Well, having that nice little removable panel
below the bath door is handy and almost makes
removing the shower drain a snap. Almost.
I got the P-trap separated from the drain pipe to
the tank (they were not cemented together), but
the one eye I can use to see what's up won't
focus upside down at the 3 inch distance
required to see how the drain itself is attached.
My parts manual shows several pieces involved
in this, but I can't get anything to come apart. I'm
not a plumber and I don't play one on TV, so
how does the shower drain come apart? There
is no clearance to swing a wrench under there,
and trying to turn the drain from the top has
pretty much ruined the thing, so I have no choice
but to replace it (with a better part).
At this point, I don't care about the fittings. If I
have to destroy them, I will. But is there a more
civilized way?
Thanks for any help (or point me to a written
reference).
Toby Maki
73 Glacier 230
below the bath door is handy and almost makes
removing the shower drain a snap. Almost.
I got the P-trap separated from the drain pipe to
the tank (they were not cemented together), but
the one eye I can use to see what's up won't
focus upside down at the 3 inch distance
required to see how the drain itself is attached.
My parts manual shows several pieces involved
in this, but I can't get anything to come apart. I'm
not a plumber and I don't play one on TV, so
how does the shower drain come apart? There
is no clearance to swing a wrench under there,
and trying to turn the drain from the top has
pretty much ruined the thing, so I have no choice
but to replace it (with a better part).
At this point, I don't care about the fittings. If I
have to destroy them, I will. But is there a more
civilized way?
Thanks for any help (or point me to a written
reference).
Toby Maki
73 Glacier 230