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Deleted member 49599
Hi all,
I'd love some advice please. I'm re-sealing a shower tray that has a little bit of flex in it. The flex is minimal, but the old seal I did previously wasn't done perfectly and if a heavier person has a shower then the joint between the shower tray and bottom tiles would let a few drips of water through. I've removed the old Silicon completely and prepped the area and just wanting to make sure I do it better this time.
I've been watching some videos and one of the tips is to use a low modulus Silicon for joints that have a little bit of flex. However, I've been searching and searching for bathroom Silicon that is low modulus and haven't found anything. It seems that the only low modulus Silicon on the market is for general building use rather than bathrooms.
One of the additional problems is that for sealing around a bath one of the tips is to fill the bath with water first before applying Silicon to avoid the flex breaking the seal, but you obviously can't do this with a shower. I'm planning to put a load of heavy things in the shower tray before applying the Silicon to get it to set whilst the joint is already a bit flexed which isn't ideal but is the best I can think of. I've got a fugi tool so hopefully the seal will be better than before anyway.
So basically I have 2 questions:
1) Can I buy low modulus bathroom Silicon? If yes, where?? If not, what is the best Silicon to use in this situation?
2) Any other tips for improving shower tray Silicon other than my current plan?
3) When doing the corner (I have a vertical joint in the corner of the tiles and two horizontal joints where each side meets the shower tray) what is the best order to do the Silicon? Is it best to do vertical then the horizonals?? And is there a direction that is best?
Thanks all very much!
I'd love some advice please. I'm re-sealing a shower tray that has a little bit of flex in it. The flex is minimal, but the old seal I did previously wasn't done perfectly and if a heavier person has a shower then the joint between the shower tray and bottom tiles would let a few drips of water through. I've removed the old Silicon completely and prepped the area and just wanting to make sure I do it better this time.
I've been watching some videos and one of the tips is to use a low modulus Silicon for joints that have a little bit of flex. However, I've been searching and searching for bathroom Silicon that is low modulus and haven't found anything. It seems that the only low modulus Silicon on the market is for general building use rather than bathrooms.
One of the additional problems is that for sealing around a bath one of the tips is to fill the bath with water first before applying Silicon to avoid the flex breaking the seal, but you obviously can't do this with a shower. I'm planning to put a load of heavy things in the shower tray before applying the Silicon to get it to set whilst the joint is already a bit flexed which isn't ideal but is the best I can think of. I've got a fugi tool so hopefully the seal will be better than before anyway.
So basically I have 2 questions:
1) Can I buy low modulus bathroom Silicon? If yes, where?? If not, what is the best Silicon to use in this situation?
2) Any other tips for improving shower tray Silicon other than my current plan?
3) When doing the corner (I have a vertical joint in the corner of the tiles and two horizontal joints where each side meets the shower tray) what is the best order to do the Silicon? Is it best to do vertical then the horizonals?? And is there a direction that is best?
Thanks all very much!