DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Rough-In After Concrete Poured (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/148549-rough-after-concrete-poured.html)

Mark johnson March 11th 06 05:33 AM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 
Before I call in a plumber for quotes, could someone give me an idea of how
much a PIA it will be to install toilet and sink drains once concrete floor
has been poured (and hardened)? It's about a six foot run to existing
pipes.

Thanks,
Mark J



Edwin Pawlowski March 11th 06 06:21 AM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 

"Mark johnson" wrote in message
. com...
Before I call in a plumber for quotes, could someone give me an idea of
how much a PIA it will be to install toilet and sink drains once concrete
floor has been poured (and hardened)? It's about a six foot run to
existing pipes.


It should be done before the concrete. How do you expect to tie in the
drain under solid concrete? I'd consider an ejector toilet rather that
take out the concrete.



RBM March 11th 06 12:08 PM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 
A few hours work breaking up a channel through the concrete and patching it



"Mark johnson" wrote in message
. com...
Before I call in a plumber for quotes, could someone give me an idea of
how much a PIA it will be to install toilet and sink drains once concrete
floor has been poured (and hardened)? It's about a six foot run to
existing pipes.

Thanks,
Mark J




[email protected] March 11th 06 12:08 PM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 

Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
"Mark johnson" wrote in message
. com...
Before I call in a plumber for quotes, could someone give me an idea of
how much a PIA it will be to install toilet and sink drains once concrete
floor has been poured (and hardened)? It's about a six foot run to
existing pipes.


It should be done before the concrete. How do you expect to tie in the
drain under solid concrete? I'd consider an ejector toilet rather that
take out the concrete.


Personally, for a 6 foot run, I'd probably open the concrete, and avoid
the ejector pump setup that has a lot more maintenance/reliability
issues over the life of the house. And I'd do it sooner, rather than
later. If the concrete is only a few days old, it's still not as hard
as concrete that has had a month to cure.


[email protected] March 11th 06 01:31 PM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 
harbor freight has nice jackhamers at reasonable price. pumps just
cause troubles over the long haul


DT March 11th 06 02:36 PM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 
In article ,
says...

Before I call in a plumber for quotes, could someone give me an idea of how
much a PIA it will be to install toilet and sink drains once concrete floor
has been poured (and hardened)? It's about a six foot run to existing
pipes.


A six foot run isn't bad, We've done that before. A lot depends on how deep the
waste line is at that point. Use a diamond blade in a circular saw to score the
concrete, then break it out with a hammer, and dig as required. Making the
connection in the drain will require a large enough hole to get in there and
work, you have to cut out the existing line and put in a Y using rubber
connectors. Run the new line, have it inspected (this sounds like new
construction) then pour the new concrete. A half day's work for an experienced
plumber, then inspection and pouring the next day.

Dennis


mm March 14th 06 04:43 PM

Rough-In After Concrete Poured
 
On 11 Mar 2006 04:08:36 -0800, wrote:



Personally, for a 6 foot run, I'd probably open the concrete, and avoid
the ejector pump setup that has a lot more maintenance/reliability
issues over the life of the house. And I'd do it sooner, rather than
later. If the concrete is only a few days old, it's still not as hard
as concrete that has had a month to cure.


When I was on the standard tour of the Panama Canal, the guide talked
about this, how the locks were harder every year. By 1970 or earlier,
if a big ship ran into the lock wall, it was the ship that got
damaged.(low budget trip, guys. 150 dollars airfare plus 3 dollars a
day.)


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:03 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter