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New Member
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Jun 14, 2008, 03:31 PM
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9 inch rough in
Hi, I am remodeling an older home the original owners put an addition on that included a half bath in the new utility room. The rough opening from the sheetrock to the center of the flange is 9 inches without chipping concrete out and putting in an offset. Is there anything else I can do to elimanate the process of chipping the floor? There was a toilet in the half bath, however, the toilet was thrown away when the home was gutted from Katrina. Any information is greatly appreciated. Thanks AM
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Eternal Plumber
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Jun 14, 2008, 03:53 PM
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I found this on the web. It was a answer to a question to another site in 1999 You may have to call American Standard and check.
They manufacture a 9 inch rough in at American Standard, but they don't advertise it because of the building code requirements. The tank placement atop the bowl requires a 10 inch distance from the back wall finish, to prevent the toilet from leaning, and getting cracked when a person of a heavier weight than 160 pounds sits on it heavily. The dealer asks that you sign a disclaimer and hold harmless agreement when you install it, because it breals the hold down bolt holes in the porcelain base. You can get a stainless steel bowl that has a 9 inch rough in too, but they're usually for high vandalism areas or for jailhouse prison installations, and they're too expensive for residential use. You can use a 10 inch rough in if you indent the wall at the sixteen inch on center wall studs, and make them 24 inch centers, and then recess the tank into the finish wall, and gain your inch that way. Or, I guess it's obvious, you can reset your flange and sewer to fit the 12 inch rough in.
I was surprised to find a bowl the roughed at nine inches. I thought that 10 inches was the smallest. Good luck, Tom
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Ultra Member
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Jun 14, 2008, 09:12 PM
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Originally Posted by Properties
Hi, I am remodeling an older home the original owners put an addition on that included a half bath in the new utility room. The rough opening from the sheetrock to the center of the flange is 9 inches without chipping concrete out and putting in an offset. Is there anything else I can do to elimanate the process of chipping the floor? There was a toilet in the half bath, however, the toilet was thrown away when the home was gutted from Katrina. Any information is greatly appreciated. Thanks AM
If the wall behind the toilet is an interior wall, you could flat-stud the wall and gain an inch or so.
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Plumbing Expert
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Jun 15, 2008, 05:27 PM
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You should be able to fit in 10inch rough toilet. Also, these days, Toto makes toilets that address this problem: you buy Toto toilet and than 9" rough-in flange separately. It is much less problem, and more economical, than breaking up your slab.
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