Damn, been following you guys for years and just came across this 4 year old video. You’re still about the only guys on RUclips that did a curbless shower on a concrete slab. I expected no less. Loving the new garaj mahal build.
I decided to watch all these guys videos from the beginning. The craftmanship and quality are amazing. Such honest, humble, and hardworking people are so rare nowadays. Even if the work is going to be covered by dry wall or toilet, it is still solid quality behind it. Masterpiece.
Watched you guys 4 years ago when this came out, and again today when I have to it this myself. I liked you back then, and you have only been improving!!
Very cool to see SPs older video and to notice progress of your channel. We can say now “this is old-school SP”. No music, different editing, different dynamics between you guys vs now. Also now you are rocking your own merch. No more sport brands. Same old quality with new and improved SP flavor! Most importantly a healthy father-son relationship from the day one! And yes, I will chip that like button, self-level the bell and sledge hammer that share. All the best crew.
Just thought I’d comment on one of your guys’s old videos. How far yall have come, especially Paul. The confidence and the way you explain things 5 years ago to now is insane. Still did it well but now you’re just a natural on camera, always know what to say and how to say it! Much love yall been watching for years, since yall 1st upload. Much love from AZ!
You get a lot of satisfaction out of knowing the job is done perfectly like that. If you’re like me, getting to that skill level requires learning from past mistakes.
Just ran across this one, I must of missed it before. Gotta say you guys have evolved in being more comfortable with the camera and dialog. Great channel.
Thankyou! Having two of you really helps putting things in simple terms, like "short one" and "all of this or just the square" is what all us diy people think when we try to fail at doing something. Both of you do amazing work!
Man you guys are the best. Watching it over and over, gained confidence, about to do it. I have the tools. I'm actually going to practice the leveling and downslope on a makeshift sandbox. I'll send pics when I tackle it all. thanks again!
very enthusiastic young man working with dad , when i worked with my dad it didnt go well at all he expected more from me than the guys he actually paid and we fought all day plus i had to drive home with him 😒😒😒😒🙄 . good for you guys seems as if you make a great team and definitly do good work .
you guys are doing good work, i really apreacit your tips and tricks. the way you guys teach is the best way. I am as well doing a whole house remodel hall bath from a 1950s house in to a two bath. For a customer and you got one thing right its a lot of work. Most people don't realize all the little things you don't see till the walls start going up.
Hi .The best I love , and I realy needed to know , was the work u did in your lovely Mom . U made my day . I loved it 😊😘😇❤👀❤🕯❤☕🙏🙌👍👏👏✟✟✟ LORD be with u all .😘
Use a dot laser on door framing, window framing etc. Make a mark say like 3” from bottom of your stud, then put your Dot Laser on that 3” mark Dot Laser will shoot that red dot straight up/down. Go to top of stud put your tape measure against the top of stud. Adjust stud until the red dot hits that 3” mark! Really helps me & is a great tip! 👌👌Great job on this Video! Keep um coming!👍👌💪👊
Hi GUYS. This is great information. Its the video I NEEDED at the time at needed it the most. Never done anything like this but, im turning my old style plastic tub and destroyed it and doing something similar to you alls set up to use as a handycap all accessible Shower.Still in good shape but just thinking into the future, I already ran into trouble and found serious termite damage. Still determined to do it all by my self
Great job. You should think about making a dedicated saw for this job specifically. I drilled and tapped a hole in the shroud of my skilsaw where I inserted a brass fitting to adapt a 3/8” tubing to the lavatory angle stop. This will help free up your assistant to vacuum up the water. Just a helpful tip. God bless
Awesome work aside, can you teach a class on fatherhood? There are so many guys out here missing the mark when it comes to teaching their kids to take pride in your work, supporting them and actually teaching them something that they can carry with them their entire lives. Kudos to you sir.
I like the idea of scoring / cutting the concrete. With my lack of experience I probably would have just spiked it then chipped it. Way more dust and way more vibration/fatigue. This is better as you only need to use the sds/demo hammer one time.
Some serious thunder there 🥳 nice content, i really like that the tools arent the most hightech you can buy. Gives that homemade feel that we mostly need here 👍👍👍
I have a feeling that the rip cuts took considerably longer than the 45 MIN mentioned lol.. I'm finding out the last 2 days.. maybe it's just my 45 year old super hard concrete.. next time ill rent the big concrete saw instead of wearing out this old 7 1/4 inch Skilsaw! Love your content, favorite channel on RUclips!
Great video! I haven't seen anything building related that you haven't mastered. One tip: When driving screws into the plywood backing through the stud, I'd drill a clearance hole in the 2X4 so you're not threading into it. This saves energy, and eliminates the possibility of a trapped space between the plywood and the 2X4 caused by the threads holding them apart. Otherwise, you're basically stripping the threads in the 2X4 to cause the plywood to pull up against it. May as well start with that.
Just stumbled upon you guys. Watched the entire thing thru...immediately subscribed after 5 mins though. I really appreciate the level of detail you both describe as your working. I don't know much so I'm trying to learn as much as I can for when I do my bathroom shower. Definitely got some more pointers.
Hey @StudPack! Long time listener; first time caller. One of my favorite early videos from you guys, and proud of the upward momentum you have earned. Was there ever a follow up to this video specially about waterproofing then tiling this bathroom? Thanks!
Pretty much the same way I did my last curbless shower on a slab, where is the follow up on the finished product though ? Nice Tundra 👍 I have a 2010 and love it !
Our video where we installed the exhaust hood for the stove has a walkthrough of the house that has the completed shower, go take a look let us know what you think!
Sooo the wet circular saw on slab. Ive typically key cut like 1.5" relief on perimeter using makita with shop vac and plastic off room. Im curious on what looks like a well ventilated remodel this wasnt used. To avoid the slurry in drain and having to flush trap. Genuinely curious. Not hate love all of the content guys. Ive been down here in florida for 15 years doing tile and kitchen bath remodels and always looking for more info and to improve. I just know that on many jobs any kind outside mess is a huge no no! Most of the snowbirds in FL really strive to make there lawn like Delaware and you cant even toss out your water bucket outside. Let alone flush a trap. I do like the idea of a hose to spray out drain over the full respirator mask plastic and negative. Theres no issues down stream like with exterior washout??
@@surffish386 You can see a black rag in the drain beginning at 16:07. I mentioned earlier in the video that years ago I had to replace a p trap in a floor drain because the concrete finishers let the slurry harden in the p trap. Lesson learned and always a good reminder, I should have pointed that out again, thanks Weston.
Paul, this is a rookie question but how do you determine the slope? Like to the drain pan you put in and to the old concrete, how did you figure out the height or depth to place to drain pan? Love the channel guys! You too are rock stars and a good team!
Taught that: You get a perfectly straight board. Lay it at center point (the drain) going outward(the wall). Lay leveler on top of board. If the bubble is where you need it your good. Follow this all the way around. Then 2 more times for good measure.
Others are using plastic liner or paint-on water barrier -- perhaps standard practice where installing in framed floors / over finished space? Obviously, synthetic moisture barriers didn't always exist, and on a slab-on-grade floor, what's the worst-case, anyway? Tile failure > a gallon a day leaches into slab, maybe makes it through to dirt below? Erosion over time? Frost heave? My situation is a basement in a row house, so I'm not worried about frost heave. Seems like moisture barriers can also cause problems. Would love to have your thoughts.
We almost always use Schluter Kerdi on the the floors, depends on availability... it's bulletproof imo. I don't think liquid applied like you get at the home center are proper for shower floors. check out www.diytileguy.com/ I agree with everything on his website
Your guys videos have gotten much smoother over the years. Is there a reason you went this route vs just tearing out the concrete before the plumbing and then poring a little concrete to the slope you needed?
This shower was bordered by two exterior walls. I didn’t want to have to jackhammer into the footings and risk cracking the stucco. The footings on this house were huge. I tunneled under one in another video
Hey guys, love your videos. Super helpful on my DIY projects. I am planning a new home that will have polished concrete floors throughout except for the showers. The showers will be tiled and curbless but I am struggling trying to find videos that show how to make the tiled shower floor level with the concrete floor in the rest of the bathroom. Since I will be finishing the showers myself, should I have the builder leave the shower floors gravel and install the insulation board and concrete myself at the required slope?
Question.. Why'd you use the thin set and paint it on and then the quikrete on top for the shower base? Tip- ram set is soo much nicer for affixing studs to concrete, easygoing and fast😁
Had this reccomended today. It's amazing how far you all have come and how much more comfortable you are on camera. Do you script things a bit more now? Or is it just a matter of you all found your groove?
Just and advice please be careful thats a power cord machine u dont wanna use water with that one cause u can get shock . Is better batterie power tool . Please just be safe my friend dont mean to be rude u did a awesome job Godbless you
Currently in the building process and a bath tub including the plumbing was left out... what is the estimated cost of breaking up the concrete, adding a vent for the bathtub and water lines, etc? Builder doesn’t want to hold back the progress to make it happen
Nice job, I am building one right now and understand that feeling of being able to move onward after all that chipping. Not sure why you didn't have all the shower floor cut away, re-pour the slab, then drypack it though. After all, somebody was already there cutting that slab...
Hey Paul, I have a question. When setting your first flange in the drain pipe; how much gap do you want from the bottom of the flange to the surface of the concrete slab?
You two are awesome! great to see a Father-Son Duo. And such High Quality Work! I LOVE your work on RUclips. I hope your doing business because of this. (Hey-- I'm into safety invest in those Safety Eye glasses, so you can save your valuable eyesight!)(Hey Dad-- you show your trust in your Son. His RUclips presence is current and helps make this awesome!! Keep it up!) I'll highly recommend!!Angela Peters, AZ
I have been following you guys on your current dream house build and came across this video because my friend and I are thinking of tackling this project. I am just curious, after the dry pack step, how do you water proof the floor?
Found you guys recently and love the content. Never saw a follow up to this one. How did you end up waterproofing this shower given that concrete is porous?
Great work! I’ll be pouring a 4” thick slab home soon with radiant heating lines within it and I want to do a curb free 32”x72” shower. How would you recommend recessing the area and how deep?
By injecting the thin set under the flange, aren't you blocking the weep holes? Shouldn't you be packing loose gravel underneath the flange to allow any water to escape into the drain?
Nice video. I'm doing a custom shower in my basement. Pretty much the same as this. Is it ok to make a concrete curb poured and tied in with floor. I plan on tiling it with shower doors on the curb?
I have a 6x6 cutout in my slab and we are doing curbless. Can I use the concrete as the finished shower floor? Would it need to be sealed and slip-proofed? We have learned to not like the maintenance of tile.
This is the greatest video ever! Exactly what I'm gonna do but with linear drain. Question, how far below the floor is your drain, looks to be about 1" (I think you said 1/2" per foot).
Damn, been following you guys for years and just came across this 4 year old video. You’re still about the only guys on RUclips that did a curbless shower on a concrete slab. I expected no less.
Loving the new garaj mahal build.
Thanks for checking out our old stuff D! It’s an oldie but a goodie
This guy and his son are a rare breed
I respect their work ethic/quality
Enjoyed this video
"I never know when to stop. I can make it better, I can make it perfect" I felt that in my bones. PS it does look perfect.
😂 thx Olivia 👊💪
I decided to watch all these guys videos from the beginning. The craftmanship and quality are amazing. Such honest, humble, and hardworking people are so rare nowadays. Even if the work is going to be covered by dry wall or toilet, it is still solid quality behind it. Masterpiece.
Thx Ray much appreciated 💪👍
Thanks! You guys are a great team ❤
I've followed you (both) for a couple of years.
I just watch this video. . . . WOW you guy have improved.
ConGrat's !!!
Watched you guys 4 years ago when this came out, and again today when I have to it this myself. I liked you back then, and you have only been improving!!
Hooray! No obnoxious hard rock during time lapse sequences. Did not have to mute this video once. Nice work.
Very cool to see SPs older video and to notice progress of your channel. We can say now “this is old-school SP”. No music, different editing, different dynamics between you guys vs now. Also now you are rocking your own merch. No more sport brands. Same old quality with new and improved SP flavor! Most importantly a healthy father-son relationship from the day one! And yes, I will chip that like button, self-level the bell and sledge hammer that share. All the best crew.
Superb work. Such great explanations to the ignorant (me!) in how you bring things to such beautiful finish!
Thank you the most complete step by step process and explanation. Of a curb-less are on slab.
I learn something new with every video I watch of you guys. I’m obsessed
Just thought I’d comment on one of your guys’s old videos. How far yall have come, especially Paul. The confidence and the way you explain things 5 years ago to now is insane. Still did it well but now you’re just a natural on camera, always know what to say and how to say it! Much love yall been watching for years, since yall 1st upload. Much love from AZ!
You get a lot of satisfaction out of knowing the job is done perfectly like that. If you’re like me, getting to that skill level requires learning from past mistakes.
Just ran across this one, I must of missed it before. Gotta say you guys have evolved in being more comfortable with the camera and dialog. Great channel.
Great work gentlemen, glad your dad give great tips for DIY’s, as a old new draftsmen that is so great see these days
Thanks 👍
Thankyou! Having two of you really helps putting things in simple terms, like "short one" and "all of this or just the square" is what all us diy people think when we try to fail at doing something. Both of you do amazing work!
You both are so respectful and thoughtful in all of your work
Man you guys are the best. Watching it over and over, gained confidence, about to do it. I have the tools. I'm actually going to practice the leveling and downslope on a makeshift sandbox. I'll send pics when I tackle it all. thanks again!
very nice , yea 5 does sneak up on you especially when you are making progress and feels great !
Been watching you guys lately. You've come a long way in your presentation but always great work on jobsites. Love your work. Keep it up.
Man, I've learned so much watching your videos. It gives me a lot of confidence. I love when you explain the little details. Thank you so much.
very enthusiastic young man working with dad , when i worked with my dad it didnt go well at all he expected more from me than the guys he actually paid and we fought all day plus i had to drive home with him 😒😒😒😒🙄 . good for you guys seems as if you make a great team and definitly do good work .
great job thanks for sharing
higly confident now to finish my standing shower. cheers from Grand valley Ontario CA
Jordan's editing skills have vastly improved in the past 3 years. Keep up the good work!
Thanks Alexei! Always trying to improve 👊🏼👊🏼
Great job!!! A blessing to see a father and son team! 💯
you guys are doing good work, i really apreacit your tips and tricks. the way you guys teach is the best way. I am as well doing a whole house remodel hall bath from a 1950s house in to a two bath. For a customer and you got one thing right its a lot of work. Most people don't realize all the little things you don't see till the walls start going up.
Keep up the hard work! We appreciate you both!
Hi .The best I love , and I realy needed to know , was the work u did in your lovely Mom . U made my day . I loved it 😊😘😇❤👀❤🕯❤☕🙏🙌👍👏👏✟✟✟
LORD be with u all .😘
I have that same porter cable saw. Bought it at a yard sale for $10. It works great still for the last two years.
Use a dot laser on door framing, window framing etc. Make a mark say like 3” from bottom of your stud, then put your Dot Laser on that 3” mark Dot Laser will shoot that red dot straight up/down. Go to top of stud put your tape measure against the top of stud. Adjust stud until the red dot hits that 3” mark! Really helps me & is a great tip! 👌👌Great job on this Video! Keep um coming!👍👌💪👊
Great videos and you guys do great work. Extremely informative videos…..👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Hi GUYS. This is great information. Its the video I NEEDED at the time at needed it the most. Never done anything like this but, im turning my old style plastic tub and destroyed it and doing something similar to you alls set up to use as a handycap all accessible Shower.Still in good shape but just thinking into the future, I already ran into trouble and found serious termite damage. Still determined to do it all by my self
Thanks Carlos! Glad it was helpful and best of luck on your project.
Great job. You should think about making a dedicated saw for this job specifically. I drilled and tapped a hole in the shroud of my skilsaw where I inserted a brass fitting to adapt a 3/8” tubing to the lavatory angle stop. This will help free up your assistant to vacuum up the water. Just a helpful tip. God bless
Cool idea thx Sal 👊👍
Awesome work aside, can you teach a class on fatherhood? There are so many guys out here missing the mark when it comes to teaching their kids to take pride in your work, supporting them and actually teaching them something that they can carry with them their entire lives. Kudos to you sir.
Fn beautlful work old timer love ur work and ur spirit u put into it
I like the idea of scoring / cutting the concrete. With my lack of experience I probably would have just spiked it then chipped it. Way more dust and way more vibration/fatigue. This is better as you only need to use the sds/demo hammer one time.
Nice job! Liked the idea of watery thinset as a bonding agent.
Some serious thunder there 🥳 nice content, i really like that the tools arent the most hightech you can buy. Gives that homemade feel that we mostly need here 👍👍👍
So glad I found your channel! I'm doing this same project in my master bath this weekend. Likely going to film and post it as well. Great stuff!
I have the same Porter Cable sidewinder and I swear it never quits. I've beat the heck out of my for years and it's just keeps on going.
I have the same porter cable saw and I love it :)
Gotta love Porter Cable!!!
Im proud to say im from Puyallup WA. It's totally kool to know your Washingtonians!
I have a feeling that the rip cuts took considerably longer than the 45 MIN mentioned lol.. I'm finding out the last 2 days.. maybe it's just my 45 year old super hard concrete.. next time ill rent the big concrete saw instead of wearing out this old 7 1/4 inch Skilsaw! Love your content, favorite channel on RUclips!
Y'all are very clean when you work!!
Yeah, I liked how clean the area stayed during the project.
I just wish I could say as much for the customers for which I work. What a bunch of pigs is most customers.
They make a good father and son team. I have to complete remodel my 3/4 bath. Got 2 teenagers to help and learn.
Great job guys. Loving the content.
I was going to do this in my basement remodel but I chickened out and just bought a fiberglass one. Nice job
Thanks recycle spinning👍
Great video! I haven't seen anything building related that you haven't mastered. One tip: When driving screws into the plywood backing through the stud, I'd drill a clearance hole in the 2X4 so you're not threading into it. This saves energy, and eliminates the possibility of a trapped space between the plywood and the 2X4 caused by the threads holding them apart. Otherwise, you're basically stripping the threads in the 2X4 to cause the plywood to pull up against it. May as well start with that.
Cool thx Ken 👍💪
It's like science with you guys
Just stumbled upon you guys. Watched the entire thing thru...immediately subscribed after 5 mins though. I really appreciate the level of detail you both describe as your working. I don't know much so I'm trying to learn as much as I can for when I do my bathroom shower. Definitely got some more pointers.
Thank you for your sharing.👏👏👏
Outstanding Job again! OORAH
Construction genius!
Great job!! Seriously you found your calling, both of you!
Hell yeah!!! Good work 👍👍👍
Thanks!!
Great help. Thanks for the effort! Loved the thunder. Cheers
Check out some stuff from Baton Rouge industries, makes anything waterproof, check out their video on you tube,, it’s called deaqua lube, c139
These guys are the best at the trade! How do you get the pan so smooth? 1 gallon of water per bag makes it SO rough.
That came out really good! I know exactly what to do now!! Haha
love your stuff! your the man, oh' and son!...lol. but bro you know your stuff. always go to your video's when i have a question pop in my head!!
Awesome job!
Great job guys!!!!
That "missing water hose "was Really God setting them up to take a break😂dang terminators
Ok, as I watched you addressed the water electricity question. Good vid
This is awesome. Would love to see the finished bathroom
Thanks Troy. There is a shot of the finished bathroom in the hood installation video on this same house published 8/29/19 mile marker 3:20
Hey @StudPack!
Long time listener; first time caller. One of my favorite early videos from you guys, and proud of the upward momentum you have earned.
Was there ever a follow up to this video specially about waterproofing then tiling this bathroom? Thanks!
Pretty much the same way I did my last curbless shower on a slab, where is the follow up on the finished product though ?
Nice Tundra 👍
I have a 2010 and love it !
Our video where we installed the exhaust hood for the stove has a walkthrough of the house that has the completed shower, go take a look let us know what you think!
Sooo the wet circular saw on slab.
Ive typically key cut like 1.5" relief on perimeter using makita with shop vac and plastic off room.
Im curious on what looks like a well ventilated remodel this wasnt used. To avoid the slurry in drain and having to flush trap.
Genuinely curious. Not hate love all of the content guys.
Ive been down here in florida for 15 years doing tile and kitchen bath remodels and always looking for more info and to improve.
I just know that on many jobs any kind outside mess is a huge no no!
Most of the snowbirds in FL really strive to make there lawn like Delaware and you cant even toss out your water bucket outside. Let alone flush a trap.
I do like the idea of a hose to spray out drain over the full respirator mask plastic and negative. Theres no issues down stream like with exterior washout??
@@surffish386 You can see a black rag in the drain beginning at 16:07. I mentioned earlier in the video that years ago I had to replace a p trap in a floor drain because the concrete finishers let the slurry harden in the p trap. Lesson learned and always a good reminder, I should have pointed that out again, thanks Weston.
At 12:20 - i wish I got see your process for the thunder around the drain. Super important step
Paul, this is a rookie question but how do you determine the slope? Like to the drain pan you put in and to the old concrete, how did you figure out the height or depth to place to drain pan? Love the channel guys! You too are rock stars and a good team!
1/4” per foot from the longest point within the shower pan to the drain
A bubble level at 'zero' and a tape measure.
Taught that: You get a perfectly straight board. Lay it at center point (the drain) going outward(the wall). Lay leveler on top of board. If the bubble is where you need it your good. Follow this all the way around. Then 2 more times for good measure.
Others are using plastic liner or paint-on water barrier -- perhaps standard practice where installing in framed floors / over finished space? Obviously, synthetic moisture barriers didn't always exist, and on a slab-on-grade floor, what's the worst-case, anyway? Tile failure > a gallon a day leaches into slab, maybe makes it through to dirt below? Erosion over time? Frost heave? My situation is a basement in a row house, so I'm not worried about frost heave. Seems like moisture barriers can also cause problems.
Would love to have your thoughts.
We almost always use Schluter Kerdi on the the floors, depends on availability... it's bulletproof imo. I don't think liquid applied like you get at the home center are proper for shower floors. check out www.diytileguy.com/ I agree with everything on his website
Your guys videos have gotten much smoother over the years. Is there a reason you went this route vs just tearing out the concrete before the plumbing and then poring a little concrete to the slope you needed?
Not a criticism btw maybe that just seems easier to me because I used to pour concrete
This shower was bordered by two exterior walls. I didn’t want to have to jackhammer into the footings and risk cracking the stucco. The footings on this house were huge. I tunneled under one in another video
Hey guys, love your videos. Super helpful on my DIY projects. I am planning a new home that will have polished concrete floors throughout except for the showers. The showers will be tiled and curbless but I am struggling trying to find videos that show how to make the tiled shower floor level with the concrete floor in the rest of the bathroom. Since I will be finishing the showers myself, should I have the builder leave the shower floors gravel and install the insulation board and concrete myself at the required slope?
It was a very neat educational video. Keep it up!
Thanks, will do!
While waiting for the new video I'm going to YET AGAIN go re-watch old videos haha.
Excellent!
Great info!
Well done!
Question.. Why'd you use the thin set and paint it on and then the quikrete on top for the shower base?
Tip- ram set is soo much nicer for affixing studs to concrete, easygoing and fast😁
Had this reccomended today. It's amazing how far you all have come and how much more comfortable you are on camera.
Do you script things a bit more now? Or is it just a matter of you all found your groove?
Did you guys keep hitting the blade with water the whole time it was running or just kindy keep the area wet?Thanks for all the content love it guys
Just and advice please be careful thats a power cord machine u dont wanna use water with that one cause u can get shock . Is better batterie power tool . Please just be safe my friend dont mean to be rude u did a awesome job Godbless you
Is there a part 2 to this video? I’m wondering if you need any type of water barrier?
Quick little tip
You should unplug it when changing a blade.
Currently in the building process and a bath tub including the plumbing was left out... what is the estimated cost of breaking up the concrete, adding a vent for the bathtub and water lines, etc? Builder doesn’t want to hold back the progress to make it happen
Nice job, I am building one right now and understand that feeling of being able to move onward after all that chipping. Not sure why you didn't have all the shower floor cut away, re-pour the slab, then drypack it though. After all, somebody was already there cutting that slab...
John, did you demo your floor and then repour it? Did you dowel into the edges with rebar to tie new pour into the old slab?
Great job on the curbless shower! Where are you located because I need this done for my bathroom remodel and would hire you guys in a flash.
Hey Paul, I have a question. When setting your first flange in the drain pipe; how much gap do you want from the bottom of the flange to the surface of the concrete slab?
You seem down. Hope all is well. I started watching you with your extension cord video, and haven’t missed one yet.
You two are awesome! great to see a Father-Son Duo. And such High Quality Work! I LOVE your work on RUclips. I hope your doing business because of this. (Hey-- I'm into safety invest in those Safety Eye glasses, so you can save your valuable eyesight!)(Hey Dad-- you show your trust in your Son. His RUclips presence is current and helps make this awesome!! Keep it up!) I'll highly recommend!!Angela Peters, AZ
Please be safe wear eye protection and hearing protection. Yall are doing a great job
My old man always said, "Know when to say when." lol
I have been following you guys on your current dream house build and came across this video because my friend and I are thinking of tackling this project. I am just curious, after the dry pack step, how do you water proof the floor?
Found you guys recently and love the content. Never saw a follow up to this one. How did you end up waterproofing this shower given that concrete is porous?
I can answer that. You would put a waterproofing sheet membrane over it. since they used a schulter drain I'm assuming they used kerdi sheet membrane
Great work! I’ll be pouring a 4” thick slab home soon with radiant heating lines within it and I want to do a curb free 32”x72” shower. How would you recommend recessing the area and how deep?
By injecting the thin set under the flange, aren't you blocking the weep holes? Shouldn't you be packing loose gravel underneath the flange to allow any water to escape into the drain?
Im basically doing this same exact job. But the shower is custom and has different measurements from every wall.
Nice video.
I'm doing a custom shower in my basement. Pretty much the same as this. Is it ok to make a concrete curb poured and tied in with floor. I plan on tiling it with shower doors on the curb?
concrete curbs are fine but it all needs to be waterproofed with Ditra or similar pitched to a drain
I have a 6x6 cutout in my slab and we are doing curbless. Can I use the concrete as the finished shower floor? Would it need to be sealed and slip-proofed? We have learned to not like the maintenance of tile.
This is the greatest video ever! Exactly what I'm gonna do but with linear drain. Question, how far below the floor is your drain, looks to be about 1" (I think you said 1/2" per foot).