2020-06-28

Tub and sink plumbing

I put the sink drain and vent first, but I didn't follow the diagram from the inspector since I had to change it from a double to a single sink.  So I forgot about I ended up forgetting about the orientation of the fittings, so I had to rotate them...


Of course the tub drain had to end up directly over a joist...so I had to notch (and reinforce) it, in addition to not being able to do the overflow connection normally.  This is how I was going to do it:

I sent the picture to the inspector before I glued anything since I wasn't sure if it was ok, and it was a good thing since it turns out you're not supposed to use the sanitary T's horizontally like that.  So after input from him I did it like this:

This is how it all looked when it was done, and I just have the pipe ending in the basement for now.


I also forgot and left a window without a screen open over night, and ended up with a bird inside.  It seemed to like my suspended extension cords.  At least it was a nice change from bats since I could just leave the door open for it to fly out.

2020-06-25

Tub and sink placement

After work I took the tub & walls and sink out of their boxes to see how they fit so I could mark for where the plumbing needed to go.  I really wanted to use a dual sink vanity, but I would have had to move the doorway over a few inches and there still wouldn't have been a gap between it and the tub which would look weird.


So I had to return it and get a single...

2020-06-21

New plumbing stack

To remove all the old cast iron stack, I had to cut into the wall in the living room, so I thought I should set up some dust extraction (it worked pretty well).


I thought I should have the city residential plumbing inspector come by before I started so he hopefully wouldn't make me redo everything in the basement since it is very much not up to code, and it's how I bought the house.  He was good with it since I'll be ripping it out anyway, and he actually drew me a bunch of diagrams of how to plumb everything, and even included a parts list.  So that was absolutely amazing and about the opposite of what I expected from a city inspector.

He also told me I should plug the stack so stuff doesn't fall down while I'm pulling the old one out and end up clogging it.  And there was a ton of stuff that fell so I'm very glad I did, but I also flushed the toilet while it was plugged and made a mess in the basement...  At least I remembered fast enough that I was able to run into the basement to watch the water come out.

I also decided to just rent a nice soil pipe cutter instead of getting a cheap one or using my sawzall, it worked amazingly and it took less than an hour to get all the old pipe out.


The inside of the pipe that was horizontal for the toilet was disgusting:

A lot of the point of cutting out the old stack was to make it so there wasn't plumbing in the corner of the dining room, which meant moving it to the other side of that wall, and instead of doing funky shit in the basement to tie this into the old stack, I decided to just make it cross over on the first floor, and deal with it later, since I would be redoing stuff regardless.




Before starting on the toilet part upstairs, I decided to reinforce the drop ceiling since it was starting to look like it collapse at any time.

I didn't take many pictures for the toilet, but it was super convenient that there was already a roof vent I could use, so I was able to get it all finished that weekend.


2020-06-14

Crown plates and valley jacks

I didn't work on the house last week because I ended up needing to work...so that was great.  This week I decided to wrap up a few things that I needed to do.  First was the crown plates, which was pretty boring, but it's done now

The valley jacks were a complete pain since they're being put in at the wrong time.  First thing I did was put up some boards up for a reference

As I saw it, there were really only 2 ways to figure out all the angles I'd need, doing all the trigonometry or just do a bunch of cutting until I got it right.  I really didn't want to re-learn trig, so I did trial and error

There were 5 angles on the final valley jack, the two 21 degree angles that were there for the drywall to attach to, the 21 degree angle on the opposite side from that so the valley jack mounted correctly to the roof, the 27.5 - 30 degree angle to make it go at the same angle as the roof, and 45-50 degree angle since the valley in the roof is about a 45 degree angle from the other rafters and ceiling joists.  I took some pictures of it, but the angles really don't come across well on camera.



And this is what it looks like after being mounted


Luckily the other side was basically the same, so it went significantly faster.  But I also cut off a part for it to fit on the top of the wall in the corner


And this is what it looked like mounted, on both of them I pre-drilled all the holes for the screws so I didn't crack the wood


Last thing was putting the other false rafters for the drywall to attach to


Rubber roofing

Finally time to actually start on the rubber roof.  That plastic I put down held up surprisingly well for how long it was there. Had to put ...