I pulled the floor boards, some of which had to come up to remove the original aluminum holding tank anyway so it wasn’t much more work and exposed the hose for easy replacement. I can’t imagine trying to snake a hose through. There was no pan. Did the folks who suggested that actually do it or was that just an opinion based on conjecture?
You MUST use the original hose to pull the new one. If you try to pull it on it’s own, it will get caught up in the grid.
You will need to buy enough hose to do the fwd & aft head, and add some length for safety.
Then, you start by removing the floors
Then, go to the fwd head hose.
Cut the end on a very straight 90 degree.
Get a piece of wood dowel the same ID as the hose about 4” long.
Put 2” into the old hose.
Then, use #8 RH screws to connect the hose to the dowel
Put the new hose onto the dowel, and screw it on.
Use at least 4 screws
Run tape around the seam,
Get a jar of PTFE grease (Starbrire). You are going to lather this on the new hose as it keeps getting pulled in,
Attach a rope to the end of the old hose at the tank by drilling holes through the wall.
Now, someone pushes, and the other pulls.
If you follow these directions, you’ll get the new hose through quite easily. I can virtually guarantee you that this is about the only way to do it, as it took me 2 miserable days to figure that out.
Once the hose is through, cut off the excess, and use it to plumb the aft head. This one is easy by comparison