Allright, so I finished the rough framing of the rest of the bathroom floor. It was a challenge with the angles. Although the sub-floor in the bathroom was challenging, I like it because it will be easy to get under my shower stall and black tanks from inside the trailer if I need to. Thinking maintenance down the road here. Also the blank tank hopefully won't freeze since it's inside. I just hope the 1 1/2 pipe vent is enough to keep smells out. I don't see why not.
I did pick up two new tools that I really like. The speed square and an angle finder. I also made a 'sled' for cutting the big boards of plywood. I'm no carpenter, but my skills are getting better and I'm looking forward to making the kitchen cabinets.
Speaking of cabinets, I'm going to tear down the 'frame' you seen in the previous pictures. It came out crooked and uneven and I'm not really satisfied with it. I'm going to rip it out, and then just use I think 3/4 Inch plywood to make a box and then attach it to the wall. Make a faceplate and then some sort of shaker doors. I just wonder if 3/4 inch plywood will hold up to all the bumps on the road. What size is everyone else using for this?
I also ordered two Grommets for the black tank. I found this a little confusing, but I believe for my tank I need one grommet to connect the toilet(Along with the flange, seal, and other pieces), and another for the outlet. Since my tank outlet whole is 3 7/8, I believe the one I ordered reduces that to 3 Inches which I'll have to connect my outlet plumbing too. Any special things people buy for the black tank outlet? I'm probably gonna buy one of those things that has that lever thing at the end. Any suggestions?
Here is the left side of the counter near the kitchen. I had to cut holes and paths for the wire to run under the shower floor.
This is where the step will go where I ran more wires under.
A full picture with all the framing roughed in and the back tank in place. All the angles were challenging and the framing is by no means perfect. But I believe it will work.
Another top picture
I really hope to get this bathroom framing done, the top layer of plywood cut out, the shower and toilet plubming in place this week/end.
I've been thinking about just using cedar or teak as my wood walls in the shower. I think it would feel cool. Teak is perfect, but very expensive. Not sure if I can afford it. But I was thinking why not just by cedar or some sort of other wood and just using marine varnish? I've seen others do it and it looks o.k. Anyone have experience with wood as the shower walls?