How to Add a Shower to a Claw-Foot Tub | Ask This Old House

Ask This Old House plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey helps a homeowner add a shower to a freestanding tub. (See below for a shopping list, tools, and steps.)
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Shopping List for How to Add a Shower to a Claw-Foot Tub:
– Chrome-plated tub-and-shower kit, including shower-curtain ring
– Copper pipe and assorted fittings
– Emery cloth, to clean copper pipe
– Lead-free solder and flux, for soldering copper pipe and fittings
– Teflon tape, to create a watertight seal on threaded fittings
– PVC primer and cement, for adhering plastic pipe and fittings
– Plumber’s putty, to create a watertight seal at tub drain[BR][BR]
– Shower curtain and rings

Tools for How to Add a Shower to a Claw-Foot Tub:
– Locking pliers
– Close-quarter tubing cutter, to cut copper pipe
– Pipe brush, to clean copper pipe
– Propane torch, for soldering
– Adjustable wrench, for tightening threaded fittings
– PVC handsaw, to cut plastic pipe
– Level, for plumbing up the shower arm
– Cordless drill

Steps for How to Add a Shower to a Claw-Foot Tub:
1. Turn off the water to the bathroom at the water main or well pump.
2. Use an emery cloth to buff clean the two water-supply pipes protruding from the floor.
3. Gently pull up on the hot-water supply pipe, then clamp locking pliers onto the pipe to hold it in position. Repeat for the cold-water pipe.
4. Cut both pipes to length with a close-quarter tubing cutter.
5. Use a pipe brush to clean the inside of a copper male adapter.
6. Apply flux to the inside of the adapter and to the outside of the hot-water supply pipe.
7. Press the adapter onto the end of the pipe, then use a propane torch and lead-free solder to solder the adapter to the pipe. Repeat to solder an adapter onto the cold-water pipe.
8. Wrap the threaded portion of each adapter with Teflon tape.
9. Slide an escutcheon over each pipe, then tighten a valve onto each adapter with an adjustable wrench. Release the locking pliers.
10. Turn the water back on and check for leaks.
11. Use a PVC handsaw to cut the plastic drainpipe slightly below the surface of the finished floor.
12. Adhere a PVC fitting onto the end of the drainpipe with PVC primer and cement.
13. Set the chrome-plated escutcheon over the fitting.
14. Wrap a rope of plumber’s putty around the threaded portion of the tub’s drain fitting.
15. Assemble and connect the tub’s drainpipe and overflow tube.
16. Install the new faucet to the tub wall, then connect both the hot- and cold-water supply pipes.
17. Tighten the showerhead onto the shower arm, then mount the shower arm to the tub faucet.
18. Attach an adjustable ceiling bracket to the shower arm.
19. Use a level to hold the shower arm perfectly plumb (vertical), then screw the bracket to the ceiling.
20. Connect the shower-curtain ring to the shower arm, then suspend the ring from the ceiling with vertical supports.
21. Install a shower curtain to the ring.
22. Attach a handheld showerhead to the tub faucet.

About Ask This Old House TV:
Homeowners have a virtual truckload of questions for us on smaller projects, and we’re ready to answer. Ask This Old House solves the steady stream of home improvement problems faced by our viewers—and we make house calls! Ask This Old House features some familiar faces from This Old House, including Kevin O’Connor, general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, and landscape contractor Roger Cook.

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How to Add a Shower to a Claw-Foot Tub | Ask This Old House
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  1. I live in an oldish apartment & it has a small cramped bathroom with a tub like this. I HATE IT SO MUCH!!! I need 3 shower curtains to wrap around it to keep the water in & due to air flow the curtains suck in & stick to the person showering. It is awful!

  2. I had used one of these at a B&B once , When you put the shower curtain inside the tub there is very little room to move around without the curtain sticking to your body. It does the job but it tends to be more frustrating than it's worth.

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