Hello, all. I'm re-doing a mobile home bathroom. No water damage, but rather a renovation. The issue is the toilet flange location. Due to a small room size and not very good options for MH bathing, I'm going with a shower. The shower (32x32 alcove) is still wider than the 27" tub, so it's throwing the sink and toilet off somewhat. The sink is no problem to find a spot.
My plan is to angle the toilet 45 degrees and make a wall behind it for the tank/water supply. Now, angling the toilet means I have very tight room to work with for the tank. The seat would project out quite well and have no space conflict. So, I would have to find a toilet with a very narrow tank and 10" rough to make it even come close. to using the existing pipe.
The room is gutted and I could cut out a piece of floor at the joists. My questions is it OK to cut down the pipe and put two fittings in it to move the pipe to a better location? And if so, it would end up offset from the central pipe run as well. I'm aware of offset flanges, but read that they're generally not liked. And IDK if one would be enough to do the job. It probably would expand my choice in toilet, as well. Right now, the best and least-costly toilet option is either a Caroma Adelaide or Caravelle-and the tank itself would still be very constricted, even if the seat isn't.
Thanks for your help. And if there's any follow-up questions, please ask.
My plan is to angle the toilet 45 degrees and make a wall behind it for the tank/water supply. Now, angling the toilet means I have very tight room to work with for the tank. The seat would project out quite well and have no space conflict. So, I would have to find a toilet with a very narrow tank and 10" rough to make it even come close. to using the existing pipe.
The room is gutted and I could cut out a piece of floor at the joists. My questions is it OK to cut down the pipe and put two fittings in it to move the pipe to a better location? And if so, it would end up offset from the central pipe run as well. I'm aware of offset flanges, but read that they're generally not liked. And IDK if one would be enough to do the job. It probably would expand my choice in toilet, as well. Right now, the best and least-costly toilet option is either a Caroma Adelaide or Caravelle-and the tank itself would still be very constricted, even if the seat isn't.
Thanks for your help. And if there's any follow-up questions, please ask.