My wall drain pipe clears the vanity , but there is not enough depth for trap . That’s why I am thinking running a 90 degree bend out of the wall upward. My concern is losing the trap seal. Since wall drain pipe clears the vanity , I am thinking running 90 degree going up and then attaching the rest to the p – trap . Not sure if this matters.
The p-tray is conveniently located in the space behind the drawers – for whatever reason the depth of the drawers themselves don’t extend the full depth of the cabinet. We considered a vessel style sink, but with small children the 36 counter height will already require a stood for the smaller one – the sink sits up another 2 above that.
6/10/2019 · Check your plumbing locations. Because this piece is a functioning vanity , it will have supply line hookups and a p – trap for the drain. Because of this, the drawers will need to be cut out to fit AROUND the plumbing when they are closed.
Where the horizontal drain piece comes out of the wall, I’d cut that and add a 45 elbow to kick the p-trap to the left, away from the drawers and drawer slides. You’d have to get under there with a few pieces of PVC to see how much length here and there so that the trap still aligns with the sink drain tailpiece, but it should work fine.
May 11, 2019 – Explore Tina’s board Bathroom Vanity Drawers , followed by 126 people on Pinterest . See more ideas about repurposed furniture, diy furniture, drawers .
1/14/2017 · Cut open the drywall and cut the PVC pipe and extend the pipe higher so the bottom of the P-Trap is above the min 16 from the floor that is needed to close the drawer correctly; Re-Route P-Trap; Notch out the drawer itself (last resort) Thank you in advance.
The drain pipe exits horizontally through the wall; in the old vanity there was about 11 inches between the floor of the cabinet and the drain pipe, but in the new vanity there’s only about 4 inches. The old sink ran straight down to a P-trap that dropped about 6 inches below the level of the drain pipe, but there’s not room for that setup with the new vanity.
3/25/2018 · P – trap too low for vanity hi, Im a rookie here, but hooking up our remodeled bathroom doesnt feel like it should be this hard. The wall drain is too low, so when I attach the p – trap , the bottom of the trap is maybe 1 too low and hits the bottom shelf of our vanity .
If I understand your description correctly, there is a 3.5 void between the back of the draws and the wall. You want to 90 down out of the wall and the install the p-trap parallel to the wall in this void space. Extend the top of the p-trap to the required hight with a 90 pointed towards the basin drain.