Anonymous wrote:Not sure what your picture is trying to prove, but the actual toilet fill is a 1/8 inch line, versus 1/2 inch for the washer. And a washer fills at full pressure, cycling on and off at full open or close. No other household plumbing fixture does this. That is why the hoses (and the valves) fail, and why no plumber would ever have a laundry room above finished space in their own home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is everyone afraid of toilets upstairs too? They have the same connections...
No, they don't.

Anonymous wrote:Is everyone afraid of toilets upstairs too? They have the same connections...
Anonymous wrote:I think it's a waste of usable space anywhere except the basement. I wouldn't want an upstairs laundry room at any price.
Anonymous wrote:If you built your dream house the laundry would be on the same floor as the bedrooms. Cut the bs .
Anonymous wrote:We looked at a home this summer that had laudry upstairs and it heated up the whole floor in a home where the AC already was weaker upstairs. Also, I would worry about the flood issue. We also looked at a home that had the expanded mud room with the nicest laundry room I have ever seen -- had storage, nice folding table and was roomy and did not take away from any thing else. I loved it. We didn't buy that house but it was the standard for all laundry rooms from there on.
Anonymous wrote:why would a washer flood anything if it has a proper drain or drain pan? It's like saying I don't want to put a bathtub upstairs because it's going to flood the house.