I found myself actually talking to the screen, trying to tell you to assemble all 3 pieces then fix the bracket to the floor, LOL. But that's the great thing about this channel - you show all the real details, the successes and the frustrations and everything between. Another great install, thanks Jeff.
Same here, but just like Jeff I have overlooked simple fixes until I rest and thought about it. I'm just happy he figured it out before he crawled in that mess lol
Yeah I saying you’ve got a head on your shoulders use it for something other than a hat rack 😅 but I’ve installed maybe ten or so I think that the delta with the big brass floor mount rough in valve is the easiest but also very expensive, so my customers don’t always want to spend that much money. Live and learn my friend
I just got done drilling 72 holes in a porcelain backsplash for open shelving using one of those bits only to start the hole, break through the glaze, then I switched to a masonry bit of the same size to push the rest of the way through, which was much faster than using the diamond bit on its own. I had a cup of water nearby to cool the bits.
Jeff - Unscrew the triple brass fitting from the floor - tighten everything else then re-secure the brass anchor to the floor. I've had that same "OMG - how does this go on properly?" moment. Get a snack, clear your head - everything will be OK...
Yeah, don't see any other way besides that. Basically fully assembled, making the water connections while holding it up (2 person at this point I guess), THEN screw it down to the floor while holding up the escutcheon plate. Edit: Ah, resumed the video after replying, that's what Jeff basically did at the end.
Your best bet when drilling into tile with the Milwaukee bits is to use the spear point that you’re using in the video as a starter bit (to make a dimple in the tile) then finish off with the Milwaukee diamond hole saw to drill all the way through the tile. Both bits will last about 5 times longer and works great!!
Love your work. Thank you. Now you asked for some thoughts... Water inlet controls should be as you decided since the user is meant to fill the tub first - the controls for this should be easiest to access from outside the tub. As an overcautious soul I would like to have some pieces of butyl rubber sheet under those feet pushing against the tile - something to spread the force and prevent point loading. Drilling the tiles next to the open water line made me cringe - any grit going into the hole will get pushed up into the water contol parts once connected
Hey Jeff, I’m in the process of remodeling my bathroom. Have been for a few years on and off now. I have that exact same bathtub. I got it at a resale shop for damaged items. It has a small scratch on it so that turned it from an $800 tub into a $100 for me! I LOVE it. I’ve had it for a few years now and the seal on the push button setup on the drain would get stuck. It ended up stretching out and we would have to use a plunger to pull the drain plug back up. I will be switching to that in floor system as soon as I can but I need another tub drain. It’s hard to find specific tub parts. Our house was built in 1941 just about an hour north of Chicago. The bathroom was so small you could wash your kids in the tub while sitting on the toilet. The door almost hit the sink when you opened it. Just enough room for the tub, toilet and sink. It’s now an 8x10 room and I’m putting in the shower finally. Finding your channel very helpful. Keep em coming. 😂
Great video, nice to see I am not the only person in the world that runs into problems and is ready to call something every name in the book... Thank you for such honest informative videos.
The drill bits you used in the video are great to get the holes started because of the point, then to finish the hole you should switch to a diamond hole saw bit to finish the job much easier and faster. Looks like the tap you used would definately not be usable if you have a house that is built slab on grade since you have no access to the plumbing below.
Thanks for this video Jeff. I’m doing the same project today and realized my kit didn’t come with a hat seal for the drain. Quick trip to the plumbing supply store!
31:00 Hey Jeff. One way you could do it is unscrew the floor bracket, screw in all the connections and then once its all together, orient the foot and screw it back into place Edit: nvm, you figured that part out later haha, should have watched the whole thing first
Makita (and probably some other makers) make bits with a water reservoir for tile drilling. You can also use a 2 liter PET bottle with a pinhole that will gravity feed water onto your target whole drilling. This is great, as continuous water supply is what you need to keep it cool. The friction will otherwise evaporate a small bit of water in a hole. Scott from Japan
Good one, Jeff. I figured it out while watching your frustration. Spot on about end of the day tired. I get like that too. Thanks for the video. Now I have the confidence to try a free standing tub installation if asked to do one. Also, wondering if crushed ice would help keep porcelain drill bits cool while drilling tile ?
Think about your head is at the other end of the tub and your feet are right close to those valves....... Does that give you any ideas ? It gives me an idea...... Say you want to add some hot water you just use your feet to actuate the valves on off and so on... So face the valves twords you for easyness for your feet to actuate No extra charge for this information have a nice day... you're very thorough. Keep making videos like this sir I've never seen anybody so dedicated.
I was saying you forgot to put the cap on before attaching the plumbing. I did the same thing multiple times installing light fixtures the other day. 🤦♂
Love your channel, we're in the middle of remodeling our bathroom and we are going with a stand-alone tub. It's a very small bathroom so the tub is near the walls. What do you recommend for waterproofing? If we don't want tile surrounding the tub? We basically want to paint all the walls.
No tape on the threads? The gasket seal is enough? I am planning on installing a soaking tub. The one I have now is so shallow it barely covers my knees. The tub is 40 years old and I had to plug the overflow to get a decent bath. So happy it will be leaving and this video will allow me to get it done. :) Thank You Jeff.
1st Jeff 33:06. Why not unscrew floor piece unscrew pipes. The assemble it all attach pipe. And screw to floor last 2nd. Why not orient faucet with temp face tub…
If there is a bathtub room, we should use mdf or wooden baseboards. I prefer to use tile baseboard and metat beats on it. also I always put a wood support for p-trap pipe to make it stronger.
I love how even the experts get defeated sometimes. The look of defeat there leaning over the tub, I think we've all been there lol. It's just funny when it's someone else. 😅 The piano music had me howling with laughter.
I think if you unscrew from floor make your connection then put line down in the hole. That should keep you from going under the house. Ok never mind, I should have just kept watching, I knew u would figure it out! 👍
probably would have been good idea to also put some silicone grease on the brass drain piece, makes it easier to slide in without damaging or displacing the seal
I think if you unscrew the brass bass support, you then can screw the faucet together then screw it to the floor for support and stability after you make the plumbing connection and screw the fixture together. I think that would do the trick.
Maybe you could use a ring of plumber's putty to make a little moat around the drill marks on the tile. It wouldn't hold a LOT of water, but perhaps enough to keep the bit from overheating.
Jeff, I'm feeling dumb right now but I don't see how you secured the tub to the floor - you had mentioned it was essential to do so but I just missed how you did it. Also, what were the three screws on the faucet base going into?
Tub sits on the floor with the edges of the tub and the legs at the bottom plus silicone helps keep it steady The faucet bracket is screwed to the plywood subfloor
This drain system allows you to rotate the tub, but how much side to side movement can you get? I’m asking because I am using this system to install a tub that fits into the corner. I need a little bit of play to ensure I don’t get gaps at the wall.
Jeff what's name of the underlayment you recommended for use until lvt with underpaid built in? Where can I buy for UK , is it a insulation with built in vapour barrier product with no give?
Dude, you gotta assemble the entire unit with the triangular base also attached first. Hold up the entire unit off the floor, attach the water lines then screw the base into the tile.
I would have assembled the entire top, middle and bottom hose and tube sections, then screw the brass three legged piece onto the bottom of the chrome pipe, connect both water lines and then push the water lines back down into the hole and screw in your three mounting screws. Looks like you have plenty of water line out the bottom of the fixture to do that. OR, simply unscrew the 3 screws on the base from the floor, screw all of the tubular parts together with water lines inside like you have it, and before pushing water lines down through floor, screw on the brass part to the chrome part if they are separate or just position it properly and screw it back down to the floor. It looks like you have plenty of hose out the bottom of the fixture to fully assemble it and lay it on the floor while you are connecting water lines. Once connected, just push them back down through the floor and put the 3 screws back into the floor to hold the brass base in place. Drop the chrome cover down over it and your all set. I know sometimes its easier to see the solution when you are not under pressure of a camera shoot. Great job by the way. Thanks for sharing the video.
i would have added a stainless steel or brass washer under the floor attachment to spread out the pressure of that standing faucet over the ceramic tile because if its every leaned against it has a lot of leverage
Freestanding tubs being able to tip over is yet another reason why I never want to have one. I like alcove tubs. Much easier to clean around and easier to sit on the edge without hurting yourself. If you have a foot slip and land on the edge of the tub while getting out, it's not as bad if its a wider section of tub (still sucks). That narrow piece hitting you in the groin or other leg is not good. I'm pausing at the spot where it went black and white while you try to figure out how to get the faucet assembled and the only thought is screwing the top chrome pieces back together, unscrewing the brass 3 leg bracket, and screwing the bracket on to the bottom of the chrome pipe, re-screwing the bracket to the floor, and then sliding the cover over. I LOLed at the little phone popup sending a pic to "the wife". LOL. I wonder if that hose has a built-in vacuum breaker. Aha! You even used the blue tape on the cover like I was thinking. Glad you figured it out. I would have been so irritated in the moment while working on that though. What an asinine assembly method they designed! Are those tubs actually comfortable to sit in? They don't look terribly comfortable to me. LOL.
i use concrete drills for any sort of tiles, better experience with those with 4 cutting edges not 2. with the setting "no hammer, only rotation" and just leaning into it, not full pressure.
You will absolutely want threadlock on the threads of the feet, otherwise they will move over time. Knuts as a way to hold a threaded thing in place are about the least effective thing you can have. Throw a second knut as a locknut and some threadlocker, and you're off to the races.
Please define BS it's a term that gets used loosely and does not cover the who what where why when and how.... like the guy wanted to know please explain. Here's my opinion that bathroom can be kept spotlessly clean with a mop around the back side of the tub and his plumbing doesn't have to be installed in the wall. Which takes extra time... But part of your comment is right on..... He would not have the tile issue if he would have installed the plumbing in the wall. And gone with a much cheaper faucet system.
I don't think I would use a fixture with long cantilever and no support near the top. At some point, someone is going stumble and fall against the fill fixture. It will either break or bend.
so in other words the drop in drain is pointless ? if you need to go under for water. I am installing one and I really thought how to do it very clean first time from above
If you didn’t do that yourself, would you expect the contractor to scratch it all up? If they did, would you expect them to just tell you, you’re picky? Thanks for the videos. I love how fastidious you are. 😘
That whole tub filler install was ass-backwards, Jeff. You should have assembled the whole thing, then tightened the plumbing up, THEN screwed the whole assembled unit into the floor. Edit: I jumped the gun and commented before I watched the last few minutes of the video. Sometimes we live and learn, eh?
I found myself actually talking to the screen, trying to tell you to assemble all 3 pieces then fix the bracket to the floor, LOL. But that's the great thing about this channel - you show all the real details, the successes and the frustrations and everything between. Another great install, thanks Jeff.
Lol I was doing the exact same thing!!
Same here, but just like Jeff I have overlooked simple fixes until I rest and thought about it. I'm just happy he figured it out before he crawled in that mess lol
Yeah I saying you’ve got a head on your shoulders use it for something other than a hat rack 😅 but I’ve installed maybe ten or so I think that the delta with the big brass floor mount rough in valve is the easiest but also very expensive, so my customers don’t always want to spend that much money.
Live and learn my friend
I was yelling it to the phone 😂
I thought that as soon as he started to screw it all together.
I just got done drilling 72 holes in a porcelain backsplash for open shelving using one of those bits only to start the hole, break through the glaze, then I switched to a masonry bit of the same size to push the rest of the way through, which was much faster than using the diamond bit on its own. I had a cup of water nearby to cool the bits.
Jeff - Unscrew the triple brass fitting from the floor - tighten everything else then re-secure the brass anchor to the floor.
I've had that same "OMG - how does this go on properly?" moment. Get a snack, clear your head - everything will be OK...
This is what I was thinking too.
Yeah, don't see any other way besides that. Basically fully assembled, making the water connections while holding it up (2 person at this point I guess), THEN screw it down to the floor while holding up the escutcheon plate. Edit: Ah, resumed the video after replying, that's what Jeff basically did at the end.
Your best bet when drilling into tile with the Milwaukee bits is to use the spear point that you’re using in the video as a starter bit (to make a dimple in the tile) then finish off with the Milwaukee diamond hole saw to drill all the way through the tile. Both bits will last about 5 times longer and works great!!
Love the Oz-behind-the-curtain moments Jeff!
unscrew the floor bracket from floor put it on pipe then reinstall the 3 screws
that would be my thought too
Saw it right away as well. Jeff you sweet summer child.
That's what I was thinking the entire time. Probably what the instructions say to do as well.
Love your work. Thank you. Now you asked for some thoughts...
Water inlet controls should be as you decided since the user is meant to fill the tub first - the controls for this should be easiest to access from outside the tub.
As an overcautious soul I would like to have some pieces of butyl rubber sheet under those feet pushing against the tile - something to spread the force and prevent point loading.
Drilling the tiles next to the open water line made me cringe - any grit going into the hole will get pushed up into the water contol parts once connected
Hey Jeff, I’m in the process of remodeling my bathroom. Have been for a few years on and off now. I have that exact same bathtub. I got it at a resale shop for damaged items. It has a small scratch on it so that turned it from an $800 tub into a $100 for me! I LOVE it. I’ve had it for a few years now and the seal on the push button setup on the drain would get stuck. It ended up stretching out and we would have to use a plunger to pull the drain plug back up. I will be switching to that in floor system as soon as I can but I need another tub drain. It’s hard to find specific tub parts.
Our house was built in 1941 just about an hour north of Chicago. The bathroom was so small you could wash your kids in the tub while sitting on the toilet. The door almost hit the sink when you opened it. Just enough room for the tub, toilet and sink. It’s now an 8x10 room and I’m putting in the shower finally. Finding your channel very helpful. Keep em coming. 😂
We feel you man. We've all been there at one point or another.
unscrew the feet then connect the hoses then reattach the feet
was gonna say that. unscrew the mounting feet. screw the fixture together. screw the feet back.. should have done the trick.
ok well he did that in the end. haha. i guess its so simple when you watch someone struggle when the awnser is so simple...
Great video, nice to see I am not the only person in the world that runs into problems and is ready to call something every name in the book... Thank you for such honest informative videos.
The drill bits you used in the video are great to get the holes started because of the point, then to finish the hole you should switch to a diamond hole saw bit to finish the job much easier and faster.
Looks like the tap you used would definately not be usable if you have a house that is built slab on grade since you have no access to the plumbing below.
Glad you figured it out because I wanted so bad to come do it for you🤣😅😂
That floor plate is the last thing I mount in place.
Thanks for this video Jeff. I’m doing the same project today and realized my kit didn’t come with a hat seal for the drain. Quick trip to the plumbing supply store!
31:00 Hey Jeff. One way you could do it is unscrew the floor bracket, screw in all the connections and then once its all together, orient the foot and screw it back into place
Edit: nvm, you figured that part out later haha, should have watched the whole thing first
Makita (and probably some other makers) make bits with a water reservoir for tile drilling. You can also use a 2 liter PET bottle with a pinhole that will gravity feed water onto your target whole drilling. This is great, as continuous water supply is what you need to keep it cool. The friction will otherwise evaporate a small bit of water in a hole. Scott from Japan
Good one, Jeff. I figured it out while watching your frustration. Spot on about end of the day tired. I get like that too. Thanks for the video. Now I have the confidence to try a free standing tub installation if asked to do one. Also, wondering if crushed ice would help keep porcelain drill bits cool while drilling tile ?
You are a good instructor.
Think about your head is at the other end of the tub and your feet are right close to those valves....... Does that give you any ideas ? It gives me an idea...... Say you want to add some hot water you just use your feet to actuate the valves on off and so on... So face the valves twords you for easyness for your feet to actuate
No extra charge for this information have a nice day... you're very thorough. Keep making videos like this sir I've never seen anybody so dedicated.
I said while watching "rotate the base Jeff" and you did....
I am a plumber I install a lot of free standing tubs the instructions say that tub it has to be 1/8” of the floor should be resting on leg’s only
I was saying you forgot to put the cap on before attaching the plumbing. I did the same thing multiple times installing light fixtures the other day. 🤦♂
Good work the drain mechanism is awesome
Those free standing tubs are a pain in the butt to install lol
Love your channel, we're in the middle of remodeling our bathroom and we are going with a stand-alone tub. It's a very small bathroom so the tub is near the walls. What do you recommend for waterproofing? If we don't want tile surrounding the tub? We basically want to paint all the walls.
No tape on the threads? The gasket seal is enough? I am planning on installing a soaking tub. The one I have now is so shallow it barely covers my knees. The tub is 40 years old and I had to plug the overflow to get a decent bath. So happy it will be leaving and this video will allow me to get it done. :) Thank You Jeff.
About 30 seconds before you caught it I was thinking “what covers so that up?”
14:22 Got a machine thread 🎵It's better than the rest
1st Jeff 33:06. Why not unscrew floor piece unscrew pipes. The assemble it all attach pipe. And screw to floor last
2nd. Why not orient faucet with temp face tub…
You should put everything together tighten up the hoses and then screw the base down
Yeah, I wouldn't have thought to unscrew it from the floor either, Jeff... it happens :)
I like the place you put it this way you are not crossing over the water to adjust
Glad I discovered this video.
That was easy 🤣🤣 good job 🤩
If there is a bathtub room, we should use mdf or wooden baseboards. I prefer to use tile baseboard and metat beats on it. also I always put a wood support for p-trap pipe to make it stronger.
How I dislike such mixers! Even built-in systems in brick walls are more appealing to me than these 😕
Lolololol, I know someone whose happy that's done. Bravo 👏👏
I love how even the experts get defeated sometimes. The look of defeat there leaning over the tub, I think we've all been there lol. It's just funny when it's someone else. 😅 The piano music had me howling with laughter.
love the funny edits!! great video. much love
I think if you unscrew from floor make your connection then put line down in the hole. That should keep you from going under the house. Ok never mind, I should have just kept watching, I knew u would figure it out! 👍
Love your channel - so helpful!
Man I was cracking up with you bud! Ive had that happen before where one piece was forgotten before another. I feel your pain😂
probably would have been good idea to also put some silicone grease on the brass drain piece, makes it easier to slide in without damaging or displacing the seal
I think if you unscrew the brass bass support, you then can screw the faucet together then screw it to the floor for support and stability after you make the plumbing connection and screw the fixture together. I think that would do the trick.
Are you gonna calk that moulding behind the tub that touches you wall of tile?
That kit comes with a lube for the brass extension and rubber seal that should be used.
Maybe you could use a ring of plumber's putty to make a little moat around the drill marks on the tile.
It wouldn't hold a LOT of water, but perhaps enough to keep the bit from overheating.
Nice job Jeff!!
Great job! What a painful experience with the tub. Cheers!
Awesome work
Jeff, I'm feeling dumb right now but I don't see how you secured the tub to the floor - you had mentioned it was essential to do so but I just missed how you did it. Also, what were the three screws on the faucet base going into?
Tub sits on the floor with the edges of the tub and the legs at the bottom plus silicone helps keep it steady
The faucet bracket is screwed to the plywood subfloor
This drain system allows you to rotate the tub, but how much side to side movement can you get?
I’m asking because I am using this system to install a tub that fits into the corner. I need a little bit of play to ensure I don’t get gaps at the wall.
I am looking for a video from you to build a tub deck . Do you have one up because I can’t find one
32:25 your only option is to take the three screws out a screw it together then screw it to the floor
Jeff what's name of the underlayment you recommended for use until lvt with underpaid built in? Where can I buy for UK , is it a insulation with built in vapour barrier product with no give?
I'm talking to the screen. Drop the collar and unscrew the feet and turn them. Also did you mark one of the feet to the tile?
As I watch this, I'm thinking the same thing that many others have been saying, screwing down to the floor should have been the last step. Cheers!
Dude, you gotta assemble the entire unit with the triangular base also attached first. Hold up the entire unit off the floor, attach the water lines then screw the base into the tile.
@jeff what kind of tub is that .? Links?
Thanks
I’ve used a regular old hammer drill and bit to go through tile without much issue in the past. 🤷♂️
5 /16 sds bit
How do you install a Tub with deck mount water supply against a wall?
Have you ever done a soaking tub and shower combo on a 33x59
I thought tiles would work as a backsplash, but I see you are more advanced and use wallpaper as a backsplash
Obviously, you have already figure it out by now just remove the three screws to screw the brass piece and then screw it back down to the floor
so, around 19:23, I see water lines coming up from the floor. I did not see how you connected those to the flex hose coming up the tower.
Take of the bracket of the tiles with out disconnecting water pipes thread every together then screw the bracket on the tile
Can u make a video on how to install flooring tile for beginners
That laugh when it dawns on you that you forgot a step and have to start all over… 😂😂😂
That makes a lot of sense. Sided Weight
I would have assembled the entire top, middle and bottom hose and tube sections, then screw the brass three legged piece onto the bottom of the chrome pipe, connect both water lines and then push the water lines back down into the hole and screw in your three mounting screws. Looks like you have plenty of water line out the bottom of the fixture to do that. OR, simply unscrew the 3 screws on the base from the floor, screw all of the tubular parts together with water lines inside like you have it, and before pushing water lines down through floor, screw on the brass part to the chrome part if they are separate or just position it properly and screw it back down to the floor. It looks like you have plenty of hose out the bottom of the fixture to fully assemble it and lay it on the floor while you are connecting water lines. Once connected, just push them back down through the floor and put the 3 screws back into the floor to hold the brass base in place. Drop the chrome cover down over it and your all set. I know sometimes its easier to see the solution when you are not under pressure of a camera shoot. Great job by the way. Thanks for sharing the video.
Easy way is to build a 2x4 frame under the tile, mount bracket to wood and tile around it the cover will hide the holes!!
How do you clean behind it?
i would have added a stainless steel or brass washer under the floor attachment to spread out the pressure of that standing faucet over the ceramic tile because if its every leaned against it has a lot of leverage
thats was nice broth , thanks for share your experience ;)
man.. we haven't Seen you guys in a long time, hope you're doing well. Grandpas birthday is coming up, maybe we'll hear from you soon!
I was screaming at the video where’s the cover..lol should have hooked to the floor last. Reading through the comments , we all said the same thing.
Freestanding tubs being able to tip over is yet another reason why I never want to have one. I like alcove tubs. Much easier to clean around and easier to sit on the edge without hurting yourself. If you have a foot slip and land on the edge of the tub while getting out, it's not as bad if its a wider section of tub (still sucks). That narrow piece hitting you in the groin or other leg is not good.
I'm pausing at the spot where it went black and white while you try to figure out how to get the faucet assembled and the only thought is screwing the top chrome pieces back together, unscrewing the brass 3 leg bracket, and screwing the bracket on to the bottom of the chrome pipe, re-screwing the bracket to the floor, and then sliding the cover over.
I LOLed at the little phone popup sending a pic to "the wife". LOL.
I wonder if that hose has a built-in vacuum breaker.
Aha! You even used the blue tape on the cover like I was thinking. Glad you figured it out. I would have been so irritated in the moment while working on that though. What an asinine assembly method they designed!
Are those tubs actually comfortable to sit in? They don't look terribly comfortable to me. LOL.
top to bottom floor screws last
That corded still had me laughing
i use concrete drills for any sort of tiles, better experience with those with 4 cutting edges not 2. with the setting "no hammer, only rotation" and just leaning into it, not full pressure.
Yup I know he was going to forget that base cap lol. It happens man 😅
I was wondering 🧐😂
So love you Jeff!!! you dufus lol
could have unscrewed base (the three screws in floor) and turned that base to screw in the pipe that holds the faucet
Please caulk where the wall and floor tiles meet😂
Sleeping on it always helps.
I love you buddy
You will absolutely want threadlock on the threads of the feet, otherwise they will move over time. Knuts as a way to hold a threaded thing in place are about the least effective thing you can have. Throw a second knut as a locknut and some threadlocker, and you're off to the races.
That poor square,LOL I thought you were about keeping every thing clean.
i always enjoy your work and knowledge but i think that tub and faucets are BS.
Out of curiosity why?
Please define BS it's a term that gets used loosely and does not cover the who what where why when and how.... like the guy wanted to know please explain.
Here's my opinion that bathroom can be kept spotlessly clean with a mop around the back side of the tub and his plumbing doesn't have to be installed in the wall. Which takes extra time... But part of your comment is right on..... He would not have the tile issue if he would have installed the plumbing in the wall. And gone with a much cheaper faucet system.
I don't think I would use a fixture with long cantilever and no support near the top. At some point, someone is going stumble and fall against the fill fixture. It will either break or bend.
I guess I was right, I watched it to the end. Glad to see it came through for you. Good job....
so in other words the drop in drain is pointless ? if you need to go under for water. I am installing one and I really thought how to do it very clean first time from above
Raise the hose up and let the water out
im dying over here lmao
I'm a little regret about my new basement bathroom. I should have told a plumber to install free standing tub instead a alcove tub.
If you didn’t do that yourself, would you expect the contractor to scratch it all up? If they did, would you expect them to just tell you, you’re picky? Thanks for the videos. I love how fastidious you are. 😘
If something is not working for you, read the comments on TH-cam.
That whole tub filler install was ass-backwards, Jeff. You should have assembled the whole thing, then tightened the plumbing up, THEN screwed the whole assembled unit into the floor. Edit: I jumped the gun and commented before I watched the last few minutes of the video. Sometimes we live and learn, eh?
these standalone tubs seem so rickety
Why would you open a ceiling, no