h a l f b a k e r ySuperficial Intelligence
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
A grid holds individual tiles suspended above a sloped drain system allowing water to drain through the fake pourous grout-lines eliminating the need for a drain cover or sloped shower floor. No more clogged drains.
Bathe Peristaltically in a Cup of Water
[hippo, Feb 08 2013]
[link]
|
|
I suspect that the porous grout would act as a filter, and eventually clog. |
|
|
You could clean it out with a blow torch or acid or something, depending on what it's composition was. |
|
|
How does the water get into a waste pipe to go to sewer,
if there's no drainage collection point? |
|
|
There is still a standard sloped drain-hole beneath the suspended tile floor. The fake grout lines that comprise the grid and the tiles themselves can be removed at any time to be cleaned or changed at whim. Simply removing the pourous fake-grout strips and turning them upside down would flush out any clogging issues. |
|
|
This would also allow for a curbless shower wheelchair access and such. |
|
|
I've thought about a variation on this for years. Why not build a solid, one-piece floor in the shower about 1" above the actual floor, with a narrow, 1/4" wide gap all the way around the edges? Solid floor, no drain cover, water magically disappears like an infinity pool. |
|
|
There are waste grates like that already, [DIYMatt]. |
|
|
Search "invisible shower drain" and you'll find multiple
examples. |
|
|
I didn't think to do a search on this one first. Building showers and steam rooms is part of what I do and since I'd never heard of it I assumed it didn't exist. |
|
|
Very common in the mid-upper level of home construction
in Australia, [2fries]. |
|
|
Then again, practically unknown in the UK, where they
don't do floor wastes in their bathrooms at all. |
|
|
Totally unknown in france, where the concept of personal
hygiene has been lost to the indigenous infestation since the
Romans left
and after 1500 years without washing, it's not
suprising that the place whiffs a bit
|
|
|
France smells like a urinal. |
|
|
I wasn't dissing your idea, I liked your idea. One of those upvotes is mine. Your idea is probably what started this one percolating and if I had remembered that I would have linked to it myself. Thanks for the inspiration. |
|
|
The weak bit in both ideas is the carpet/porous-grout-lines. IMHO of course. |
|
|
Apart from that I rather like both of them. |
|
|
I forsee the buildup of significant amounts of biofilm. If it's in the drainage space rather than on the user side then that isn't really a problem. |
|
|
Do you need grout at all? |
|
|
If you mounted each tile onto a fixing with full edge support, they could be held firmly in place individually. Leave a few millimetre gap between each tile, and you're good.
Tiles with rounded edges would be better. Maybe you could simply cover a support grid with a couple of layers of even, flattish cobbles. |
|
|
Big plastic bag, you stand in it, take a shower, attach bag to vacuum pump, all water boils off, throw away the bag. |
|
|
[not_morrison_m] - see link |
|
|
Perhaps acoustic tiles would help? |
|
|
I'd thought of no grout lines at all, but then hair will just end up having to be collected from the lower drain. |
|
|
Not if you add a device to chop the hair into tiny
little pieces. |
|
|
I think we're looking at this from the wrong angle. |
|
|
There any many deserted mine-shafts in the world. Suspend the person instead? |
|
| |