Pressure Balanced Shower Rough-In Valve Records for Multifamily Installers
Multifamily installer guide for pressure balanced shower rough-in valves, 1/2 inch connections, wall-depth checks, hot-limit stops, and 50 unit phase labels.
Answer: Multifamily installers should record pressure balanced shower rough-ins with 1/2 inch connections, wall-depth range, hot-limit stop, and 50 unit phase labels.
Why rough-in valve records reduce field changes
Repeated apartment shower installs fail when valve depth, trim compatibility, or service stops differ by stack. A rough-in valve record gives the installer, procurement team, and property manager one reference for wall depth, cartridge type, hot-limit setting, and phase labels.
| Rough-in field | Installer reason |
|---|---|
| 1/2 inch connections | Confirms supply and outlet compatibility before wall close-in. |
| Hot-limit stop | Documents the anti-scald setting for repeated units. |
| 50 unit phase labels | Connects valve records to ordering and inspection batches. |
FAQ
What should a multifamily rough-in valve record include?
Include connection size, wall depth, cartridge type, service stops, hot-limit setting, and phase label.
Why track 50 unit phases?
Phase labels let installers and managers audit repeated bathrooms without searching every unit file.
Should rough-in records mention trim finish?
Yes. Valve records should connect to the visible trim kit so replacements stay compatible.
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