The distance is one of the reasons I mentioned getting extras. But since you mentioned hoarding stuff, take an inventory of what you have before you shop. Instead of having two of 'this or that', you don't want to end up with four of them.
Also, there's this:
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Grace-Vy...Roll-Fully-Adhered-Flashing-5003105/203057405
Yeah. I remember one time my dad started doing a concrete pour job (for a shed) and ran out of concrete so we had to make a mad dash to HD to get more bags. We told them what we needed and that we needed to load the bags in a hurry and get back. They said they would run the barcodes and we would pay and then they would load us up. We stood there for probably 15 minutes waiting for someone to come load the bags we'd already paid for when I said "screw it" and started picking up a bag myself-- suddenly employees stopped chitchatting with one another and rushed over and said I wasn't allowed to pick them up and that they would handle it, so they started loading them and then we had to rush back home.
I don't know if I have any spare DWV parts laying around-- mostly PVC supply stuff. I will have to go and take an inventory of lumber and stuff. There is all sorts of stuff down in the workshop. One day I'll take pictures of the workshop and post it on the garageretreat forum. I need to get some sort of stepstool out down there and look through some of the little bins on the walls. Dad was a bit taller than me and had longer arms so he could reach stuff. I also want to do some stuff to fix the place up a little more. I need to patch the roof on the workshop's porch area, but I've gained a LOT of weight since I last went up there and the reason there is a hole is bc my foot went through when I was mopping Coolseal up there.
Thanks for the link to the wrap. A related link pulled up this
pre-made corner thingy. I saw a video where someone used a similar product under the wrap. I wonder if that stuff is actually any good.
I've been watching videos about window installation-- leaving gaps to let water drain, using flat plastic shims, etc. I forget the name one of the people used for the shims-- but he said it was a plastic kind that would not compress and would not rot.
I'm currently watching a video on electrical installation-- but it's over an hour and 40 minutes long. I have about 20 minutes left, but I started drifting off so I paused and will resume watching in a bit. Lots of cool things I didn't know about-- like making loops of extra wire in case more is needed to be pulled into the box later on, the different types of things to hold the wires on to the studs, what the different colors are, wrapping the wire around the screws clockwise, etc. Wish I'd known that last bit when rewiring a replacement jack after the old one got fried by a power surge. I'm taking notes. Heh.
And I'm going to watch videos on door installation and stuff later.
I wanted to watch last night but internet went out from storms-- we had a tornado watch in effect.
Meanwhile, I'm going to take some measurements of the other two bathrooms so I can get a general idea of the distances in them for running the vents.
I plan to install a light fixture above the vanity in my room, so that means I will have to open up that wall. I was thinking of pulling that whole wall panel and putting up beadboard.
I already plan to run the trap arm from the adjacent bathroom's lav in to that wall, but I'm debating on where to run the toilet vents. I could run them both to that same wall (and I've got probably 4 feet of space to work with there) or run the toilet vents to the nearest tub wall-- since I'm going to pull that wall back-- but it is a smaller space and I have the water lines and tub's vent in that one. Although, I could potentially access it from both sides if I cut an access panel in the adjacent hall closet.
On one hand, if I run it to the tub wall, the drain will line up more with the next tub. On the other, I'm not sure there is enough space in there and it is above a joist. If I run the toilets to the lav wall there will be more space and I can run them all together to the main sewer line. I'm trying to figure out if it would be shorter to run the other shower separately to the main line or tie it in with the other fixtures.
Edit: I threw together an ugly sketch.
Lav from B2 wet vents under Lav from B3. on the toilets, one will wet vent under the other.