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Default Drop in tub against walls

I have a nice drop-in fiberglass jacuzzi tub with all the goodies, I
want to put in place of a regular tub. I'm pretty determined, and have
a few thoughts, but would appreciate the insight of the group. I plan
to notch the walls to accept the edge of the tub, then put the drywall
(or backer board up). I'll need electricity, so the wall at the head
of the tub will be totally stripped and reworked and an access panel
left (Fortunately that wall is just a room divider backing on to the
sink area.) My main concern is the area where the deck meets the wall,
normally a tub has an "L" there to keep the water from seeping behind,
with this being designed as a drop in it doesn't. I thought about
bonding aluminum angle to the edge & while perhaps unsightly &
overkill, that would probably work. This is where the community might
know a lot more than I do.

It looks like this: http://www.tubz.com/images/aquatic/hotsoak55-big.jpg
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Default Drop in tub against walls

On Jul 8, 1:01*pm, Eric in North TX wrote:
I have a nice drop-in fiberglass jacuzzi tub with all the goodies, I
want to put in place of a regular tub. I'm pretty determined, and have
a few thoughts, but would appreciate the *insight of the group. I plan
to notch the walls to accept the edge of the tub, then put the drywall
(or backer board up). I'll need electricity, so the wall at the head
of the tub will be totally stripped and reworked and an access panel
left (Fortunately that wall is just a room divider backing on to the
sink area.) My main concern is the area where the deck meets the wall,
normally a tub has an "L" there to keep the water from seeping behind,
with this being designed as a drop in it doesn't. I thought about
bonding aluminum angle to the edge & while perhaps unsightly &
overkill, that would probably work. This is where the community might
know a lot more than I do.

It looks like this:http://www.tubz.com/images/aquatic/hotsoak55-big.jpg


Maybe cover the backer board with tile???
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Default Drop in tub against walls

On Jul 8, 4:55*pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote:
On Jul 8, 1:01*pm, Eric in North TX wrote:

I have a nice drop-in fiberglass jacuzzi tub with all the goodies, I
want to put in place of a regular tub. I'm pretty determined, and have
a few thoughts, but would appreciate the *insight of the group. I plan
to notch the walls to accept the edge of the tub, then put the drywall
(or backer board up). I'll need electricity, so the wall at the head
of the tub will be totally stripped and reworked and an access panel
left (Fortunately that wall is just a room divider backing on to the
sink area.) My main concern is the area where the deck meets the wall,
normally a tub has an "L" there to keep the water from seeping behind,
with this being designed as a drop in it doesn't. I thought about
bonding aluminum angle to the edge & while perhaps unsightly &
overkill, that would probably work. This is where the community might
know a lot more than I do.


It looks like this:http://www.tubz.com/images/aquatic/hotsoak55-big.jpg


Maybe cover the backer board with tile???


Sort of planned that as well, but still looking for ideas for the
failsafe for when the grout fails, and no one seems to notice or care.
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Default Drop in tub against walls

Eric in North TX wrote:
On Jul 8, 4:55 pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote:
On Jul 8, 1:01 pm, Eric in North TX wrote:

I have a nice drop-in fiberglass jacuzzi tub with all the goodies, I
want to put in place of a regular tub. I'm pretty determined, and have
a few thoughts, but would appreciate the insight of the group. I plan
to notch the walls to accept the edge of the tub, then put the drywall
(or backer board up). I'll need electricity, so the wall at the head
of the tub will be totally stripped and reworked and an access panel
left (Fortunately that wall is just a room divider backing on to the
sink area.) My main concern is the area where the deck meets the wall,
normally a tub has an "L" there to keep the water from seeping behind,
with this being designed as a drop in it doesn't. I thought about
bonding aluminum angle to the edge & while perhaps unsightly &
overkill, that would probably work. This is where the community might
know a lot more than I do.
It looks like this:http://www.tubz.com/images/aquatic/hotsoak55-big.jpg

Maybe cover the backer board with tile???


Sort of planned that as well, but still looking for ideas for the
failsafe for when the grout fails, and no one seems to notice or care.


Get the right tub for the job. A kludge like that would be a red flag to
a competent home inspector, or most of the people on here, come sale
time. Tubs have a continuous wall flange for a very good reason.

If you or SWMBO simply MUST have THAT tub up and running, recommend
converting a spare bedroom to a tub room. I once gave an old (like 1912)
6-foot clawfoot tub to my sister as a joke, after buying it out of a
farmers field for 25 bucks. (he had been using it as a stock tank.)
Damned if she didn't install it in a small upstairs living room of the
A-frame she was living in at the time. Little romantic alcove, etc.
Everyone that saw it loved it.

Too bad she lost that tub when she traded in the husband....

--
aem sends...

--
aem sends...
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Default Drop in tub against walls

Eric,

If the tub isn't going to have a shower, the drop-in you describe is
fine. Some drop-in tubs offer a tile flange option if you want a
shower. You could add a gutter and down spout to the tub, but it'll
look weird, be expensive and may not work in the long run. Better to
find a tub designed for your space and needs. There are plenty of them
with all the goodies.

Good luck.

dss


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Default Drop in tub against walls

On Jul 8, 9:37*pm, aemeijers wrote:
Eric in North TX wrote:





On Jul 8, 4:55 pm, "hr(bob) "
wrote:
On Jul 8, 1:01 pm, Eric in North TX wrote:


I have a nice drop-in fiberglass jacuzzi tub with all the goodies, I
want to put in place of a regular tub. I'm pretty determined, and have
a few thoughts, but would appreciate the *insight of the group. I plan
to notch the walls to accept the edge of the tub, then put the drywall
(or backer board up). I'll need electricity, so the wall at the head
of the tub will be totally stripped and reworked and an access panel
left (Fortunately that wall is just a room divider backing on to the
sink area.) My main concern is the area where the deck meets the wall,
normally a tub has an "L" there to keep the water from seeping behind,
with this being designed as a drop in it doesn't. I thought about
bonding aluminum angle to the edge & while perhaps unsightly &
overkill, that would probably work. This is where the community might
know a lot more than I do.
It looks like this:http://www.tubz.com/images/aquatic/hotsoak55-big.jpg
Maybe cover the backer board with tile???


Sort of planned that as well, but still looking for ideas *for the
failsafe for when the grout fails, and no one seems to notice or care.


Get the right tub for the job. A kludge like that would be a red flag to
a competent home inspector, or most of the people on here, come sale
time. Tubs have a continuous wall flange for a very good reason.

If you or SWMBO simply MUST have THAT tub up and running, recommend
converting a spare bedroom to a tub room. I once gave an old (like 1912)
6-foot clawfoot tub to my sister as a joke, after buying it out of a
farmers field for 25 bucks. (he had been using it as a stock tank.)
Damned if she didn't install it in a small upstairs living room of the
A-frame she was living in at the time. *Little romantic alcove, etc.
Everyone that saw it loved it.

Too bad she lost that tub when she traded in the husband....

--
aem sends...

--
aem sends...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


"Little romantic alcove, etc."

"Too bad she lost that tub when she traded in the husband..."

And they say love is all you need...obviously not!

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Default Drop in tub against walls


"DerbyDad03" wrote in message
...
On Jul 8, 9:37 pm, aemeijers wrote:
Eric in North TX wrote:





On Jul 8, 4:55 pm, "hr(bob) "

wrote:
On Jul 8, 1:01 pm, Eric in North TX
wrote:


I have a nice drop-in fiberglass jacuzzi tub with all the
goodies, I
want to put in place of a regular tub. I'm pretty
determined, and have
a few thoughts, but would appreciate the insight of the
group. I plan
to notch the walls to accept the edge of the tub, then put
the drywall
(or backer board up). I'll need electricity, so the wall at
the head
of the tub will be totally stripped and reworked and an
access panel
left (Fortunately that wall is just a room divider backing
on to the
sink area.) My main concern is the area where the deck
meets the wall,
normally a tub has an "L" there to keep the water from
seeping behind,
with this being designed as a drop in it doesn't. I thought
about
bonding aluminum angle to the edge & while perhaps
unsightly &
overkill, that would probably work. This is where the
community might
know a lot more than I do.
It looks like
this:http://www.tubz.com/images/aquatic/hotsoak55-big.jpg
Maybe cover the backer board with tile???


Sort of planned that as well, but still looking for ideas
for the
failsafe for when the grout fails, and no one seems to notice
or care.


Get the right tub for the job. A kludge like that would be a
red flag to
a competent home inspector, or most of the people on here, come
sale
time. Tubs have a continuous wall flange for a very good
reason.

If you or SWMBO simply MUST have THAT tub up and running,
recommend
converting a spare bedroom to a tub room. I once gave an old
(like 1912)
6-foot clawfoot tub to my sister as a joke, after buying it out
of a
farmers field for 25 bucks. (he had been using it as a stock
tank.)
Damned if she didn't install it in a small upstairs living room
of the
A-frame she was living in at the time. Little romantic alcove,
etc.
Everyone that saw it loved it.

Too bad she lost that tub when she traded in the husband....

--
aem sends...

--
aem sends...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


"Little romantic alcove, etc."

"Too bad she lost that tub when she traded in the
husband..."

And they say love is all you need...obviously not!


I have to go along with the feeling that if it looks homemade, it
won't help when you go to sell the house. HOWEVER, if you're
going to do it, why not get some aluminum flashing and use that to
make a waterproof return. If I was doing it, I'd apply a liberal
bead of silicone to the downturn side of the tub that'd be against
walls, the fasten the aluminum flashing to the downturn with self
tapping hex head sheet metal screws on, say, 3" centers. Once the
silicone has cured, I'd add a bead to the top of the flashing/tub
joint just "to be sure."

The flashing would then be placed against the drywall, with just
enough inletting, if at all, that the rolled edge of the downturn
would not show after backer board and tile was applied. I'd also
caulk the backer board to the tub joint.

Nonny


--
On most days,
it's just not worth
the effort of chewing
through the restraints..


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