Why is the average bathtub not long enough for an adult to stretch out in?

HAH!! I’ve thought about this design; it seems so cool an idea. Never dreamed they existed.

Not any more I don’t - I’ve just had a bath :slight_smile:

Anyway, is a standard US bathtub really 60" long? The standard in the UK is 170cm, which is just under 67". The bathroom in my house is only about 165cm wide, which meant rather a lot of chiselling out of the brick walls to fit a new bath in. But fit it did. :stuck_out_tongue:

Obese people are usually less dense than water. There’ll actually be less weight with a fatty in the tub.

Your overflow scenario, as you sorta-admit, is unlikely.

Yes.

Actually, buoyant objects will displace an amount of water equal to their weight rather than their volume and float. More likely though, the depth of the water will not allow enough of Mr(s) Fatty’s volume to displace this amount of water and float, so the tub will weigh more with a person in it.

Emtar KronJonDerSohn is right - less dense bodies still displace their weight of water, which is why part of them is able to protrude above the surface.

Indeed, however, peak load happens before any displacement/overflow occurs anyway.

If the tub is longer, it’s got more floor space upon which to spread out the weight. So it’s not really the total weight we care about. It’s the weight per square foot, which would be the same no matter how big the tub was. Unless you’re talking about exceeding the weight limit of the entire floor, I don’t think weight is really the issue here.

Why is the average bathtub not long enough for an adult to stretch out in?
Because not enough adults pitch a bitch the way I would about short tubs. I loves me a nice long soak in a tub full of hot water. Aaah!

She’s only 50’

Could it have something to do with standard water heater capacity?

I know that my water heater only has a bit less than one tub’s worth of hot water in it. If it were 20% bigger, it’d be quite a bit colder.

Fashion? Specifically, the preference for showers over baths and the expansion of the rest of the bathroom furniture from a simple sink to a large, sometimes double sink/vanity area.

If anything, bathtubs from previous eras were bigger and heavier than recent ones. My grandmothers 1920’s house had an enormous clawfoot jobbie that I’d love to have now. The master bathroom in our “luxury” apartment has no bathtub at all.