | 7 |
|
Yup...thats about the gist of it... Only thing I haven't figured
out is *WHICH* stomach the magnet ends up in... Cows have eight!
Bob
|
201.223 | sure about 8 ??? | PENUTS::DUDLEY | | Wed Oct 19 1988 13:44 | 1 |
| thought they had 4.
|
201.224 | Wouldn't be the first time I was accused of seeing double! 8-) | MISFIT::DEEP | This NOTE's for you! | Wed Oct 19 1988 14:24 | 0 |
201.225 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Wed Oct 19 1988 15:54 | 5 |
| >
> thought they had 4.
>
"well, they were designed for 8, and marketing finally announced the
upgrade"
|
201.226 | | CRAIG::YANKES | | Wed Oct 19 1988 15:57 | 3 |
|
But how do you make sure that the drain isn't clogged by heavy
air? You might need a small air shredder in addition to a cow magnet.
|
201.227 | (Smirk) | SALEM::MOCCIA | | Wed Oct 19 1988 16:24 | 4 |
| The magnet would be the more attractive (heh, heh) solution.
pbm
|
201.228 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Thu Oct 20 1988 05:03 | 7 |
| Not that it matters but the magnet stays in the 1st or 2nd stomach.
BTW- Cows use air shredders as a ventilation aid to prevent methane
concentrations from building up which is the reason why you dont see
many exploding cows.
-j
|
201.229 | For smaller applications, I'd assume... | 21532::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Sat Oct 22 1988 17:59 | 4 |
| But can you find used air shredders at the slaughterhouse (as you
can used cow magnets)?
Dick
|
201.230 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Mon Oct 24 1988 05:07 | 8 |
| re.30
Sadly no they are quickly snapped up by the attendants and sold
on the blackmarket to 3rd world countrys that lack the technology
to develop shredders equal to ours. Inside connections refuse to
disclose how the used shredders are transported out of the country
but spectulations of covered-up government involvement abound.
-j
|
201.231 | But we answer to a higher authority :-) | CSSE32::NICHOLS | HERB | Mon Oct 24 1988 09:21 | 11 |
| Furthermore, the air shredders would not pass the Federal EPA & Osha
standards for sale in USA. It has become common practice to sell to the
3rd world, products that cannot be sold domestically.
p.s.
the shredders have not been approved for use in the abatoirs by
the Rabbinical Council of America either, but that's another story.
herb
|
201.232 | What?? no keyword for AIR_SHREDDER??? | TRAFIC::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Wed Oct 26 1988 16:38 | 11 |
| I was trying to find more information on air shredders,
and to my dismay, dir 1111.*/title=air_shredder gave nothing!
Can it be that we don't have a keyword for this valuable piece
of equipment??? ;^)
Remarkable!
Actually, I was trying to find the note on fireplaces where air
shredders first came up. Anybody remember?
Kevin
|
201.233 | found using 1111.1 (INFORMATION_AND_FUN) | LAVC::CAHILL | Jim Cahill | Wed Oct 26 1988 17:41 | 3 |
| See 1906 (the fun starts around .29).
Jim
|
201.29 | They do Fiberglass | HPSCAD::FENNELL | Tim Fennell | Thu Jan 26 1989 09:45 | 22 |
|
I just called Bathtub Genie in Marlboro today. To re-finish a fiberglass
one piece tub they want $450 for white or $480 for color. They will match
colors of major fixture manufacturers, so you can get Koehler blue, or
Elger natural... They will fix any chips before they begin. They asked
about the severity of the chips, (ie are they leaking)?
Their claim is that a re-finished tub is more durable than a new tub as
they put a stronger coating than what comes on a new tub. This coating
stands up very well if cleaned with Softscrub, Dow etc. It takes 4 hours
to do the re-finishing and the tub has to sit for 2 days. Typically they
schedule for Friday and you go away for the weekend...
Their number is 800 ALL TUBS, and they are sending me a brochure desribing
more about the process.
$480 sounds high to me, but I haven't priced new tubs at all. If I counted
the aggravation of pulling the old tub, doing the plumbing, (besides fixing
whatever else goes wrong), and trying to fit both up and down the stairs
then adding the price of a new tub and surround, it may not be so bad.
Tim
|
201.30 | Old House Journal Article Pointer | OASS::B_RAMSEY | Bruce Ramsey | Wed Feb 01 1989 14:43 | 9 |
| For reference
The January issue of Old House Journal has a detailed article about
refinishing enamel tubs/fixtures. It lists the addresses of several
places which do the work. It also explains the processes and their
advantages/disadvantages.
The article implied that it is a good alternative to new reproduction
fixtures and a good way to re-use authentic period fixtures.
|
201.31 | Bath Genie works... | HANNAH::PORCHER | Tom, Terminals Firmware/Software | Fri Feb 03 1989 17:37 | 14 |
| Re .16: Bath Genie
We had Bath Genie do over our porcelain-on-steel tub 5 years ago, and
I a was a skeptic. It still looks almost as good as when they refinished
it (there is one scratch caused by a metal sweater dryer).
The process for porcelain (I'm sure it's the same for fiberglass) is
to treat the tub with acid to give it a good binding surface, then spray
on this porcelain enamel paint, and let it dry. It was about $300 when
we had it done; more expensive than a new tub, but much, much cheaper
than getting a new tub in!
So I would recommend them!
--tom
|
201.32 | Another $$quote | ISTG::REINSCHMIDT | Marlene, DLB12-2/D8, DTN 291-8114 | Mon Feb 06 1989 14:56 | 0 |
201.332 | installing tub surround | NERDS::BARRY | | Fri Apr 21 1989 14:10 | 3 |
| I AM going to be installing a tub surround soon. Can I put it right
over the existing tiles? If so, what kind of preparation do I need? Any
other tips would be appreciatred.
|
201.333 | 737, 1639 | BEING::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Fri Apr 21 1989 14:47 | 18 |
| This note has been temporarily write-locked pending approval of the author.
To the author: This subject is already under discussion in this file, under the
topics listed in the title. Please look at these notes; you may find that your
question is already answered, or you may find a note where your question would
be an appropriate continuation of the discussion. Note that since nearly
everyone uses NEXT UNSEEN to read notes, your question will get the same
exposure whether it is a response to a two-year-old note or it is its own new
note. These topics were found using the keyword directory (note 1111), and you
may find other notes relating to this subject by examining the directory
yourself.
We do, however, welcome new notes if they explore a specific aspect of a
problem that may be under general discussion. And this moderator has been
known to make mistakes. :^) So if after examining these notes, you wish to
continue the discussion here, send me mail.
Paul [Moderator]
|
201.33 | Thumbs down on Bath Genie | PAXVAX::NAYLOR | Mark E. Naylor | Thu May 04 1989 08:26 | 32 |
| I have a 4' tub from 1922, that needs refinished. Given the "good
press" on Bath Genie, I called them. They wanted $295 to do just the
inside of the tub - I want the outside done also. To do the entire
tub will cost $800 ! They were very reluctant to have me bring the
tub to their shop; they prefer to do it in your home. I told them I
did not want the fixtures masked with tape; I wanted the tub sprayed,
then I would replace the fixtures, and I did not want over-spray all
over the new walls and floor. They gave me alot of silly reasons
for not wanting to do it in their shop.
I called a place in Waltham that was willing to do the entire tub
for $250 (same price in my house or in their shop).
I called a third place in Watertown. They wanted $250 to do the entire
tub and $125 if I brought it to their shop.
Bath Genie gives you a 5 year guarantee (provided you do not use
abrasive cleaners). The other two places offer no guarantee, but they
both were very candid about companies offer. Both of these guys said
if a guarantee is offered, the price is higher (they get their money
up front). They told me if I do not use any abrasives, the finish
will last 5 years easily.
After discussing the process with all three places, I found that all
of them use the same process.
Well, I took the tub to the place in Watertown and they did a great
job ! The name is Porcelain Patch and Glaze.
Mark
|
201.328 | Half-tubs? | PIGGY::FERRARI | | Tue May 09 1989 10:44 | 24 |
| I realize that this note hasn't been active for quite a while, but
instead of starting a new note...
I'm in the process of redesigning/remodeling the OLD bathroom in
the house. Vintage 1940, the floor has to be removed and the lead
waste pipes removed, etc., and space is a major concern. The room
is approximately 9 1/2 ft. by 5 ft. I can put a new tub/shower
in front of the window, which I really don't want to do. If I put
it along the 9.5' wall, the only place the sink could go would be
opposite the tub. It would have to be a pedestal sink, and even
then, we'd only have about 15" clearance. It has to be a tub/shower
combo, because of the baby (with more on the way...)
Where can I find a half-tub without paying an arm and a leg? That
would give room enough for the little guy to take a bath, and save
space. I tried Grossman's and Somerville, but they have to be special
ordered and we're talking about $600. I want to get out of it as
cheaply as possible, since we don't plan on staying in the house
for much more than 5 years. Any ideas would be appreciated, on
either the tub source or a remodeling hint.
Thanx,
Gene
|
201.329 | Mini-tub from an RV? Worth a phone call | BOMBE::CARLSON | Dave Carlson | Tue May 09 1989 11:16 | 13 |
| re.6
Many late model RV's, self contained camping trailers and Motorhomes,
have "mini-tubs" with the shower. I'm not sure how much one would
cost, especially since RV stuff is usually expensive, but then a
$600.00 special order from a lumberyard is no bargain either.
Try calling a local RV dealer that sells full size trailers and
ask how much a "mini tub" would cost? They would also have to order
it but the item is "normally used" in their product.
Disclaimer: I'm not sure if there are any plumbing codes that these
"RV mini-tubs" would have to conform to.
Dave Carlson
|
201.330 | Try fiberglass | TROA01::PONEILL | Peter O'Neill DTN 631-7093 | Tue May 09 1989 12:11 | 8 |
| Have you thought of building a mini-tub out of fiberglass, The resin
and cloth could not cost more than a couple of hundred. I've seen
some pretty fancy jobs, with epoxy finishes. I've also seen some
tubs build out of ceramic tile, but they looked rather crude.
Good luck
Peter
|
201.331 | Maybe... | WEFXEM::COTE | The fool screams no more... | Tue May 09 1989 13:08 | 12 |
| Assuming a devil's advocate role....
Are you sure you want to 'make do' in the bathroom? It seems that
that room is the one place that you'll get a decent return on your
improvement dollar, *especially* if you DIY.
I just dumped ~$500 on a Kohler pedastal sink and another $500 on
the matching tub. Considering what the more economical alternatives
looked like, I couldn't be happier. I feel VERY confident I'll get
every penny back at re-sale...
Edd
|
201.314 | 2 pc tub installation, cont'd | MFGMEM::S_JOHNSON | Park Ave in Beautiful Worcester | Wed Oct 11 1989 17:30 | 50 |
|
Its been a year and 8 mos since this note was active, and...
George, how did you make out on your 2 piece fiberglass tub installation??
Are you still with DEC?? :)
I've ordered an Eljer model from Spags and plan to install it this
weekend. I have expected all along that instructions would be included
and am a bit concerned that you didn't get any. Was yours an Eljer brand?
My concern right now is how to mount the thing to the walls-- I have to
build a new wall at the drain/valve end of the tub, because the tub is going
into the far end of the bathroom and the room is a foot wider than the tub
is long. The wall will also hide the plumbing. Any pointers on the best
way to do 2 x 4 framing for such an installation?
Does the tub get nailed to the walls? Does the surround get glued or nailed
to the walls?
How about a sequence of steps, if no instructions are included?
1. Rough plumbing--done
2. 2 x 4 framing for new wall on drain end of tub, plus other framing
to support tub, as required.
3. Install tub drain assy to tub, make sure drain plumbing will
line up with it when tub is installed.
4. Install shower valve assy and piping on framing, somehow making sure
that the valve will protrude through the tub surround just the right
amount so that the finished surround looks right. (any good tricks
for this?)
5. Install tub, connect drain assy to drain.
6. Install greenboard in tub surround area as necessary
7. Install tub surround.
8. Install escutcheons, tub spout and shower arm and head.
9. Install finish bath panelling or tile as desired, around tub
surround and tub.
10. Caulk everywhere water could get behind fiberglass.
11. Install luan plywood on floor.
12. Install vanity and sink, connnect to plumbing.
13. Install toilet.
14. Lay vinyl flooring.
15. Caulk floor/tub interface.
Comments? I could use some feedback.
Steve
|
201.315 | Only 2 comments | WJO::MARCHETTI | Mama said there'd be days like this. | Thu Oct 12 1989 09:29 | 27 |
| Scott,
Step 5:
When my two piece tub and surround was installed, the wallboard was
installed afterwards, so that the it covered the mounting flanges of
the surround.
Wallboard
| |
| |||
|__|||
------ |
| ----|
| |
Surround
This would seem to make it more difficult for water to find a way
behind the tub assembly.
Steps 13 and 14.
I reversed these. Putting the vinyl flooring down first makes a
neat and easy installation.
Bob
|
201.316 | | SALEM::PAGLIARULO_G | | Tue Oct 17 1989 08:50 | 20 |
| Yeah, I'm still here.
The installation went well. But, when I do it again in mmy
downstairs bathroom I'll be sure to set the tub in a layer of morter.
Since the bottom of the tub doesn't sit on the floor it flexes
and doesn't feel as solid as a regular tub. 'Course, part of the
problem is my not so svelte figure but the morter will support the bottom
so it feels more solid. And, if it doesn't flex so much it seems
like it should last longer. The morter will also help to deaden
sound. When the water beats against that dead air space it sounds
like a drum.
Since I was tiling around the surround I used cement board (forget
what it's called) instead of sheetrock. The board went over the
flanges as previously noted. The flanges get nailed right to the
2X4 studs, no glue was used since the only part of the shower that
contacted the walls was the flanges. Be sure to leave an access
door to the plumbing when you build the wall.
George
|
201.88 | No HW Pressure at Sink Faucet | 26638::HQCONSOL | | Thu Nov 16 1989 16:02 | 19 |
| After recently doing extensive bathroom remodeling in the upstairs
master bath (new supply line "branches) to relocate a vanity and
shower; I have hound that the downstairs bath has virtually no
hot water. Cold water pressure is fine........but when the mixer
is turned all the way to hot, there is just a slow trickle of water.
o I've checked to make sure my shut off valves are all open.
The bathroom faucet is a Moen mixer type.
o The hot water supply for this sink comes from the upstairs
bath that was just remodeled. Upstairs 3/4" HW pipe T's to
1/2" supply to downstairs.
o The upstairs remodeling is just "roughed" in at this point....
all pipes are capped off until carpentry and sheetrock is complete.
Any suggestions? Should I remove the HW shut-off valve in that
bath to try and "flush" the system of any solder fragments and/or
debris???
|
201.89 | It could be solder! | MAKITA::MCCABE | | Thu Nov 16 1989 19:37 | 9 |
| I would give that a try, I ran into the same problem with a sink
and washing machine, which were a lot easier to fix than your
shower valve. You might want to try back-flushing your shower
valve, by shutting off the hot water and hook a hose to the
shower, open a faucet down stream of the shut off and see if
any solder comes out. It may save you from having to re-sweat
fittings.
Chris
|
201.34 | DIY? | ROLL::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes . . . understanding endures | Tue Dec 12 1989 07:42 | 3 |
| Anybody tried doing the job themselves? Are the materials readily
available (a kit perhaps)? Seems to me there's no way it can be
difficult enough to justify the ridiculous prices I'm seeing here.
|
201.35 | Epoxy Kits Available | RAVEN1::RICE_J | This space for rent cheap! | Tue Dec 12 1989 08:56 | 8 |
| I used a two part epoxy product to refinish an antique claw foot tub
several years ago. (Sorry, I can't remember the brand, but it's
available at most home centers and hardware stores in a variety of
colors.) I used a brush to apply it but it dries to a very smooth
finish with no brush marks. I was very pleased considering the price
of the professional jobs.
Jim
|
201.36 | Thanks! | ROLL::BEFUMO | Knowledge perishes . . . understanding endures | Thu Dec 14 1989 07:52 | 6 |
| re [.-1] - Thanks! was it sold specifically for that purpose, or
was it a general puspose epoxy finish? Did it include any kind of
surface preparation compound (acid etch, etc?). Thanks again.
jb
|
201.37 | Just for tubs! | RAVEN1::RICE_J | Your Advertising Message Here - $5 | Wed Jan 10 1990 15:40 | 10 |
| Sorry for the delay in responding but this is the first time I've had
time to access this conference in almost a month.
The product I mentioned is sold specifically for bathtup refinishing.
I don't recall any preparation material being included with the kit,
but I seem to remember degreasing the surface with alcohol and cleaning
with a tack cloth.
Jim
|
201.294 | Doing it right? | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Feb 13 1990 14:46 | 22 |
| I looked through this note and number 102, and decided this was a more
specific note.
I am installing a new fiberglass tub, and want to do it right, especially
as regards supporting the bottom. I bought an Artesian "Comfortub", and
was astonished that the instructions said NOTHING about what to put the
tub on. I am assuming that it at least needs a subfloor below it, but otherwise
they would have the tub supported by the studs on three sides and the skirt
on the front. This is not enough for me.
I am going to go ahead with the mortar or cement under the tub, as
mentioned by others here. What is the recommended type of cement and
method? Can someone "walk me through" the steps? There seems to be about
two inches under the tub bottom when it would be installed level.
Also, someone in note 102 mentioned running a bead of expanding foam caulk
around the edge between the tub and the studs. I don't understand the
purpose of this. This particular tub (maybe others?) has a nailing flange
that the sheet rock would cover after installation, and thus there is no need
for a caulked joint around the tub.
Steve
|
201.295 | FREE 36"x48" CEMENT PAD :-) | FORCE::HQCONSOL | | Tue Feb 13 1990 16:29 | 41 |
| I just got through doing this for a shower stall in installed.
The WRONG Way:
My first word of caution is don't assume that the bottom of the
tub is level (flat). I did....consequently I framed a "form" and
poured the cement base, letting it cure for two days (w/o the shower
on it.) Then I set the stall in place.......boy was I surprised when
it wobbled like my son's rocking horse :-)
The CORRECT Way:
I pulled up the cast concrete pad mentioned above and started
again. I started by leveling the shower stall with shims under
the front and rear edges. I then tacked the shims into place on the
sub-floor. Then I did moved the shower stall out of the way. This time
I did away with the thought of being neat with a "form" and I just
mixed the cement (to a sour cream consistency), concentrating the
pour in the middle (between the front and back shims). I then covered
the cement with a plastic vapor barrier. I then set the shower into
place and walked around the inside of it to "squish" out the cement
until I was sure that the shower was level and resting on the shims.
I used the vapor barrier to help the cement to dry from the inside
out. I let the cement cure for 48 hrs.
After 48 hrs. I stood in the tub and felt a small amount of deflection
evidently caused by shrinkage of the cement. I lifted the shower
stall and plastic vapor barrier off the dried cement and used aerosol
expandable insulating foam to lay a "bead" of foam on the concrete
where the "ribs" of the shower bottom contacted the cement. I then
replaced the plastic vapor barrier and set the shower back in place.
I used the vapor barrier just to prevent the foam from "gluing"
the shower to the cement, it is real sticky stuff! I'm happy to say
that the bottom of the shower now feels "rock" solid and lies perfectly
level.
BTW-I used QuickCrete Sand Mix Concrete Mixture. I mixed it in an
old plastic laundry bucket, mixing about 20 lbs at a time. Used
about 80 lbs for a 36x48 shower.
|
201.296 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Mar 11 1990 19:35 | 12 |
| Well, I finally brought the tub upstairs and set it in the opening,
and was astonished to find that the bottom of the tub sits as much
as THREE inches off of the subfloor! This is an Artesian "Comfortub".
The installation instructions say NOTHING about supporting the bottom
of the tub, and three inches of concrete seems a bit much. (It does
slope to about an inch and a half at the drain end.
Has anyone had experiences with this sort of tub? Can I safely just
let it hang and hope for the best?
Steve
|
201.297 | | FORCE::HQCONSOL | | Mon Mar 12 1990 13:44 | 10 |
| Steve-
The concrete pad I described pouring for the Lasco shower stall
was easilt 2-3". It wasn't even cause the ribbing underneath
the base was sloped for drainage to the center drain. I used
a 2x4 lying on the 4" side set at the back wall to support the
shower at the back. The front rested on it's own fiberglass skirt.
I then added shims under the front and back until perfectly level
........then I removed the shower and poured the concrete as described
in 531.15.
|
201.298 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 12 1990 15:22 | 4 |
| I called Artesian and they insist that the tub needs no support underneath.
I may rig up something anyway....
Steve
|
201.299 | Spend $10 for a bag of cement | OASS::RAMSEY_B | Put the wet stuff on the red stuff | Mon Mar 12 1990 17:26 | 11 |
| Well, the tub will support the weight of a tub full of water and an
average person but the bottom will have some give to it. If you are
used to a cast iron tub or tile shower, you may feel a bit quesy about
trusting the tub.
I agree with previous replies that you will want to put some thing
between the tub and the floor to provide some additional support to
eleviate the sag and give. Under normal use the tub will hold up, but
I personally don't like the flex underfoot.
|
201.102 | Soft skin bathtubs | 38879::DICASTRO | Jet Ski jockey | Tue Mar 13 1990 13:07 | 12 |
| I recently (11-mar-90) read an article in the Boston Globe Home and
Garden section about soft skin bath tubs. The tub has a rubberized
plastic skin, bound to a foam backing. The article mentioned that the
tub skin, if stood in w/ golf shoes/spikes would not puncture/tear.
And even if it did there is a repair kit which will give you invisible
repairs. Apparently many accidents occur in (hard) tubs, (they quoted
the figures). And that a metal tub drastically reduces the temp of the
water. Aside from being comfy and safe, the tub will only lower the
water temp 1 degree every 15 minutes. Anybody have one of theese???
Any pros/cons/ or comments...?
-bd-
|
201.103 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 13 1990 15:17 | 3 |
| The article also mentioned the price - $2000 and up.
Steve
|
201.300 | | GIAMEM::RIDGE | | Wed Mar 14 1990 12:21 | 3 |
| My fibreglasss tub/showers (2) have been installed about 10 years.
Neither has any extra support underneath. No problems, ( except for the
gold color of one of them :^( )
|
201.104 | | OASS::BURDEN_D | No! Your *other* right! | Wed Mar 14 1990 13:12 | 4 |
| Sounds like what they line some swimming pools with. We'll probably
see it in TOH next week.....
Dave
|
201.301 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 15 1990 13:52 | 3 |
| I decided to forgo the cement. It seems sturdy enough.
Steve
|
201.302 | Have it your way -- Either way | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-02/Y05 -- dtn 381-2684 | Thu Mar 15 1990 16:11 | 29 |
| When we built our home we thought that we would have to trim about
3-4" off the top of one end of a one-piece fiberglass
tub/enclosure in order for it to fit under a slopping roof. It
ended up that this wasn't required, but thats besides the point.
I was concerned about cuting the enclosure so I went to a
fiberglass fabricating firm near where I lived at the time. Among
other advise the man I spoke to offerd the following. Even though
I had not asked about supporting the bottom of the tub he strongly
recommended that I do so. If I didn't, he said, I'd have problems
in a few years time.
So I went back to the plumbing supply house and asked about this.
They told me the exact opposite. According to them, any attemp to
support the bottom of the tub would CAUSE problems, not avoid
them.
So there you have it. Two supposedly knowledgable sources. Two
contradictory recommendations. What is a poor boy to do?
Well, it turned out that a couple 2x4s laid flat fit exactly
between the foor and the underside of the tub. They're fitted in
loosly, with just a couple nails to keep them from sliding around.
By stepping in the tub before and after inserting the 2x4s I could
feel a difference in the "give" of the tub bottom.
That was my "solution" and going on 5 years later I have no
problems. Of coursw I may not have had any problems without the
supports either. And who knows what the future will hold?
|
201.105 | Types of Bathtubs. | LEDS::WITTMER | Kevin Wittmer NKS1-1/E4 291-7247 | Tue Mar 27 1990 12:29 | 14 |
| I couldn't find a note dedicated to types of bathtubs so here it goes.
I will be in the market for a bathtub soon (not a replacement but for a
new bathroom) and am not familiar with the different types. In a
Somerville Lumber ad they listed steel, cast iron, 2 piece fiberglass,
and 1 piece fiberglass - in increasing price. Also 4' and 4 1/2' tubs
are alot more than the 5' ones. Is 5' the standard?
Any comments on bathtubs (types, sizes, etc.) would be greatly
appreciated.
Thanks,
Kevin.
|
201.106 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Mar 27 1990 14:54 | 19 |
| 5' tubs are the standard - the standard width is 30-32 inches.
Cast iron tubs are strong but VERY heavy. Few people bother with these
anymore. The cheapest tubs are enamelled steel. There are also PVC
plastic tubs, which usually have a styrene foam liner because the PVC is
not strong by itself. The most popular tubs are fiberglass, which are
strong and lightweight.
If you are designing a new bathroom, consider that a 5' tub is really
short for many people, and that a longer and wider tub can be a wonderful
luxury.
I'd go for a 72 inch long by 36 or 42 inch wide tub if it would fit. You
might even consider a whirlpool tub (discussed in other notes).
Of course, if you NEVER take baths, then a standard tub is inexpensive and
will work fine. See the earlier notes on firming the bottom of a tub.
Steve
|
201.107 | Tubs | OASS::RAMSEY_B | Put the wet stuff on the red stuff | Tue Mar 27 1990 14:56 | 24 |
| 2 piece fiberglass tubs are created for retrofiting a bathroom. The
problem is that you cannot get a 1 piece fiberglass tub through
doorways and down hallways and into a bathroom in an existing house in
most cases. They have the advantage of being fiberglass so the only
seam that can leak is the one between the two pieces. The drawback is
they are fiberglass so can be scratched and you can break them with a
really hard wack with your fist,(like when you fall down).
1 piece fiberglass are easy to install. Connect the plumbing, nail to
studs, and your are ready to go. Contractors love them. If the dead
air space around the tub is not filled, they are very noisy when water
hits the side. Because they are fiberglass, they also have some give
and can flex if space between the tub and the floor is not filled.
Cast iron tubs usually have an enamel painted finish. This paint can
be chipped but usually are very durable. My tub is 38 years old and
has been abused. No chips but they are scratches from pets being
washed. I can always have it re-enameled (note 465). My personal
favorite. The cast iron is heavy and has no give. If I fall, I know
that I will wack my head.
Steel, I don't know. I would imagine that it is a lighter weight than
the cast iron so may flex and the enamel finish would not be as
durable.
|
201.108 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Bain Dramaged | Tue Mar 27 1990 16:58 | 9 |
| If it was me, and I was considering only 'standard' 5 ft. tubs, the
only thing I'd even think about was a 1 piece enclosure (or a two-
piece if it's a retrofit).
I'm not convinced it's possible to build a permanent water-tight
enclosure using ceramic tiles, etc., and water damage is something
I don't EVER want to deal with again.
Edd
|
201.109 | more bathtub info | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Tue Mar 27 1990 17:54 | 13 |
|
Steel has the disadvantage of being the best conductor of heat.
A cast iron tub will hold the water temperature of the bath water
longer. Plastic is even better in that regard.
As far as having a water-tight enclosure goes, ceramic tile works
great if it is installed over cement board (Wonderboard and
Durock are two brands of cement board). If I wanted to build
a luxury bathroom, I would definitely use ceramic tile over
cement board. I wouldn't even consider using green board
(water resistant sheet rock) in a bath/shower. It's really not
much better than ordinary sheet rock.
|
201.110 | good question Kevin! | BAGELS::MICHAUD | I have become comfortably numb! | Wed Mar 28 1990 16:53 | 13 |
|
Thanks Kevin for placing this note into the file. I will also be in
the market for a new bathtub for a 2nd floor bathroom remodeling
project. What I have removed was an old UR fiberglass 2 piece (tub and
enclosure). My plans for the remodel, since my wife can't stand the
enclosure, and also because the bathroom is being remodeled to correct
leaks, was to use Ceramic tile + Epoxy Mortor/Groout over Wonderboard
in the enclosure area. I've already purchased the Wonderboard and am
just strating to consider what type of tub to use. I had heard that
fiberglass tubs were good but am wonderboarding now if we should
install a cast iron tub?
I would appreciate any recommendations you experienced folks may
have concerning this project.
|
201.111 | | AKOV12::ANDREWS | | Thu Mar 29 1990 15:05 | 13 |
| I installed a new, 5 1/2 foot cast iron tub three years ago. It is
not a one person job to move it, and once located it needs to be
properly leveled, pitched and slanted, and hook up was not easy as
it's on a finished concrete floor with almost no access underneath.
But it's there to stay, it as solid a Gibraltar, and feels like
_real_ plumbing. The only nicer tub I've ever been in was an old
world hotel with a...yes...6 1/2 foot tub. Unreal! But the Kohler
cast iron one I put in was in new construction, it weighed 435 lbs
and I got it for $525 plus tax, delivered.
Erick
|
201.112 | see here | CSDNET::DICASTRO | Jet Ski jockey | Fri Mar 30 1990 14:18 | 1 |
| See note 3748 on soft tubs........
|
201.113 | 4 sided, one piece works good | SALEM::LAYTON | | Fri Apr 06 1990 17:17 | 17 |
| When I built my house two years ago, I installed two of Kohler's
full enclosure glass tubs. These include the ceiling as well (no
more mildew on the ceiling!) If you use these, you will need to
put a light fixture in the top. We lifted the tubs to the second
floor by using 4 X 4 jacks, and in the rough opening for a window.
Unit is 5' wide by about 7' tall.
The only problem was the custom colors are factory special order.
Lead time was 8 - 10 weeks. At the end of 8 weeks, I called the
plumber, who called the distr. who said "maybe another 8 to ten
weeks...". This didn't fly well. I bullied the plumber for the
distributor's phone number, the distr. for the factory's phone number,
made them aware that I was NOT a happy camper. They committed to
ship within the week and did.
Moral: Don't take any crap from plumbers, distr's, or Kohler! Let
'em know you mean business and a commit is a commit, d*mmit!!
|
201.317 | Comments on Novi American "Capri" tub surround | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue May 08 1990 11:10 | 23 |
| Last weekend I installed a 5-piece tub surround kit from Novi American,
style name "Capri". I was not impressed...
The first thing I noticed was the color. They claimed that the almond color
matched the Artesian/Eljer "Bone" or "Natural", but it is significantly
darker.
The kit contains three flat sheets and two corner panels. The instructions
refer to raised edges on the end panels that go over the edge of the corner
pieces, but there are none - the sheets are absolutely flat, so that the
join from end panel to corner is not flat.
Also, the panels are all slightly different lengths, making it harder to get
it looking right.
Lastly, though the box shows the corner pieces to have sharp corners (to fit
properly against the wall), they are in fact rounded so there is a large gap
to be filled in with caulk.
If I were to do it again, I'd pay the extra money to buy a one-piece
surround.
Steve
|
201.318 | The one-piece units are very awkward | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue May 08 1990 14:15 | 20 |
| I think most of the retrofit tub surrounds come in three pieces,
because often the one-piece ones are real hard or impossible to get
into a finished house - you might get lucky if you have a doorway right
across from the bathroom door, and your bathroom is big enough to turn
the thing in. I put in a three-piece one, also. Actually, I hired
a carpenter to do it, since I didn't want to fuss with cutting the
middle piece out around the window over the tub (yes, that's a silly
place for the window, but it was alread there...). That turned out to
be a good thing, since the tub itself was not installed perfectly level
and the carpenter had to do some extra kludgery to get the part at the
foot of the tub to fit correctly - the tub was not level by about 1/2",
which is quite a bit (I knew it was off, but hadn't realized how much).
I don't recall what brand the thing was anymore, but all the pieces
looked and fit as they were supposed to - and like I said elsewhere, it
sure is much easier to maintain. I didn't attempt to match the tub; I
got the enclosure in a shade intermediate between the tub and the tile
wall (which was a darker color).
/Charlotte
|
201.319 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Strom clods are forming... | Wed May 09 1990 09:31 | 6 |
| When I did my bathroom I was adamant about wanting a one-piece tub
surround. So much so, that busting out the door frame to get the
unit into the room was worth the effort to me. It must have taken me
2 hours even then to get it into the room...
Edd
|
201.114 | No more fiberglass ....please! | BCSE::WEIER | | Wed May 23 1990 14:14 | 12 |
| PERSONALLY, being the owner of a 1-piece fiberglass tub, I would never
get another fiberglass tub. They're so impossible to clean when
compared with an enameled tub. They scratch very easy, and soap just
loves to stick to them. I've heard rumor that using a car wax helps
keep the soap scum to a minimum, but you better wear suction cups on
the bottoms of your feet (and a helmut!).
AND, if it's at all possible to get a longer/wider tub, and you'll use
it, don't hesitate for a second. You'll be glad you did in the long
run.
pw
|
201.115 | | WEFXEM::COTE | What if someone sees us? Awwwwkk! | Wed May 23 1990 14:35 | 7 |
| I wax my tub regularly with whatever car wax I have at the time. I do
believe it cuts down the maintenance. (And the tub looks GREAT!!)
I've noticed no problem with slipping, but would advise people to
be careful anyhow....
Edd
|
201.116 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed May 23 1990 18:04 | 6 |
| You can use car was, but shouldn't wax the bottom of the tub. What works
much better is GEL-GLOSS, available in hardware stores and other places.
It is not slippery to the touch, but it restores the shine and soap and
other crud just rinse off.
Steve
|
201.117 | The wax gives you better grip | WFOV11::KOEHLER | I have a long list of 'honey do's | Thu May 24 1990 08:23 | 8 |
| There is nothing wrong with waxing the bottom of a tub. You won't
slip... Bare feet won't slip, but don't take a shower with your socks
on!
Jim
Waxing to get better grip is something I learned from my surfing
days.
|
201.118 | Is Gelcoat really effective? | CIMNET::LEACHE | | Thu May 24 1990 14:27 | 12 |
| RE: .11
I've been searching for a couple of years for a product that will take
the soap scum off of a fiberglass surround. Does Gelcoat really work?
The Globe handyman column once recommended lemmon oil, but I've never
happened upon any.
We've used auto-wax on our surround since the day I installed it. It's
fairly effective, but inevitably soap scum builds up around the
soap tray. Nothing short of scraping/hard rubbing gets it off.
|
201.119 | Eliminate | WARIOR::RAMSEY_B | Put the wet stuff on the red stuff | Thu May 24 1990 16:25 | 12 |
| We found a product recently called ELIMINATE. It claims to be come
kind of enyzme which actually eats the soap scum off the surface. We
have a tile surround on a porceilen tub and man oh man does it work
great. Spray on, wait 10 minutes, rinse off. No dangerous smell, not
corresive to skin. It will eat the the limestone out of grout so don't
leave it on too long.
Comes is white plastic cylinder with pink and blue lettering. We buy it
at Home Depot in Atlanta. Have no idea where you Yankees could get
some. If I think about it I will try and get the manuafacter
information and post it.
|
201.120 | Gell Gloss | GIAMEM::RIDGE | Trouble w/you is the trouble w/me | Thu May 24 1990 17:32 | 5 |
| The Gell Gloss works ok. The results are great. The fibreglass tub
really taks a good shine, and it cleans up real easy after a shower,
but it is a lot of work. I found the product to be very hard to work
with. You need a lot of elbow grease.
|
201.121 | 2nd good thing to move North | PCOJCT::MILBERG | I was a DCC - 3 jobs ago! | Thu May 24 1990 21:30 | 7 |
| Hey (Southern for hello) Bruce-
Us Yankees now got Home Depot up heah in the Nawth - at least in New
Joisey!
-Barry-
|
201.122 | | CIMNET::MIKELIS | Construction means Destruction | Fri May 25 1990 10:41 | 8 |
| > I wax my tub regularly with whatever car wax I have at the time. I do
> believe it cuts down the maintenance. (And the tub looks GREAT!!)
Gee, i don't even wax my car! :-)
-jim
|
201.123 | Straight vinegar works if sprayed on too! | CARTUN::VHAMBURGER | Disasterizing with your mind | Fri May 25 1990 15:23 | 9 |
|
There is a product in the household cleaner section now in a lime green
spray bottle, called Lime-away (or similar such name). It is specifically
for removing soapy buildup. Does work great, but does not spray evenly, you
have to really cover the wall with it if it is a large area. Use this to
get 90% of your scum removed, then go for the wax/gel-gloss.
Vic H
|
201.98 | silicone caulk removal? | CUPMK::PHILBROOK | Customer Publications Consulting | Mon Sep 10 1990 13:38 | 8 |
| I did a remarkably horrific job of caulking the perimeter of our newly
installed glass tub enclosure and I want to remove the caulking and
start again. Does anyone have any ideas for how I can go about this?
I've tried tearing, scraping, etc., but the stuff is pretty well stuck.
It's white silicone caulk.
Thanks,
Mike
|
201.99 | use a razor | KAYAK::GROSSO | | Wed Sep 12 1990 18:13 | 9 |
| I've had success with one of those flat retractable razor blade knives
they use for cleaning windows. Two orthogonal passes were required. Then I
scraped it out with a screwdriver. To get a nicer job next time, try masking
with tape and using a finger covered with a baggie dipped in water to spread it
evenly. While still soft, remove the tape. I just read that in a magazine but
haven't had occasion to try it myself yet.
- Bob
|
201.100 | | TOPDOC::PHILBROOK | Customer Publications Consulting | Mon Sep 17 1990 15:18 | 5 |
| Thanks for the tip on a neater application for next time around,
however, I cannot use a razor blade to remove the existing caulking as
I'd surely scratch the surface of the metal frame. Any other ideas?
Mike
|
201.101 | | WILKIE::DCOX | | Mon Sep 17 1990 18:55 | 6 |
| > <<< Note 2208.8 by CUPMK::PHILBROOK "Customer Publications Consulting" >>>
First, take a razor blade and remove as much as you can withought touching the
surface so as to avoid scratching. Then try nail polish remover on the
remainder.
Dave
|
201.337 | removing rust stains from porcelain | CRBOSS::CALDERA | | Mon Nov 05 1990 17:33 | 9 |
| I have looked through most of the notes dealing with rust and can't find
anything on how to remove rust from a porcelain bath tub. I have tried bleach
but nothing, I let it stand overnight still nothing. the tub is in excellent
condition except for these rust stains. I do not think a refinishing job
is in order.
Thanks,
Cal
|
201.338 | Try ZUD | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Nov 06 1990 08:03 | 4 |
| We have "wicked iron" in our water. The only thing that was able to get all the
stains out was ZUD. Make a paste and apply it to the stain. Let it sit for a
while then scrub away. This stuff is kinda like Comet cleanser, but better.
Works great. I've found it in grocery stores.
|
201.339 | oxalic acid is the magic ingredient | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Tue Nov 06 1990 08:06 | 10 |
| Bleach won't do a thing, except maybe make the rust stain worse.
Get some oxalic acid crystals, mix up a solution of that, and
let it sit overnight on the stain. You can get a small bottle
of oxalic acid crystals at the drugstore (probably) at an absolutely
outrageous price considering how much you get, or you can usually
get it at Spag's in the paint department in 1-pound boxes. At
least, you could before they reorganized; I haven't looked for it
since they did that. I assume they still carry it. A good big
hardware might have it too; it's used for bleaching wood.
|
201.340 | | VMSDEV::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Tue Nov 06 1990 10:25 | 13 |
| Boy, we've got about half a dozen notes about removing rust from every other
known surface, and another half a dozen about removing other stains from
porcelain, but none about removing rust from porcelain.
Does anyone else get the feeling that eventually we'll have separate notes on
removing rust from blue porcelain and white porcelain? :-) :-) :-)
You might try an acidic removal agent, instead of basic(bleach). We get those
blue-green stains in our sink from our water supply, and a squirt of
"Lime-away", which is simply an acidic cleaning solution, literally dissolves
the stain in a couple of seconds. I've never tried it on rust, though.
Paul
|
201.341 | Well, is the tub white? | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Nov 07 1990 07:55 | 8 |
| re:.3:Does anyone else get the feeling that eventually we'll have
separate notes on removing rust from blue porcelain and white
porcelain? :-) :-) :-)
Well, you see, I was just looking for a note concerning rust on yellow
porcelain. %-} %-}
ed
|
201.342 | | DICKNS::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Wed Nov 07 1990 08:34 | 4 |
| You might try just putting some vinegar on it overnight, for
that matter, before you hunt up oxalic acid. I've had good
luck de-rusting steel parts by soaking them in vinegar for
a few days.
|
201.343 | Chlorine bleach may cause iron stains! | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Originality = Undetected Plagiarism | Wed Nov 07 1990 10:41 | 10 |
| Apparently, sodium hypochlorite (bleach) reacts with disolved iron
(or iron in one of its various forms) and acts as an oxidizing agent
thereby PRODUCING rust stains!
So, if you have a high iron content in your water, then you should
actually avoid using chlorine bleaches -- you run the risk of rust
stains on everything. We live in just such an area and have rust
stains on our toilets because of the use of bleach.
Stuart
|
201.344 | removing rust stains..... | CECV03::SILVA | | Thu Nov 08 1990 14:03 | 14 |
| Re:4024.0
You may want to try a product called IRON OUT. I have used it on
toilets, tubs, sinks etc. It is very powerful, I have noticed that
some of the drain fixtures appear black, this may be because of
scratches or the iron that is imbedded in the fixture.
It should only be used in a ventilated area. This was recommended
to me through the man that was repairing my water filter system.
You can purchase IRON OUT in a hardware store, I haven't seen it
in regular department or grocery stores. I have used it on fiberglass
tubs, showers, in the washer with white clothes with rust stains,
and in the dishwasher with glasses to remove the rust stains.
|
201.345 | | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Nov 08 1990 15:41 | 2 |
| Yep, Iron Out will work too. Is *is* powerful stuff!
You can get it at Spag's in the plumbing dept.
|
201.124 | whirlpool tubs for everyday | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Mon Jan 14 1991 09:26 | 15 |
|
I couldn't find a whirlpool tub note in the index but if anybody
remembers one...
I'm considering getting a whirlpool tub in one of the standard
sizes ( 60 x 30 or 60 x 32 ) for my master bath. I like the
ability to take a whirlpool but this tub would primarily be
used for everyday showers. Is this a recommended use? I concerned
that there might be some parts that aren't intended for everyday
use or that the tub might be extra hard to keep clean.
Anyone had any experiences with using a whirlpool tub for everyday
showers?
Garry
|
201.125 | whirlpool tub as a shower | SMURF::WALKER | | Mon Jan 14 1991 12:44 | 9 |
| re: .19
We are having a whirlpool tub installed in the master bath of our new
home. The only down side we could find was that it is taller than a
normal tub - this means that you have to step a little higher when
getting into the tub to take a shower.
Mary
|
201.126 | | STAR::THOMAS | Ben Thomas | Sat Jan 26 1991 13:58 | 6 |
| Re: .19
I had a Kohler Guardian Bath Whirlpool (model K783) installed a few
years back when I had a second floor added to the house. It's a standard
size (60" x 32" x 16"), cast iron, 4 jets. It has certainly been used
for far more showers than baths. It seems to be in fine shape.
|
201.38 | product name | OLDJON::FAUCHER | | Tue Mar 12 1991 11:36 | 8 |
| I know this note is a bit old, but can someone post a name of the product used
to refinish a tub yourself. Also a place were it can be purchased.
I've been to quite a few home centers, plumbing supply outlets,
no one has a clue as to what I'm talking about.
Any pointer would be appreciated
Mike
|
201.131 | "Rainbow Spout" on Jacuzzi bathtub illegal in Mass? | 4EVER::MEHRING | | Fri May 10 1991 15:44 | 24 |
| After splurging on a corner (triangular) whirlpool tub by Jacuzzi for our new
master bath (being constructed this week), we also purchased a special rec-
tangular faucet, called a "rainbow spout", which dispenses the water in a
waterfall-like flow.
Well, our plumber says (and double-checked) that this spout/tub combination
is not to Massachusetts building code, therefore, would not pass inspection.
The law says that the spout cannot be below the topmost edge of the tub, or
else water could potentially backflow into it. The spot where the tub brochure
shows the spout mounted is slightly (3/4") below the topmost edge of the tub.
So, he's advised us to go pick out a wall-mounted spout/handle fixture instead.
Anyone ever hear of this? Why would Somerville Lumber display and sell such a
combination if its not legal in the state of Mass.? It's disappointing since
the spout is quite unique, but more so since we have to return it, make another
trip to the store - risk our next selection being out of stock, and cause a
delay in the project...
If anyone's ever had one of these spouts installed in Mass., how did you get
around this apparent restriction?
Thanks,
-Cori
|
201.132 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri May 10 1991 16:20 | 5 |
| I've never heard of it, but I think the reason this is illegal is to prevent
backflow in case your water system loses pressure. Why does Somerville
display it? Maybe they don't know that it's illegal, or maybe they don't
care. After all, they sell lots of plumbing supplies to non-plumbers,
and non-plumbers can't legally plumb in MA.
|
201.133 | | HKFINN::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Fri May 10 1991 16:36 | 6 |
| Yep, it has to be above the potential standing water level. Notice
sometime that all your other faucet spouts are (or at least they are
if they're legal!)
Any chance of putting a spacer under the faucet to raise it up an
inch or so?
|
201.134 | Cross-Coupled | KEYBDS::HASTINGS | | Fri May 10 1991 16:58 | 15 |
| .1 is right. I believe the correct term is "Cross-Coupled". If the
spout goes below the highest point that the tub can be filled to it
could act as a siphon in the event that water pressure is lost in the
water main. This could siphon your tub water into the municipal supply
I admit that this scenario seems unlikely but...
Check to see if the spout is really below the highest water level
that your tub could reach. (ie: is the bottom of the spout below the
overflow drains?)
As for the faucett being illegal, it may not be. It just might be
that the particular *combination* of tub and faucet thatyou selected
creates the cross-couple potential that violated code.
|
201.135 | | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Fri May 10 1991 17:21 | 14 |
|
>> <<< Note 4229.0 by 4EVER::MEHRING >>>
>> -< "Rainbow Spout" on Jacuzzi bathtub illegal in Mass? >-
.re As for why Somerville would still sell it....
Why not? It's not their responsibility to uphold the building
codes. Another example of this, is that in NH, it's required to
use anti-scald shower valves. Builder's Square in Nashua only
sell ONE (1) that meets code and many many others that don't.
You can get away with it in NH since all plumbing changes need
not be inspected.
Garry
|
201.136 | About to go check out the options... | 4EVER::MEHRING | | Fri May 10 1991 17:22 | 6 |
| Well, thanks for the inputs - I'm on my way back to S.Lumber tonight and will
discuss the options with them (regarding raising the spout, etc.). I didn't
notice where the overflow drains were located, but I should be able to check
the display model for them...
-Cori
|
201.137 | BACK-FLOW PREVENTER? | ORIENT::HUTZLEY | My favorite day has arrived! | Fri May 10 1991 20:23 | 11 |
| I'm not a GURU, by any means....But if they're worried
about back-flow into the water supply, couldn't one use a
backflow preventer...My duplex in NH has two....One on the
water line coming in, right after the meter, and another one on
the feed line to FHW/Dom. H20 boiler.
Just asking...
Steve
|
201.138 | Nit-picky inspector is the root of problem! | 4EVER::MEHRING | | Mon May 13 1991 15:29 | 11 |
| Actually, upon our return visit to Somerville Lumber, my husband came up with
that same idea. But, for some reason the plan was nixed (I'll find out why),
so we just picked out a wall-mounted extended faucet.
Incidentally, the two men servicing the bath fixture area of S.Lumber were very
surprised to hear that the plumber advised us to switch fixtures -- until they
heard what town we live in (Wilmington, MA)...It turns out we have one of the
strictest inspectors in the state (we heard some other stories from the clerks),
so that explained things a bit better.
-Cori
|
201.139 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon May 13 1991 15:39 | 6 |
| Strange - all of the "Rainbow" style spouts I've seen emit their water at
least an inch or two above the level of the tub. I'd agree that one whose
outlet could possibly be covered by water would open the door to a
backflow problem.
Steve
|
201.140 | CAll Jacuzzi | 37339::GHALSTEAD | | Mon May 13 1991 16:32 | 6 |
| Just for the heck of it, or you still really may want the rainbow
faucet, why don't you call jacuzzi direct and talk to some of their
technical folks. Certainly they wouldn't design a procuct that
would not meet code in 50% of the US., and if they did by accident,
they probably know about it by now and have a work around.
|
201.141 | holes are not supplied | LEVERS::S_JACOBS | Live Free and Prosper | Mon May 13 1991 17:27 | 9 |
| re .10
I am also in the process of ordering a Jacuzzi, which I will be
installing myself (Live free or live in MA!!!!). The tub comes with no
holes drilled in it. You put holes to suit the fixtures you buy.
Regards,
Steve
|
201.142 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon May 13 1991 17:43 | 6 |
| Oh... you drilled holes in the tub for the spout? Did Jacuzzi say to
do that? I'd think the spout should be mounted in the wall above the
tub, as normal tub spouts are. I can definitely see why the inspector
would complain about a spout in the tub!
Steve
|
201.143 | | ULTNIX::taber | Position set by lassitude and loungetude | Tue May 14 1991 09:06 | 8 |
| It's not clear to me from what's been said so far that the faucet
violates code. It seems like it would depend on where the overflow
drains are on the tub. If the overflow is below the level of the
faucet, you should be OK. If you like the fixture, it would be worth
checking with Jacuzzi to see what they have to say about it. After
that, it's your choice if you want to be jerked around by a cranky inspector.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
201.144 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Tue May 14 1991 09:33 | 8 |
| Jacuzzis come "pre-plumbed", which I gather (from their literature)
means that all the holes and the pump and its associated plumbing are
supplied. The particular model Cori's got has, if I'm not mistaken,
faucet mounting holes already drilled. I could be wrong.
Re .last, just how does one avoid being jerked around by a cranky
building inspector? The only method I know of might work in Italy, but
would get you a prison sentence in this country.
|
201.145 | Yes, you do drill the holes | MARX::SULLIVAN | We have met the enemy, and they is us! | Tue May 14 1991 09:54 | 13 |
| Steve,
>Oh... you drilled holes in the tub for the spout? Did Jacuzzi say to
>do that?
Yes they do. We have a Jacuzzi whirlpool tub. It has a rainbow spout
that is mounted on an angle in one of the corners (above the tub so code is
not a problem). We couldn't put it on a wall if we wanted to. The wall is about
2' away. Jacuzzi has diagrams for mounting it in corners, sides, middle, etc.,
wherever you want to drill the holes.
Mark
|
201.146 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue May 14 1991 12:46 | 7 |
| Re: .15
Oh, ok.. It's mounted on the tub deck. That means the output of the spout
is above the rim of the tub and it should be legal. I don't see what the
gripe is.
Steve
|
201.147 | Sounds like a 'back flow' valve could be used .. | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early, Digital Services | Wed May 15 1991 11:01 | 30 |
| re: 4229.13 "Rainbow Spout" on Jacuzzi bathtub illegal in Mass? 13 of 16
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>drains are on the tub. If the overflow is below the level of the
>faucet, you should be OK. If you like the fixture, it would be worth
Sorry if this is out of place, but I use batch exrtracting of
"unseens" ..
I just went through a similar issue of having the 'supply line' below
the "drain level". The basic health problem is one of ".. if the
water pressure fails due to a broken pipe, the used (contaminated)
water could be sucked back into the supply pipes. causing as health
hazard".
There is a device called (for lack of correct terms) a "backflow
valve", and they are typically used on Bidets, and compared to a
"above drain" supply, they are somewhat pricey. Fountain plumbing
fixtures cost someting like $250 compared to "above reservoir" which
is around $95.00 (like at Builders Supply) for the Eljay brand.
I would think (perhaps mistakenly) if someone really wants "bottom
fed" or "below level" supply; an add on back flow valve could be
installed .. but expect a certain amount of pricieness ..
(yes I know a bidet and jacuzzi are different, but the principle is
different, and one doesn't get pregant in a bidet)...
-Bob
|
201.148 | I don't think your contractor knows how to install the faucet | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Thu May 16 1991 09:40 | 12 |
| Better late than never. I haven't read all the 17 previous replies but
here goes...
I have a rainbow spout on my two person rectangular tub that I bought
at Somerville in Westboro 6 years ago. It makes the tub. We ordered the
tub and didn't realize that the spout wasn't included. I wasn't
impressed when the tub was installed with the "standard" faucet. That
got pulled and the rainbow installed. The rainbow on my tub is
installed on the top edge of the tub above the level of the lip. Until
my bathroom gets flooded to 3' deep, there will be no backflow. It's
not in the tub. I don't see how you can get the "rainbow" effect
without it mounted this way.
|
201.149 | No pre-drilled holes; spout not wall-mountable... | 4EVER::MEHRING | | Fri May 17 1991 16:52 | 37 |
| Well, to set some of you straight:
o The tub does not come with pre-drilled holes (thus you can pick where to
place the fixtures)
o Our particular tub is triangular (fits in a corner) and has a wide "ledge"
area less than an inch, but still recessed from, the topmost lip of the
fiberglass. This is where the jacuzzi brochure shows the rainbow spout
mounted. In other standard shaped tubs, the ledge is not recessed from the
top edge, thus there wouldn't be this problem.
o Yes, a backflow valve was an alternative, but as mentioned, it was quite
expensive (has to be exposed -- accessible, as in the basement somewhere)
when added with the required labor, etc.
o Yes, the "rainbow" spout cannot be mounted on a wall -- it is about a 3" by
7" by 1" rectangle, where the water comes out from the widest side (7"x1")
to create a waterfall effect. So, it wasn't that the plumber didn't know
how to install it...
I looked at the tub and didn't see any backflow drain holes near the top, so
I don't know if those have to also be drilled, or what...
We ended up getting a wall-mounted extended spout and knob set, which was even
more expensive than the original (both were brass...), but will pass in-
spection fine and is certainly equivalent functionality-wise...However, it
will probably always bother me since I feel we had to compromise for no
reasonable reason -- and the wall-mounted spout could potentially be dangerous
if one is sitting in the tub, since it's extended (to allow the required
water flow), which makes it kind of obtrusive... Sigh.
If I didn't have work, baby on the way, etc. I would've made more of a stink
about this, but not only is it stressful, it was causing even more delays in
the whole project. Calling Jacuzzi may have helped, but there's still the
problem of convincing the inspector.
Anyway, thanks for the suggestions
|
201.150 | How do I cut a Cast Iron bathtub? | MKFSA::SENNEVILLE | | Wed Jul 10 1991 17:32 | 24 |
| After looking at 1111 I don't believe there is a note specificly
related to what I'm looking for. I'm shure I'll be corrected if I'm
wrong.
I have come to the point where I need to replace the bathtub in my
house. The problem is how do I remove this thing? It was obviously put
in before the ceramic tile arround it. I guess what I would like to do
is cut it in pieces to make removal easyer. The question is, how do I
do it? Here the situation
1. the tub is the width of the bathroom.
2. the toilet bowl is about 18" in front of the tub ( I guess I could
remove it temporaryly)
3. The tile walls will be removed (to replace the waterlogged plaster
behind it) and replaced with a fiberglass type tub surround.
4. Most importantly the thing is made of cast Iron.
I have been told that it could be cut with a torch. But it seems to me
like I'd be asking for a fire with that suggestion. Another suggestion
was to wack it with a sledge hammer. Somehow the thought of porcelain
flying everywhere seems a bit dangerous. How about a sawsall, would
that work? I am shure this has been done many times before I just don't
know anybody who has done it. Any suggestions?
GUY
|
201.151 | What I'd do | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Wed Jul 10 1991 23:33 | 16 |
| I would put on heavy boots, heavy pants, a heavy shirt, and eye
protection and go at it with a sledgehammer. With the door shut.
I'd smash in the front to start with, and then break down the top.
I'd be surprized if it was that tough a job, or if there were that
many flying pieces. I broke up a discarded cast iron sewer pipe once
and it crunched quite easily -- cast iron is brittle. Cleaning the
tools was my worst problem -- I replaced it because it was clogged...
Enjoy,
Larry
PS -- Smashing things gets a lot easier if one buys a heavy sledge.
PPS -- Using a sawzall sounds dangerous to me, even if it would work
on cast iron. You'd have to break a starter hole anyway.
|
201.152 | Wack it. | SMURF::AMBER | | Thu Jul 11 1991 08:49 | 4 |
| You'll be amazed at how easily it breaks with the sledge. Don't go
nuts; start with soft taps and progress to harder ones until it cracks.
Also, don't underestimate the weight of the pieces.
|
201.153 | Case of the mutant cast iron tub that wouldn't die | NATASH::MARCHETTI | In Search of the Lost Board | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:14 | 11 |
| I tried breaking up a cast iron tub with a sledge and I couldn't do it!
The hammer just bounced off that sucker and after a while I started
vibrating more than the tub. I was able to get the tub out with the
help of my brother (I gave him the heavier end). We dropped it to the
ground from a height of 14 feet and it still didn't break. Somebody
took it off my hands for use as a horse trough.
Are there different kinds of cast iron that are less brittle that might
resist this sort of attack?
Bob
|
201.154 | | BGTWIN::dehahn | No time for moderation | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:20 | 7 |
|
There are such things as cast steel tubs
Don't forget ear protection when smashing with the sledge. Even cotton wads are
better than nothing. Those sledge blows are LOUD!!!
CdH
|
201.155 | | SEESAW::PILANT | L. Mark Pilant, VMS Security | Thu Jul 11 1991 09:45 | 7 |
| There was an article in Fine Homebuilding (Great Moments in Building History)
in the last issue or two that told a story about extracting a similar tub.
While the story is also humorous, it might also give you some ideas about what
might be done.
- Mark
|
201.156 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Thu Jul 11 1991 10:15 | 6 |
| There are also steel tubs; they won't break with a sledgehammer.
A cast iron one should though. I think the sledgehammer route
is your best bet. Cast iron doesn't cut very well with a torch,
not to mention the fire hazard. A steel tub would probably cut
pretty well with a torch, if the porcelin didn't interfere, but
I'd worry about setting the house on fire....
|
201.157 | What for flying slivers | TLE::MCCARTHY | Brian J. | Thu Jul 11 1991 10:43 | 5 |
| and as .1 says COVER YOUR ENTIRE BODY with clothing/protection. I broke apart
a cast iron tub with a sledge hammer - yes it was loud - the worst part was the
flying enamel finish. It was very sharp - like glass.
Brian
|
201.158 | Sledge and blanket?! | CTHQ1::EHRAMJIAN | And Twins Makes 3 | Thu Jul 11 1991 11:26 | 7 |
| I'd suggest the sledge approach too. What about using a blanket or
something of heavy cloth over the area you are to strike with the
sledge? It would seem to me that this might reduce the flying enamel
and splinter pieces.
Carl
|
201.159 | Should be an easy job if cast iron. | GIAMEM::LAMPROS | | Thu Jul 11 1991 14:22 | 7 |
|
I broke up a cast iron tub this past November. I put an old light
blanket over it and hit it with the sludge hammer. it was a real easy
job. The whole thing including cleanup took less than 1 hour.
Cast steel will not break up. You will know pretty fast if it is
cast iron or cast steel when you hit it.
Bill
|
201.160 | When you've removed it ... | STAR::GAGNE | David Gagne - VMS/LAN Development | Thu Jul 11 1991 22:32 | 3 |
| If you end up not destroying the tub, Vermont Salvage in Manchester,
New Hampshire will pay you for the tub if you bring it to them. They
will pay you 20% of what they usually sell them for.
|
201.161 | Hit it with a sledge it is | MKFSA::SENNEVILLE | | Fri Jul 12 1991 12:18 | 9 |
| Thanks for all the replys. It's obvious that the way to go is to wack
it with a sledge. I would be supprised (as well as angry) if this tub
is not cast. In looking at the back side of it (there's an oversized
hole for the drain in the floor under it) the finish is rough. In other
words it looks like a casting. besides the house is 32 years old and
judgeing by the quality of everything else.......
Thanks
GUY
|
201.244 | Vanisol cleaner (sp) | LUNER::DOIRON | | Mon Jul 15 1991 10:36 | 10 |
| Has anyone heard of Vanisol (sp). While on vacation I couldn't help
notice how the fiberglass tubs (not new either) looked so fantastic
everyday that the maid cleaned them. I asked her what she used and she
stated Vanisol(sp). She said it is a spray and it helps kill germs
etc. We were on our way out and I thought I'd get more info when she
came around again, but I never did see the maid. Seems we were out when
they came. Any insight as to where I can get some?
Loraine
223-3606
|
201.162 | Wonder if SPAG'S carries them? | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Tue Jul 16 1991 15:26 | 9 |
| .9:
� I put an old light
� blanket over it and hit it with the sludge hammer.
^^^^^^
Yes, that is the proper kind of hammer to use in plumbing.
Dick
|
201.163 | Sledge hammer - my favorite tool | PICKET::LEFFERTS | | Wed Jul 17 1991 09:04 | 6 |
| I busted up a very heavy cast iron/enamel sink with HEAVY sledge hammer
and light canvas drop cloth over it to catch splinters. This technique
does work. However, it may take longer than you think if the cast iron
is thick. Don't get discouraged. When we got tired of hitting the sink
(and it RINGS LOUDLY) we drilled holes and cut it with a power saw just
to get the crack lines going. Good luck.
|
201.245 | | MARX::SULLIVAN | We have met the enemy, and they is us! | Wed Jul 17 1991 21:00 | 13 |
| Loraine,
It would be nice to find out this works. Since we have a high iron
content in our water, the tubs always look lousy. Anyone know?
>While on vacation I couldn't help notice how the fiberglass tubs
>(not new either) looked so fantastic everyday that the maid cleaned them
I think the keyword is here ^^^^^^^^. I bet if our tubs were cleaned
everyday they'd look pretty good too. I don't know about your house. We aren't
slobs, but we certainly don't clean the tub every day! :-)
Mark
|
201.246 | "Iron Out" is good for iron stains | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Jul 18 1991 01:06 | 8 |
| If the tubs look bad because of high iron content in the water, there's a
product called "Iron Out" that works a treat. Put it and some water on
the stain and it reacts with the iron to remove the stain. Gentle scrubbing
helps it work quicker, but isn't mandatory (at least not on horziontal
surfaces). I bought some at Spags, but I've seen it elsewhere, too.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
201.164 | A LITTLE HUMOR | DELNI::RIZZITANO | | Thu Jul 18 1991 10:43 | 1 |
| Maybe use a pencil and DRAW it out..... Just a suggestion.
|
201.165 | Yuk, yuk | ELWOOD::LANE | | Fri Jul 19 1991 14:19 | 2 |
| The binoculars trick is easier - just use 'em wrong-way-around and pick up
the tub with a tweezers and drop it in the trash.
|
201.166 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Fri Jul 26 1991 17:56 | 5 |
| re: .12
Yes, Spag's keeps their sludge hammers just downwind from their air hammers.
Gary
|
201.247 | DISSOLVE | MCIS2::DUPUIS | Love is grand, Divorce is 20 grand | Mon Aug 26 1991 13:29 | 4 |
| Fuller Brush has a product called DISSOLVE that does a great job on my
tub.
Roberta
|
201.320 | tile above tub wall liner | FSTTOO::ROTHBERG | | Tue Oct 22 1991 11:10 | 9 |
| I'm going to be installing a 3 piece tub wall liner in a few weeks. I
also plan on tiling above the liner. My question is, since the liner
is relatively thin compared to the thickness of the tile above it, how
would I make these two surfaces look good where they join together.
also are there any particular caulking techniques for this kind of
joining (tile above tub liner).
thanx,
Marc
|
201.174 | Bathtub Refinishing | LJOHUB::FOLEY | | Fri Feb 21 1992 11:31 | 6 |
| I'm in the process of having a 20 year old, pale pink bathtub
refinished. I've talked to Mr. Tub and Bath Genie - it costs $200-250.
Does anyone have any experience in dealing with these two companies ?
Alos, how did the job look ? I'm also doing a color change - pink to
white, and hoping that it brightens the bathroom.
|
201.127 | Soaking Tubs | SALEM::PAGLIARULO_G | Reality is a cosmic hunch | Mon Apr 06 1992 09:56 | 15 |
| I'm getting ready to remodel our main bathroom and am looking for
tubs. Ideally I would like to put in a 2 piece acryllic unit but they
don't make them and I don't want to use fiberglass. So, it looks like
we'll go with a stand alone tub and tile. One of the things my wife
would really like is a deeper tub than the normal 14". So, I'm thinking
of buying a soaking tub. It's essentially a whirlpool type tub without
the mechanicals and jets. We don't want to put a whirlpool tub in because
we will be selling the house in the next few years and don't want to spend
the extra $400 - $500 over the cost of the soaking tub. My question is,
since this is an unusual item, how will this be looked on by prospective
buyers? Will it be a bug or a feature or neither? Any opinions?
George
George
|
201.128 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome (Maynard) | Mon Apr 06 1992 10:45 | 6 |
| It likely depends entirely upon the prospective buyer. A family
with small children to bathe would probably see it as a negative.
An individual or a childless couple, on the other hand, would
perhaps see it as a positive. My guess is that on balance, it
has the potential for more negative than positive...but that's
just a guess.
|
201.39 | | FROST::SIMON | Birds can't row boats | Thu May 14 1992 15:23 | 19 |
|
When we built our house 8 years ago we picked up a used cast iron/
enamel tub, that I considered refinishing at the time. I even
did pick up a kit from Hilson's Home Center (South Burlington, Vt)
to do the job. But at the time I was so busy with other building
that I decided against it, and just gave the tub a very thorough
cleaning and then lived with it since then.
Now that we have most of the other work done (we work slow ;-)),
we've decided to look into finally doing something about the tub.
My wife called a "professional" for a quote and got a price of
$300. This is done in the home, takes about a day, they etch with
acid first, etc.
Having paid only $35 for the tub, I find it hard to swallow $300
to have it refinished.... I may go check to see if that kit that
I returned is still available. I think that only cost ~$10.
_gary
|
201.40 | Try Town Paint | JURAN::LAFORTE | | Mon May 18 1992 16:28 | 10 |
|
There's a place in Marlboro, Mass. called Town Paint. I know they
have a refinishing kit there. I believe they sold somewhere between $25
and $35. I haven't tried this myself but plan to in the future. I'd
rather work outside this time of year. They also have excellaent prices
on all there goods.
-Al
|
201.175 | Crispy Feet......Yuk!! | PAKORA::KANDERSON | Home Sweet Home? Whaaaaaa.... | Sat Jun 27 1992 19:10 | 7 |
| The bath in my new home had little sticky feet on the bottom to stop
slipping while in the shower,i have removed these and used nail polish
to remove the glue but two of them the glue was crisp and wouldn't
budge.Any ideas how to get this off,it's a plastick bath.....
Kat
|
201.176 | | KEYBDS::HASTINGS | | Mon Jun 29 1992 13:54 | 3 |
|
would a razor blade work?
|
201.129 | Crack in fiberglass | KIMBER::FIFFY | | Mon Oct 05 1992 15:46 | 4 |
| I have a large crack where you step over into my one piece fiberglass
shower and tub. The crack seems to be growing (very slow) and I would
like to know if there is anyway to repair this?
|
201.248 | Crack in fiberglass tub | KIMBER::FIFFY | | Wed Oct 07 1992 08:51 | 4 |
| I have a large crack where you step over into my one piece
fiberglass shower and tub. The crack seems to be growing
( very slow 12" long now ) and I would like to know if there
is anyway to repair this?
|
201.249 | | MANTHN::EDD | Math is hard! | Wed Oct 07 1992 09:13 | 12 |
| Is the crack on the side or bottom of the tub?
| __
| || <- Here?
| ||
\________/| Somewhere else?
^
Here?
Before you fix it, you'll probably want to find out WHY it's cracking.
Edd
|
201.250 | Here a shot at where. | PIPPER::FIFFY | | Thu Oct 08 1992 12:20 | 11 |
| The main crack is here.
| _____ <- Main crack on top center of step over.
| ->| |Hairline crack when pressure is put on
| | |top center of step over.
\________/ |
The crack may have come from one of the older kids who said they
did not do anything but lean on top to wash hair!!!! But who knows..
|
201.251 | I HATE when that happens | SALEM::PAGLIARULO_G | Reality is a cosmic hunch | Fri Oct 09 1992 08:25 | 6 |
| I don't remember the name off hand but County Supply in Lowell can
give you the phone nyumber of a company that may repair such things. I
know that they can repair the finish on acryllic units since I had to call
them after I whacked my new tub with a hammer. :-( :-(
George
|
201.252 | Acrylic Crafters in NH | JUNCO::BOWNE | | Mon Oct 19 1992 11:51 | 8 |
| Give Acrylic Crafters a call. They are supposedly one of the only
companies on the east coast that will do this type of repair. They are
located in Northampton, NH, I believe. The phone was (603) 964-8957
about a year ago... But they can take quite a while to get back to
you.
/Tom
|
201.253 | get a referral | XLII::NSOHL | | Mon Oct 19 1992 17:44 | 7 |
| I had a hole about the size of a dime and several hairline cracks in my
fiberglass tub. I called a plumbing supply company and asked for
recommendations. The guy they suggested was great and you can't tell
there was anything ever wrong. Since I'm in Atlanta, a referral won't
help. Try calling a plumbing supply place and ask who they use. It seems
they have to get fiberglass tubs repaired quite often due to damage during
shipping or installation.
|
201.4 | Replace shower drain? | MR4DEC::BMCWILLIAMS | Improvise if you have to ... | Mon Mar 08 1993 21:11 | 11 |
| Question for the plumbers out there:
Is it possible to remove and replace the chromed drain at the bottom of my
shower stall? The existing drain is very corroded, gross looking, and smelly.
Does this piece basically thread into something below it? If so, what is the
best way (tool?) to uncrew it, given that it is 15+ years old and rusty?
Thanks for any tips ...
Brian
|
201.5 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 09 1993 07:57 | 6 |
| RE: .4
Can you get under the tub? The piece is held down with a nut under the
tub.
Marc H.
|
201.6 | | MANTHN::EDD | I'm just a jigger low... | Tue Mar 09 1993 08:35 | 15 |
| > The piece is held down with a nut under the tub.
Hmmmmm... On both the tub I removed, and the one I installed, the drain
screwed into the pipe under the tub. That is, the chrome piece visible
from inside the tub was threaded on the *outside*, and the piece that
received it (under the tub) was threaded on the inside.
It was easily removed by inserting the handles of a pair of pliers into
the drain and unscrewing it.
I had no reason to get under the tub for that part of the project.
Edd
|
201.7 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 09 1993 08:46 | 5 |
| Re: .6
Correct! I was thinking about the whole assembly. Thanks.
Marc H.
|
201.8 | | MR4DEC::BMCWILLIAMS | Improvise if you have to ... | Tue Mar 09 1993 09:42 | 7 |
| RE. past two:
Thanks. So do I turn *clockwise* to loosen?
Are these drains standard? Available in good plumbing supply shops?
Brian
|
201.9 | | MANTHN::EDD | I'm just a jigger low... | Tue Mar 09 1993 12:35 | 12 |
| > Thanks. So do I turn *clockwise* to loosen?
COUNTER-clockwise to loosen.
The drain should be easily available. Take the old one with you.
When re-installing, apply a liberal amount of plumber's putty to the
bottom of the flanged part that contacts the tub surface. After you
tighten it down the putty will squeeze out and you wipe the residual
off.
Edd
|
201.130 | wearibility of Americast tubs? | ROMA::TCHEN | | Wed Apr 28 1993 15:46 | 8 |
| I'm wondering if anyone has experience w/ Americast tubs (from American
Standard) consisting of a enamel-coated steel sheet inside a plastic
frame. Advantages over cast iron are ~1/2 the weight, less heat
conductive, more sound damping. However I'm concerned about the
wearability of the finish. I've heard the Kohler applies its glaze
by heating the tub nearly red-hot and spraying dry glaze while rotating
the tub.
|
201.321 | Help! Sand Tile Wall? | 15377::PKOW01::EBERT | | Tue Sep 21 1993 17:45 | 8 |
|
Does nayone know if its necessary to sand a glazed tile wall before
applying adhesive and aa tub surround? The instruction booklet that
comes with the surround suggests that you do so, but the glazed is
really resistant to even corundom sandpaper.
Thanks!
Dave
|
201.254 | Repairs to fiberglass tubs | BUSY::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Wed Oct 27 1993 16:26 | 49 |
| Looked for a topic on "repair to fiberglass tubs" but could not find
one.
We have a 60" x 32" fiberglass tub/shower unit that we installed just
under 3 years ago. About 1 year ago we installed a shower door
designed for this unit. We have had water collecting and dripping thru
the bottom of the lower track on and off ever since. The bottom track
was replaced by me 3 times. I had posted the problem under another
topic and was advised to do a good job using plenty of silicone
adhesive.
The leak was on the left half of the tub which is a left hand drain tub
btw. After 3 times without being able to stop the leak we contacted
the distributor. They came out and felt there may be a slight dip in
the top of the dam (the area the track sits on) which would explain why
the water would collect in that area and why the track would never seat
perfectly on this half of the tub. The manufacturer's rep had come out
next to have a look. After several visits from both the distributor
and the manfacturer, the manufacturer sent a plumber to install a new
lower track. The plumber removed the old track and cleaned up the
surface.
At this point I spoke to him to get his opinion on the condition of the
dam. He said there was a definate imperfection where the water would
collect and be unable to runoff. He said he could lay the new track
down but could not guarantee the problem would not re-occur.
At that point I told him not to bother and to inform the manufacturer
that I wanted the unit replaced, per the warranty.
To make a long story short, the manufacturer has decided to repair the
area to make it perfectly shaped as it should have been to begin with.
He will grind down the area and rebuild it. I was told that the job
would be professional and I would not see any lines, and the area would
be stronger than it was to begin with.
They are so confident in their mans work, that they said if we are not
satisfied they will at that time replace the unit.
We were not happy with them doing this job, and were told that our only
other choice would be re-imbursement for the tub only, no labor,
no materials, no shower door. Just the tub, about $350.
So, left with little choice we scheduled the repair for next Thursday.
Has anyone had experience with fiberglass tub repair work that they
could share here?
Thanks, Mark
|
201.255 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Oct 28 1993 09:01 | 4 |
| > Looked for a topic on "repair to fiberglass tubs" but could not find
> one.
See note 2748.
|
201.167 | Old tub worth any $ ? | BUSY::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Mon Jan 24 1994 17:13 | 13 |
| I have a cast iron tub that is almost ready to come out. Just need
to disconnect the drain.
I was wondering if the tub was worth saving or if I should just smash
it with a sledge hammer (I know a guy who has a 45lb hammer and I'm
sure he will let me borrow it).
The tub is 100% functional but does need refinishing to be perfect.
I am trying to recycle and get a few dollars towards the cost of the
new fixtures. I suppose an old cast iron tub (no claws, about 30 years
old) is not worth much. Any opinions?
Thanks, Mark
|
201.168 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 24 1994 19:07 | 3 |
| Swing that sledge; cover the tub in an old blanket first.
Steve
|
201.169 | Be a goooood neighbor... | STRATA::CASSIDY | | Tue Jan 25 1994 05:48 | 10 |
| > I was wondering if the tub was worth saving or if I should just smash
> it with a sledge hammer (I know a guy who has a 45lb hammer and I'm
> sure he will let me borrow it).
Swing hard. Don't forget the ear plugs. They break much easier
if you bang on them (repeatably) before dawn. 8^)
As scrap iron, an old tub isn't worth much.
Tim
|
201.170 | Can we watch? | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Tue Jan 25 1994 08:01 | 7 |
| A friend of mine had a cast iron tub "all ready to come out" too.
After repeated whacks with the sledge which did nothing to the tub but
did wonders for his neck and shoulders, he got some help from his
father, and the two of them tried to maneuver the tub down a flight of
stairs and out the front door. I only wish I could have been there to
watch. From his description, the three stooges couldn't have done it
better. Good luck. You're going to need it.
|
201.171 | | USPMLO::GILLIGAN | The skipper too.... | Tue Jan 25 1994 09:35 | 4 |
| And don't forget the eye protection!!
Brian
|
201.172 | Sledge Hammer | BUSY::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Tue Jan 25 1994 15:51 | 9 |
| I guess what you hit it with would make a difference.
If it does not break with a 45 lb sledge hammer I will be suprised.
Actually the guy with the 45 lb'r has done this many times.
I'll let you know. Probably this coming weekend.
Mark
|
201.173 | Done deal! | BUSY::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Thu Feb 10 1994 13:43 | 12 |
| Turns out that sledge hammer was more around a 25 lb'r.
At any rate the unit was broken into 3 major pieces. The whole
job including removal of the 3 pieces took about 5 minutes.
Cleaning the rest of the stuff took about another 30 minutes.
Was able to get 2 cents/pound on those pieces at the local auto
salvage yard.
Mark
|
201.190 | 2nd Floor Tub Trap Takes Too Much Space | XELENT::MUTH | I drank WHAT? - Socrates | Tue May 31 1994 15:33 | 54 |
|
I'm in the process of renovating our 2nd floor bathroom and have the
following problem. The trap for the bathtub drain extends approx 2"
below the ceiling of the room below it (the kitchen.) We would like
to remedy this so that nothing extends below the kitchen ceiling. The
drain lines were installed from below, so it really isn't possible to
raise the drain line without cutting too deeply into the joists.
I thought that it might be possible to place the tub on a platform to
give the trap enough room, and add an extra bend to the end of the
trap to connect it with the existing drain (see after picture.)
Before:
!------------------------------! tub
! !
! !
! !
! !
************| |**************************************** bathroom floor
| |
| | /-----------------------
\ \ / drain
\ \ / /---------------------
***************\ -- /******************************* kitchen ceiling
\ /
--------
After:
!--------------------------! tub
! !
! !
! !
! !
============| |============== platform
============| |==============
************| |**************************************** bathroom floor
| | /---------
\ \ / \
\ \ / /--\ \
\ -- / \ ------------------
\ / \ drain
-------- \---------------------
********************************************** kitchen ceiling
Is this a reasonable solution? Is it safe? Does it violate any
codes? Any comments or suggestions would be appreciated!
Bill
|
201.191 | Nearly 5,500 Topics & counting... | STRATA::CASSIDY | | Wed Jun 01 1994 01:17 | 8 |
| > <<< Note 5329.0 by XELENT::MUTH "I drank WHAT? - Socrates" >>>
> -< 2nd Floor Tub Trap Takes Too Much Space >-
I'm sure there are plenty of plumbing notes in this conference
where you could have asked about this. Performing a title search
of Note 1111 can show you where they are. (DIR/TITLE=1111.*)
Tim
|
201.192 | | XELENT::MUTH | I drank WHAT? - Socrates | Wed Jun 01 1994 11:06 | 11 |
|
> <<< Note 5329.1 by STRATA::CASSIDY >>>
> I'm sure there are plenty of plumbing notes in this conference
> where you could have asked about this. Performing a title search
> of Note 1111 can show you where they are. (DIR/TITLE=1111.*)
I looked through the plumbing notes, and did title searches for
DRAIN, TRAP, TUB, and some others, and found nothing really
relavent.
Bill
|
201.193 | Unique plumbing? what's next? | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Wed Jun 01 1994 11:48 | 19 |
| So why not just ask another plumbing related question in one of the
plumbing notes? Is yours a "special" plumbing case? Is yours a gold
plated pipe that can't be soldered without destroying the poor adhesion of
the gold onto the cheap plastic pipe and should probably go in the jewelry
conference, instead? Or is it the fact that your plumbing was done by an
unskilled craftsman and, therefore, isn't really plumbing but, rather,
resembles something that belongs on a Super Mario Nintendo screen and,
therefore, belongs in the Nintendo conference.
come on. Plumbing is plumbing.
Since you're going to have to repair the old hole in the ceiling, perhaps
you can duplicate this note and ask how to repair a ceiling that used to
have a bathtub trap protruding through it.
Mr./Ms. Moderator, please move the base note to the correct topic and delete
the rest of these useless, (mine included) replies.
|
201.194 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jun 01 1994 11:50 | 12 |
| I went through this recently; during a bathroom remodelling the plumber
hired by the contractor rigged up the drain so that the trap stuck down below
the joist (into a finished basement.) He claimed that he was required to
do so by code, but I later had another plumber whom I trusted more look at
it and he said that the first plumber was just lazy; a new, tighter-angle
trap was installed and the trap is now above the joist.
As long as there is the usual vent through the stopper control, I think
what you are proposing should be fine. But it might be wise to call your
town's plumbing inspector and ask.
Steve
|
201.195 | Looks wrong to me | EVMS::KAYAK::GROSSO | Prevent & Prepare or Repent & Repair | Wed Jun 01 1994 18:55 | 3 |
|
I think what you've drawn is against code because it can siphon and drain
the trap thus allowing sewer gas back up.
|
201.196 | | WIDGET::KLEIN | | Thu Jun 02 1994 14:31 | 6 |
| >I think what you've drawn is against code because it can siphon and drain
>the trap thus allowing sewer gas back up.
That was my first reaction, too. (The siphoning action, that is.)
-steve-
|
201.197 | Use different trap | TOOK::MACHON | | Wed Jul 06 1994 11:05 | 21 |
|
This may be too late but when I took up my floor to redo the bathroom, this
was the trap used, I had to replace it 'cos the bath moved, about $8
at home depot. Its a two ( three including the cap) piece PVC unit, so
you can easily change the angle between the in and out and then welded
------------------------------------------------------------ Sub floor
--|ScrewCap|--
| |
| -------------------------------
| Out
| -------------------------------
| |
|------------|
| |
| |
| |
------------ |
In |
--------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------ SLAB
|
201.177 | BathFitters tub insert and surround ??? | NODEX::CLBMUD::Conferencing-User | Pat McGreal 297-2285 | Thu Jul 07 1994 11:07 | 18 |
| Hi,
I am considering having a bathtub insert put in over an old
cast iron tub. In addition a one piece tub surround will also
be installed.
The company that does this is called "BathFitters". The tub is made
of a thermo molded acrylic as is the tub surround. The material is
1/4" to 3/8" thick. The cost is about $1200 which I believe is a
lot less than having everything ripped out and replaced.
Has anyone had this done? Is this a good way to go?
All opinions/suggestions welcome.
Thanks.
Pat
|
201.178 | hummmmm? | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Thu Jul 07 1994 12:42 | 6 |
|
Unless your bath is one major disaster, the 1200 seems on
the high side. DIY cost would be under half that depending
on what you had to do and put in.......
jd
|
201.198 | creative decorating? | NRSTA2::BRODERICK | You're in a WWWeb of twisty little passages | Thu Jul 07 1994 20:57 | 6 |
| In our house (2x8 floor joists) we have the same situation. Creative
decorating was used to hide the protruding trap. The basement is done sort of
rustic w/ barn board and rough-cut 4x4 "fake" timber. One of the 4x4s was
placed right over the trap and hollowed out to fit the trap.
_Mike
|
201.179 | | TOOK::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Thu Jul 07 1994 23:49 | 12 |
| re: .0, Pat
> I am considering having a bathtub insert put in over an old
> cast iron tub.
Can you elaborate on this? What exactly are they proposing to do? Is
this something made to fit inside (i.e. to "jacket") an in-place
cast iron tub? Footed or modern?
Sorry - this concept is a new one to me.
-Jack
|
201.180 | I meant to post this as reply to #737 | NODEX::CLBMUD::Conferencing-User | Pat McGreal 297-2285 | Fri Jul 08 1994 10:40 | 8 |
| Hi,
I goofed again. I had intended this note as a reply to #737
and must have pushed the wrong icon on my PC pathworks
conferencing screen.
Please excuse this mess.
Pat
|
201.181 | Here is what it is | NODEX::CLBMUD::Conferencing-User | Pat McGreal 297-2285 | Fri Jul 08 1994 11:59 | 16 |
| Hi,
Yes. That is exactly what they do. They take a lot of mesurements
of the existing tub and then produce an Acrylic liner which is
quite thick and much stiffer than a fiberglass tub.
The wall surround (also one piece) installs over the existing
tile, wall or whatever as long as it makes a solid foundation.
No loose tiles.
The tub is produuced in Canada, Bath Fitters is in Vermont,
and is made by a process called thermo molding. Basically
take a big sheet of acrylic, heat it up and wrap it around
an already formed mold, then let it cool and voila. I'm sure
I over simplify.
Pat
|
201.41 | Tub Refinishing - 1994 | MKOTS3::NICKERSON | | Wed Nov 09 1994 10:34 | 8 |
| I'm interested if anyone has any recent experience with
refinishing Bathtubs and Shower Stalls. Can this be a DIY
or should we look for a company (in Southern NH)?
Thanks for any info,
Linda Nickerson
MKOTS3::NICKERSON
|
201.42 | what kind of paint on my claw-foot tub? | GUIDUK::BRENNAN_CA | Cathy Brennan, 548-8563 | Thu Nov 10 1994 15:25 | 19 |
| I inherited an old, claw-foot tub with the house I bought. The inside's
okay, but the outside's been painted tan. I can tell that there were
probably other coats of something under the tan, because, although the
tan's not peeling, there are bumps and pocks under it indicating that
a previous layer had peeled.
I'd like to repaint just the outside. I have about a month to do this
before the builders are ready to put the tub back in. (It's sitting in
the hall now, so all sides should be accessible.) The paint guy at
Eagle swears I can put a regular, latex paint on it. ("Lots of people
think enamel's different than paint.") Is that really true? The can of
paint I picked to look at, labeled something like "latex enamel,"
mentioned that it could be put on lots of materials, but didn't mention
the metal (iron?) of a tub. Will latex paint withstand the changes in
temperature that come with hot or cold water?
Thanks for any help.
Cathy
|
201.43 | | SMURF::LARRY | | Thu Nov 10 1994 16:24 | 11 |
| I tried to strip and paint an old claw foot tub but gave up.
I could not strip it with the chemical stuff. You will laugh at
what I ended up doing but it came out great! ....
I brought my tub to a local auto body shop. I asked him if he could
strip it (by sandblasting) and paint it (Ford white with Cadillac Gold
legs). Cost me $100 for the job. Like I said, it came out great!
Stripped right down to the metal and excellent sprayed on finish.
No kidding,
Larry
|
201.44 | ?s on paint job | BUSY::CLEMENT | Smells like Nirvana | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:08 | 9 |
| >I brought my tub to a local auto body shop. I asked him if he could
>strip it (by sandblasting) and paint it (Ford white with Cadillac Gold
>legs). Cost me $100 for the job. Like I said, it came out great!
>Stripped right down to the metal and excellent sprayed on finish.
Just curious. Was the inside and outside painted? How long ago and
how has it stood up overtime? How many coats of paint?
Thanks. Mark
|
201.45 | | ANGST::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:20 | 1 |
| How often do you have to wax it?
|
201.46 | | SMURF::LARRY | | Fri Nov 11 1994 09:37 | 11 |
| >> Just curious. Was the inside and outside painted? How long ago and
>> how has it stood up overtime? How many coats of paint?
Just the outside. I'm not sure exactly how many coats were applied... at
least two however. We did the Job about two summers ago and it still
is perfect with no sign of cracking... and I have not had to break out
the turtle wax yet!
-Larry
|
201.47 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Fri Nov 11 1994 11:08 | 11 |
|
I second the trip to the local auto body paint shop. I took the
front of my dishwasher in for the same treatment but in Ford black.
It is holding up real well. Having the tub done in a red would
be really neat. I wouldn't go with those bathtub companies though.
They are EXPENSIVE. I paid $40 dollars for the front of the
dishwasher and don't regret it!
justme....jacqui
|
201.182 | Bad experience !!!!!! | NODEX::CLBMUD::mcgreal | Pat McGreal 297-2285 | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:39 | 25 |
|
Here is an update on my Bathfitter installation to help those
who wish not to make the MISTAKE that I made.
I had mine installed in late July of this year. It looks nice
but since that time I have had to call them back FIVE times to fix
leaks in the seams where the wall surround meets the tub liner.
The major flaw in this system as I painfully now know is that
the joint between the tub insert and wall surround is a simple
butted joint whose integrity is VERY dependent on the caulk used
to seal it. This is not a good thing in an area where water is
involved as I have discovered.
I am having them come back ONE more time. If the problem returns
after this I am having the entire thing (including the old tub)
ripped out and a true replacement with conventional one piece
surround and tub unit put in. This no doubt will cost me between
$2000 - $3000 I would guess not counting the $1200 I've already
spent.
The painful lesson here is don't put a band aid over a problem
that should be fixed with major surgery. There are no short cuts.
Pat
|
201.183 | Sounds really high to me | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, UC1 | Mon Nov 28 1994 10:38 | 4 |
| Re: .5
You paid that much for a tub surround!!!!?? Your surround
must be made of granite slabs? :-)
|
201.184 | | VMSSPT::PAGLIARULO | | Tue Nov 29 1994 07:25 | 9 |
| Before you rip anythng out or purchase anything, be forewarned that a
one piece unit probably won't fit into old construction. They are pretty
much for new houses where you can put the unit in place before all the walls
are up. For an already built bathroom you probably need to go with a two
piece unit. There are a lot of good units that won't have the problems that
you experenced with the tub insert. Get acrylic, put down a bed of morter
and they are as solid as you could ever want.
George
|
201.185 | Was it sheetrocked wrong ? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Tue Nov 29 1994 09:16 | 9 |
| Normally, a bead of good caulking around the seam of the tub/wall
is not a problem. About the only time I've seen it be a problem is if
the sheetrock was run to close to the tub.
There is supposed to be about a 1/4" gap between the bottom of the
sheetrock and the tub itself. If this is not there, no amount of
recaulking is going to fix your problem.
Ray
|
201.186 | | WMOIS::ECMO::SANTORO | Greg Santoro | Fri Dec 02 1994 12:46 | 3 |
| If you do get fed up and consider replacing everything, you can save the
tub and have the walls tiled for a reasonable amount of money. IMHO,
nothing beats the look and performance of a good tile job.
|
201.334 | REFINISH with enamel or porcelin?? | REGENT::ROSS | | Tue Apr 11 1995 09:28 | 12 |
| ENAMEL vs SYNTHETIC PORCELIN ???
Hi,
I need to have my bathtub refinished. I've called two places -- each
charges the same amount of money ($250) and offers the same
warranty (5 years). But they use different methods, and I don't
know which is better! Sprayed on ENAMEL or prayed on
SYNTHETIC PORCELIN. Anyone know which is BETTER ???
Thanks.
Gale
|
201.335 | | HELIX::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome MRO1-1/KL31 Pole HJ33 | Tue Apr 11 1995 10:00 | 4 |
| I bet they're the same thing, but the synthetic porcelin guy is
trying to make it sound like something other than high-quality
enamel paint. But that's just a guess based on absolutely nothing....
|
201.336 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Apr 11 1995 13:00 | 7 |
|
re: the prayed on...
Probably better if you are a believer...
|
201.268 | Brown stain in tub caused by bleach??? | POBOXA::BAUST | | Mon May 08 1995 11:41 | 29 |
|
To the moderator, I apologize if I should have added this
to note 261, please feel free to move it.
Sue
I have an old porcelain free-standing bathtub. There
were some stains on the bottom of the tub caused by
leaving a rubber mat in the tub for an extended period
of time (at least that's what I think caused it).
Yesterday, I decided to clean it with Clorox bleach and
water (I've used this successfully on my kitchen sink - porcelain
also). However, instead of coming clean, the yellowish stain turned
into a very large brown stain. I looked in note 261
about the green stain, but this is not green - it\s very brown.
And before I try anything else and make it worse I wanted to
ask here. The porcelain is very dull in this part of the tub,
but it is not cracked. Any idea what this might be?
I also tried to call Besco supply, mentioned in 465.5 but their
phone has been disconnected. Does anyone know of another antique
plumbing supply house?
Thank you,
Sue
|
201.269 | | 12363::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Tue May 09 1995 12:26 | 8 |
| Chlorine bleach can cause stains when there is iron present.
Try using ZUD. Wet the stain, sprinkle liberally with ZUD, and leave it for a
while.
ZUD can be found in many stores near the comet cleanser. It's in a similar can,
but yellow.
|
201.270 | USE THE PINK STUFF?? | ICS::GROEZINGER | | Tue May 09 1995 16:46 | 9 |
| I had the same problem a few years ago. I used the pink stuff
for rust (can't remember the name of it though). Its in a pink
plastic bottle, very strong, will burn your skin, but it sure
took off the cast iron rust stains! I'd put a layer on, let it
stand for about 1/2 day and rinse thoroughly.
Good luck!
Judie
|
201.271 | nasty stuff | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Tue May 09 1995 17:06 | 4 |
| > for rust (can't remember the name of it though). Its in a pink
> plastic bottle, very strong, will burn your skin, but it sure
Naval jelly
|
201.272 | another solution | 25151::HOVEY | | Wed May 10 1995 11:28 | 4 |
|
Peroxide in a 5% solution (hair supply aisle) help me out when we
did the same thing...I sprayed it on and let it sit overnight. It
helped but once the finish is gone....
|
201.187 | Tub unit - grip bar repair | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Fri Sep 22 1995 17:56 | 19 |
|
Hi,
I have a fiberglass tub/shower unit. The grip bar has loosened and
falls out. The grip bar is approx. 15 1/2" long, approx. 1 1/4"
diameter. A plastic sleeve fits on each end of the metal bar, and
this sleeve fits into the hole (2) of the tub unit.
I have tried several plumbing supplies stores, and no one has a re-
placement part. The suggestion that I got was to try to re-install
the grip bar by using a lot of tub caulking to set the bar back in
place. But how would I do this since I can not get behind the tub
to put something in place that would stop the bar from sliding
through the hole? Also, the sleeve is made out of a very thin
piece of plastic that does not fit tightly around the metal bar.
Eleanor
|
201.188 | One way | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Tue Sep 26 1995 16:26 | 11 |
| Since nobody else took a stab at this, heres something that will
work and look reasonably well. Get some plastic or nylon washers that just
fit over the tub bar and slide two of them onto the middle of the bar.
Posistion the bar so that both ends are in the holes in the tub surround.
Slide a washer to each end of the bar and epoxy them in place.
The washers themselves will obviously be on the outside of the tub
surround. Short of taking down the tub surround, I don't see any other
way to do this.
Ray
|
201.189 | No replacement part, this sounds good. | 11435::ESULLIVAN | | Mon Oct 02 1995 14:41 | 7 |
|
Thank, Ray, I'll try this. I didn't know that there were plastic or
nylon washers. Would I find these in HQ or Home Depot or a plumbing
supply store? Hopefully I will find something close to the
circumference of the grip bar.
Eleanor
|
201.48 | This Old House... | 17972::SCARDIGNO | Let's have a BREAKTHROUGH in approval times | Mon Nov 13 1995 09:10 | 9 |
| I caught the last minute or two of "This Old House" the other
night, and they were putting some stuff on a bathtub they said
they got via mail-order... is this the same stuff referred to
in previous replies? Does anyone know how it works or where
one can get some? What I envisioned is stuff you apply, let
dry overnite, then peel off and voila, a new bathtub! :-)
Is that how it works?
Steve
|
201.49 | | PACKED::VOGEL_W | | Mon Nov 13 1995 09:33 | 6 |
|
I believe the stuff that Tom was applying to the tub was just
a protectant while they work on that room. It wasn't for
refinishing the tub.
|
201.50 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Mon Nov 13 1995 09:48 | 2 |
| The stuff in TOH was nothing more that a scratch guard -- it was
not a refinishing product.
|
201.346 | ..new surround right over the old one?.... | JUGHED::FLATTERY | | Fri Jan 26 1996 15:37 | 7 |
| question....i have what appears to be a plastic tub surround in my
bath. it is a horrible color and i want to change it to white. If i can
put a new enclosure right over the old one I'd prefer to do that as I'm
not really interested in getting into removing the old one. if I sand the
old plastic surround to rough it up, can i liquid nail my new fiberglass
tub surround right over the old one?. it's a given that both surfaces would
be flat and even. comments anyone?..........tx....../k
|
201.347 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Jan 26 1996 17:43 | 3 |
| I would rip out the old one. I don't think it will fit right otherwise.
Steve
|
201.348 | | JUGHED::FLATTERY | | Mon Jan 29 1996 14:15 | 4 |
| ....as it turned out...we ripped out the old one...the new one was two
inches shorter than the old one so that wouldn't have looked to
great....we got lucky and most of the wall stayed put when we ripped
the old one out....the new one looks great.................../k
|
201.349 | Crack in the fiberglass tub | UHUH::CHAYA | | Wed Mar 06 1996 13:52 | 15 |
|
There's a small crack in the fiberglass tub in the main bathroom. The inspector
who inspected the house for us, told us to get some Phenoseal(?) and seal the
crack to prevent leaks. He also mentioned that we should drill two small holes
on either side of the crack to prevent the crack from spreading. He said that
this sealant was gross looking orange stuff, but it would at least stop a
potential leak.
My question - has anyone done something similar? We are first time homeowners
and are totally ignorant about these DIY jobs. If it is a simple enough job, we
might attempt to do it ourselves ...I am just too scared of causing a bigger
problem than the one we already have! Also, is there an alternative to having
an orange patch in a grey tub?
--CR.
|
201.350 | Fiberglass can be repaired. | STAR::PIRULO::LEDERMAN | B. Z. Lederman | Wed Mar 06 1996 14:35 | 31 |
| I also have some hairline cracks in a shower stall in the house I just
bought. The inspector mentioned that any fiberglass repair kit could
be used.
If you've ever done any fiberglass construction or repair (automobile
or boat) you can do the same thing to fix a tub or shower and match the
color. It actually should be a bit easier than fiberglass construction
because you should only have to fix the gel coat. (Unless there is a
big crack near the bottom of the tub, in which case you might have to
slap some reinforcement over the crack on the 'outside'. But in this
case the repair is in a place where it will never be see, so the color
and neatness of the repair don't matter.)
If you've never done it before and can read a book and follow
instructions and aren't a complete klutz, you should be able to make
the repair. It's really not too difficult, but it does take a bit of
manual dexterity. The resin also usually smells awful, so you may want
to wait to do this at a time when you can open a lot of windows and use
a fan to ventilate the area.
Otherwise, you have to balance the cost of the repair kit and the cost
of the tub with the cost of a professional repair. The worst that can
happen is you end up with a really crummy looking tub that you might
have to replace, but if you don't fix it you'd have to replace it
anyway.
The color of the repair may depend on how good you are at mixing
matching colors. I haven't gone out to look (yet) to see if there are
pre-mixed repair kits for showers and tubs in matching colors. If
there are, then this makes the whole thing a lot easier.
|
201.351 | steal from the boating community | NOODLE::DEMERS | | Wed Mar 06 1996 17:05 | 10 |
| Cracks in the gelcoat (along with major dings from rocks, etc.) is a common
problem in the boating community. There are lots of kits that are targetted
for this type of problem. I recently saw a product that claims that, due to
its ultra-thin consistency, is able to penetrate even the smallest of cracks.
FWIW, if you're willing to pay, there are people who do this for a living.
When I discovered a crack in my tub under warranty, the tub company sent out an
independent tub repair person to do the work. Check the yellow pages.
Chris
|
201.352 | Some options | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Mar 07 1996 10:29 | 16 |
| Not sure how well fiberglass will stick to gel-coat on a tub, but
if it's the same as on boats, then you'll want to use a gel-coat repair
kit, not a fiberglass repair kit.
The fiberglass kit would work well on the under/back side of a tub
or stall, but not quite as well on the surface. I've had good luck
using plastic filler (i.e. Bondo) to fix a hole in a tub, but it was
above the normal tub waterline, so leaking wasn't as much of an issue.
My mother had a professional come in and redo a tub for her. I
don't think it was that expensive and it looked like new when it was
done. Another option would be to use the Bondo or phenoseal, then get
some of those stick on things they apply to tub bottoms for a more
non-skid surface, to cover the repair.
Ray
|
201.353 | cosmetic or what? | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Thu Mar 07 1996 15:55 | 14 |
| >crack to prevent leaks. He also mentioned that we should drill two small holes
>on either side of the crack to prevent the crack from spreading. He said that
The drilled holes relieve the stress and prevent the crack from spreading
further.
If the crack goes all the way through the Fiberglas, use a Fiberglas
repair kit and drill the ends.
If the cracks are in the gelcoat, use a gelcoat repair kit.
Gelcoat is a glaze that's not really a structural component of the fixture.
It's only purpose is to provide a smooth surface.
|
201.354 | Corian Tub Surround...any experience? | DELNI::CHALMERS | | Tue Mar 26 1996 12:10 | 16 |
| Since there doesn't seem to be a "tub surround" note, I'll ask this
here:
Has anyone ever installed a tub surround made of Corian? If so, what
did you like/dislike about it? Any gotchas to be aware of?
At local homeshow last weekend, my wife saw a display for them (sample
pieces and pictures but no model) and wants to investigate further.
Personnaly, I thought it looked a little "boxy"...it appears to be made
up of Corian panels with the edges and seams covered by long rectangular
'blocks' of the stuff. I prefer a fibreglass or plastic kit myself, but
I'll likely be outvoted 1 to 1.
Any comments appreciated.
Thanks
|
201.355 | wife says OUT | USCTR1::GHIGGINS | Oh Whoa Is Moe | Tue Mar 26 1996 15:22 | 13 |
| Re: Corian Surround
I own an older cape and the previous owner used corian for a
surround on our main bathroom. It is very "boxy" looking and our
only problem, aside from the look, has been contolling the mildewy
grout. I've had to replace it 3 times in 5 years.....
If there was one project my wife would like me to start in the house
it would be to replace the corian around the tub....
my 2 cents....
George
|
201.356 | Sealed grout ? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Mar 27 1996 09:07 | 5 |
| re:355
Did you seal the grout with a silicone sealer ? Just curious.
Ray
|
201.357 | BATHTUB SIZES? | WMOIS::FLECK_S | Love me, Love my dogs, cats, etc. | Mon Apr 15 1996 13:02 | 14 |
|
I started going through this whole note looking for sizes of
tubs, but I was running out of time so I'm writing a reply instead.
I recently purchase a corner vanity and, as usual, replacing my
bathroom vanity has now turned into remodeling the whole bathroom.
Well, its a very small bathroom and we'd like to open it up,
somehow and maybe get a smaller tub/shower unit. I have two
questions: Do tub units come in different sizes or can they be
made custom size and is there anyone who will come to you house
and give ideas on how to make the room bigger and more efficient,
for a small price? I live in Gardner so someone local would be
good. oh yeah, I believe my bathroom is approx. 5'x 7'. Any
recommendations would be greatly appreciated! thanks Sue Fleck
WMOIS::FLECK_S
|
201.358 | Some ideas | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Apr 15 1996 13:45 | 19 |
| I think that a standard tub is 5'. Obviously, you can't use a
one-piece because it won't fit through the door. From what I remember,
shower stalls can vary from 30" to 48". With whatever you use, keep in
mind that you'll want to leave some access space to get at the plumbing
in case a repair is needed.
One thing you can do is make a scale drawing of your bathroom
(i.e. 1" = 1'). Then make scale sized cutouts for the tub/stall,
toilet, and vanity. Now you can place them where you want and measure
what's left to see if it's workable.
One advantage to the stall is that, even in a small room there's
usually enough wall left to have a closet next to it. This gives you
needed storage for towels/toiletries, and can also hide, yet give access
to, the plumbing.
Good luck and I hope this helps......Ray
P.S. I'm looking at doing the same thing for a downstairs bath.
|
201.359 | in-laws had small tub (in Colorado) | SIPAPU::KILGORE | The UT Desert Rat living in CO | Mon Apr 15 1996 13:47 | 7 |
| In the 1950's my father-in-law was a contracter and built their own home. In
one of the baths is a tub that takes up a little more room than a shower but
is about 3/4 of the size of a normal `modern' tub. It had a small bench built
into the rear corner. Perhaps you can locate one at a used building supply
store and have it refinished.
Judy
|
201.360 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Apr 15 1996 13:52 | 7 |
| You can get 4-1/2 foot tubs. The selection is small and prices are higher.
Having installed one of these, I would strongly advise you to use a
standard 5' tub, unless you will never use it for a bath (or everyone in your
family is a "little person".) Sterling and Lasco are two of the makers
of such tubs.
Steve
|
201.361 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Apr 15 1996 15:33 | 12 |
| > I think that a standard tub is 5'. Obviously, you can't use a
> one-piece because it won't fit through the door.
But most likely you could use a two-piece which is as
maint. free (in regards to worrying about water leakage),
but does cost about $100 more than the basic one-piece
($200 for a basic one piece, almost $300 for a two-piece).
I was able to get one of these babies up to the 2nd floor of a
130 year old house (ie. relatively narrow door openings), with
the upper surround piece being the tricky part manuvering it
like a puzzle through the doorways ....
|
201.362 | Not the worst compromise you can make. | EVMS::PIRULO::LEDERMAN | B. Z. Lederman | Mon Apr 15 1996 16:11 | 17 |
| The house I just sold had a 48" tub in it, and the owners before me had
just redone the bathroom: so you could get them less than 8 years ago.
It was a modern one-piece, and they put in a surround as well.
It was small as tubs go, but I mostly take showers. It was a
reasonable size for a shower (bigger than the shower stalls I've seen);
and was large enough that could could lie down in it and take a bath if
you wanted to, which you can't do in a shower stall.
My biggest problem is that I wanted to replace the shower curtain with
a sliding door, and most tub doors aren't available in a small enough
size to fit that kind of tub, and a shower stall door would have been
too high. It happens that Kohler makes a tub door that fits 48" tubs:
I think it's intended for some sort of hot tub or spa or whirlpool tub.
If you really don't have room for a full-sized tub, I think a reduced
size tub is a better choice than just a shower stall.
|
201.363 | Possible 4' tub source | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Apr 15 1996 17:09 | 7 |
| I think my mother's mobile has a 4' tub. If that's what you're
looking for, it may be a another source to pursue. The two-piece tub
is what I was initially looking at. It's less expensive than a 48"
shower stall that I was also looking at. Then again, I also have a
6'x10' bathroom, vs. 5'x7'.
Ray
|
201.364 | Terminology (?) | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Apr 15 1996 19:00 | 12 |
| > It was a modern one-piece, and they put in a surround as well.
?? by def. a one-piece has a built-in surround (ie. the tub
and surround are made in a single mold). the two-piece I
bought was similiar, except that the mold is 2 pieces, one
piece being the tub base and part of the surround, and the
2nd piece being the rest of the surround that bolts down ontop
of the 1st piece (hence after you get it into the bathroom,
after joining the 2 pieces together, you basically have a 1-piece
(tub & surround) that's installed the same way you would a 1-piece.
ps: do you mean "Moderne" (ie. the brand name made in Canada)?
|
201.365 | Things change. | EVMS::PIRULO::LEDERMAN | B. Z. Lederman | Tue Apr 16 1996 10:07 | 10 |
| I guess I'm not up on the latest slang.
To me a one piece tub is one where the tub and sides are all in one
piece. I'm sure I've seen some where the tub is one piece and the
outside trim down from the edge of the tub to the floor is another
piece.
I've seen shower stalls that include the walls and floor in one piece,
but I don't recall seeing a tub and shower surround all in one piece
(not that I've really looked).
|
201.366 | Same-o same-o | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Tue Apr 16 1996 10:32 | 16 |
| The truely one piece tubs will most likely be in newer construction.
They will not fit through a typical doorway, so they must normally be
placed in the bathroom *while* the house is being framed, or at least
before they completely frame in the bathroom.
The next best thing is probably the two piece (tub and surround)
as far as lack of maint./leaks are concerned. It's designed to give
that one piece look and feel, and fit through regular sized doorways.
Having seen first hand what they get for ceramic tile, it's also less
expensive, and probably just as durable.
Since shower stalls can come in widths larger than regular
doorways, they too come in two piece versions (base and sides).
Just another option to ponder.
Ray
|
201.367 | Claw-foot tub question | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed May 29 1996 14:49 | 6 |
| Does anyone have a claw-foot tub on a tiled bathroom floor ? I'm
just wondering if the tiles would crack with all that weight on 4
relatively small points, or do you make some sort of feet pads for
it ?
Ray
|
201.368 | | GRYHND::BRYANT | | Thu May 30 1996 10:40 | 9 |
| I have one on tiles and it hasn't cracked any yet. It was there when I
moved in 2 years ago. I suspect it has been there for at least 5
years. The tub has only had occasional use, but has stood up to the
stomping/jumping of my kids (ages 8 - 11). I think you'd only have a
problem if there were gaps between the tiles and the subfloor. And,
for what it's worth, my house is 220 years old so it doesn't have the
most steady, straight floors around.
- Doug
|
201.369 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu May 30 1996 11:33 | 3 |
| Claw-foot tubs were used on tiles for years without any ill effect.
Unlike most tiles today, those tiles were set in concrete ("mud jobs")
so your mileage may vary.
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201.370 | Acrylic vs Fiberglas | ASDG::SBILL | | Mon Aug 19 1996 15:02 | 7 |
|
I'm having a house built and I have a choice between a fiberglas and
acrylic tub/surround combination. My question is why is there a ~$400
difference between the two? And is the acrylic worth the extra?
Steve B.
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201.371 | No expert, but... | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Aug 19 1996 16:02 | 12 |
| Just thinking of the two materials themselves, I would think that
acrylic is the same color all the way through. A scratch or chip would
likely be less noticable. I'd also expect the acrylic to be more crack
resistant, though this shouldn't be a problem with a properly installed
fiberglass tub of decent quality.
You're the only one that can decide whether or not the extra $$ is
worth it to you. Fiberglass is relatively easy to work with and there
seem to be a few people around that do this if you go with fiberglass and
have a problem down the road.
Ray
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201.372 | | 18559::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome SHR3-1/C22 Pole A22 | Mon Aug 19 1996 16:32 | 4 |
| The acrylic is more durable. As .371 states, the color goes
all the way through and it's less prone to cracking. Whether
it's $400 worth of more durable is up to you.
|
201.373 | bathtub foundation material | TUXEDO::BARWISE | | Mon Sep 09 1996 15:13 | 15 |
| I'm installing a one-piece bath/shower in an existing house (through a hole in
an exterior wall - but that's another story)_and I'm wondering what others may
have used for a foundation material under the unit. The installation instructions
state that there will be no deflection with weights up to 300 lbs, but the use of
a foundation material to support the bottom of the unit is recommended. It
doesn't take much water and body to surpass the 300 lb. point, so I would like to
use some sort of casting or foundation material. I just don't know what it's called
or where you'd get it. Probably a plumbing supply place would have it, but I haven't
called any place yet. I saw mention of it in a earlier note, but no real details
on where to get it how to use it, etc. Maybe a standard lightweight plaster would
do the trick.....
Thanks for any advice.
rob
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201.374 | How about foam ? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Sep 09 1996 15:35 | 5 |
| If I where to use anything, I'd probably just use styrofoam
sheets cut to size. Another thought is to use the expanding foam
and cut it to size after it expands.
Ray
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201.375 | Lightweight mortar | MUMMS::ROLLER | Life member of the NRA | Mon Sep 09 1996 17:29 | 8 |
| I just saw one of Bob Villa's programs over the weekend where they put
in a fiberglass tub. They set it in a bed of lightweight mortar. I
didn't see any names, but they claimed that this was what the mfgr
required for the installation. My guess is that it's probably a
standard item, maybe not at HQ or HD, but a good plumbing supplier
would know what you're after.
Ken
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201.376 | or simply use regular mortar (I did) | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Sep 09 1996 17:42 | 14 |
| .373, your lines are all longer than 80 characters making it
difficult to read for us character-cell noters.
In any case, the previous reply suggests a lightweight mortor.
In my case, when I installed a 2-piece fiberglass tub/shower
I simply used regular $2-3 a bag mortor. I used either one
or two full bags, and simply mixed it in an empty joint
compound bucket. Plenty of working time.
The only suggestion I have is to have some other people handy
when you do it, so they can step in the tub with you to seat
the unit down into the mortor bed. I had no one around when
I did mine, and I'm not a heavy weight, so it was diffcult to
seat it down. Oh yea, also have a level handy to level it.
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201.377 | Regular tub ? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Double Income, Clan'o Kids | Tue Sep 10 1996 09:04 | 7 |
| re:375
Was this a regular one-piece tub unit ? The only thing I've ever
seen that done on is those larger jacuzzi type tubs.
Ray
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201.378 | | MUMMS::ROLLER | Life member of the NRA | Tue Sep 10 1996 10:13 | 6 |
| Ray,
Actually now that you mention it the tub that BV was putting
in did have a whirlpool setup.
Ken
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201.379 | | 19096::BUSKY | | Tue Sep 10 1996 10:49 | 15 |
| > Was this a regular one-piece tub unit ? The only thing I've ever
> seen that done on is those larger jacuzzi type tubs.
While it may not be required for a smaller tub, sometype of a
base, spray foam, cement, plaster, whatever, goes a long way
towards giving your tub a more solid feel. It can also cut down on
the "drumming" noise that you can get with a these types of tubs.
But first check the installation instructions carefully. Some tubs
may state that you DON'T do anything for a base and may void the
warranty if you do. If this is case, then it's up to you what
course you take.
Charly
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201.380 | use plaster or lightweight mortar | TUXEDO::BARWISE | | Thu Sep 12 1996 12:14 | 20 |
201.381 | How about expanding foam? | MUMMS::ROLLER | Life member of the NRA | Thu Sep 12 1996 14:13 | 12 |
201.382 | | PCBUOA::TARDIFF | Dave Tardiff | Thu Sep 12 1996 14:42 | 13 |
201.383 | foam | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Sep 12 1996 15:18 | 27 |
201.384 | | PACKED::ALLEN | Christopher Allen, Ladebug, dtn 381-0864 | Thu Sep 12 1996 16:09 | 4 |
201.385 | I was told to use sand as a base | EDWIN::MACHON | | Fri Sep 13 1996 09:11 | 5 |
201.386 | Looking for Jan '89 Old House Journal | POBOXA::BAUST | | Thu Jan 02 1997 13:48 | 21
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