![]() Out of curiosity I had a look and although it was from the American site, I was directed back to the UK and surprisingly, straight to the item. ![]() This popped up in my news feed as one of those "15 things you can't live without on Amazon". If you have a tub, where you cannot accept that overflow hole, why not just cover it with some duct tape? The hardest to visualize from the item description, was the actual size, so I have added a few photos showing alternative perspectives, which might help you decided. If I do that in my tub, the emergency overflow is about 1 cm lower than the rim, which is so high, that I don't even dream of filling it that much. I have seen some reviews stating that the emergency overflow hole in this item prevents it from doing what it is supposed to do, but if you make sure the hole is on the top, you at least get a gain of 4 inches/10 centimeters. Works exactly as expected, and covers the overflow completely. Had first tried to come up with an idea on my own, when I realized I couldn't be the first with this thought, so went to Google for ideas, and up came Amazon, unsurprisingly, with this. Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 February 2017 deep, the Bottomless Bath fits commonly found bathtub overflow drains, like toggle/trip lever, flat, or snap drain types.
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