When you stand at the side of the tub, is the drain on the right, or the left?
A right-hand tub is a reference to the faucets being on the right hand side. The left-hand tub will have the faucet placement on the left-hand side.
When you are facing the side of the tub (looking at the skirt) as if you are about to get in the drain will appear on either the right of you or the left of you. That will designate a right or left handed tub. This only applies to tubs that have the skirt (Side wall) as part of the tub. A drop-in tub has no skirt will not use the right or left hand designation as the same tub can be installed either left or right.
YES
By standing in front of the tubs apron and looking at the tubs outlet and if it is on the right it is a RIGHT HANDED TUB
A right-hand drain applies usually to bath-tubs and means the drain is on YOUR RIGHT when you are standing in front of the tub.
Which direction the tub outlet is in relation to the apron
Left hand. There is no way for me to tell what kind it is since there are several kinds available. Just had to be stupid, it's late.
One fishing pole on the left hand side by the light house. One dolphin in the upper right on the chair. One dolphin on the upper left inside the white shell. Mouse trap behind the swan's butt on the left. Two bags: one base ball bat leaning against the brown ta le on the left. One black bat under the letter r over the sail on the boat.
The difference between a shower and a tub is the shower tends to enclosed with water that comes out of a shower head above while a tub has a faucet that pours into a large basin.
Have you tried "WooHoo"-ing in the hot tub? Or making to people relax in a bed and selecting "Try For A Baby"? or this cheat when in a bed with someone else it is r1 r2 left right right left it all werks
a drop in bath tub has no outside to it, it is "dropped in" to an existing frame (like a juccuzi tub), a skirted tub has the trim that goes from the side of the tub to the floor "finishing" off the side of the tub if you will; you do not need to build a complete structure for a skirted tub, just back and side supports; skirted tubs tend to be cheaper
yes yes