augestknight aka Stephan,Quote:
Originally Posted by augustknight
The "first comment",(in a earlier post) I saw was , "You really want a vertical drop from the toilet to drain pipe. I seriously doubt that you could run what would basically be a horizontal pipe without back up problems."
Well Stephan, I have news! Every toilet that a plumber sets has a vertical drop from the toilet to a horzizontal closet bend or a drainage ell.
The entire thrust of your message in both posts is not to take a chance on doing the work yourself but to hire a plumber to do it for you. Hey Stevie! I have more news for you!
The very reason the plumbing page exists is so the asker doesn't have to strap his bank account by hiring a plumber. If I were to follow your adviceI could just copy and paste up, " You're too stupid to do this by yourself, HIRE A PLUMBER." on all my answers.
While I appreciate your comments and opinions, the one thing I will not tolerate and let slide is misinformation and bad advice. I move in to correct it every time. Your comment about the toilet discharge was not correct
and now I see.
" the whole concept of the flange is that it is secured to the subfloor, accepts the seal from the wax (don't even think about using that pretaped crap) and prevents the toilet from rocking. So the answer is that it should be flush with the finished floor. Even a 1/8 inch too high will set it rocking, break the seal and possibly crack the bowl."
Wrong in two places! (1) "So the answer is that it should be flush with the finished floor."
Because a toilet bowl has a 4" horn that extends well below the floor line a toilet flange can be set on the sub floor with no negative results. We set them on a finished floor because the floor is finished when we come in to trim the unit out and set the fixtures. Which brings us up to number two.
(2)" Even a 1/8 inch too high will set it rocking, break the seal and possibly crack the bowl."
Wrong again! If you will look on the underside of a toilet bowl you will see the lip raises up the bowl up so that it never sets directly on the flange, so your comment, " So the answer is that it should be flush with the finished floor." is incorrect because, surprise! When we trim out a house and install a closet flange on top of a tile floor it sticks up at least 1/4" inch higher then the floor. As I stated, While I welcome your comments I wish you would preface them with, "in my opinion" because if you present them as facts and I find them to be incorrect, I'll shoot them down every time.
Stephan, I hope you take this as " constructive criticism" and not as some sort of a personal attack. I value all opinions on this page, even if I don't agree with them. Regards, Tom