S
Sanke
Hi all
Went to a job today to replace a built in sheer valve with an exposed one. Should ave only neede to remove & replace 2 tiles. However when removing them I discovered that they almost fell off the wall with no adhesive on the back of the tips. The whole back wall of the shower was loose & so was most of a side wall. No adhesive behind tiles at the joins etc or in the corners. The tiler ad even left in the spacers. Removed all the grout & several tiles just fell off the wall. The shower tray hadn't been let in to the wall so the tiles just sat on the edge of the tray. Resulting in some of the block coming away. The gap in places s big enough to put my finger in
I removed the grout with a rake which took ages. Is there a better way ?
When replacing the bottom row of tiles can I bench them slightly so that they come more over the edge of the tray ? Or is there a better way ?
The exposed walls are being replastered over the weekend. How soon can we reptile over it ?
Thanks all
Went to a job today to replace a built in sheer valve with an exposed one. Should ave only neede to remove & replace 2 tiles. However when removing them I discovered that they almost fell off the wall with no adhesive on the back of the tips. The whole back wall of the shower was loose & so was most of a side wall. No adhesive behind tiles at the joins etc or in the corners. The tiler ad even left in the spacers. Removed all the grout & several tiles just fell off the wall. The shower tray hadn't been let in to the wall so the tiles just sat on the edge of the tray. Resulting in some of the block coming away. The gap in places s big enough to put my finger in
I removed the grout with a rake which took ages. Is there a better way ?
When replacing the bottom row of tiles can I bench them slightly so that they come more over the edge of the tray ? Or is there a better way ?
The exposed walls are being replastered over the weekend. How soon can we reptile over it ?
Thanks all