I'm tiling an en-suite shower (it has one of those bog-standard heavy cast-concrete (?) and enamel bases if that makes a difference).
I am not an experienced tiler, so I'm doing my learning.
Looking on the YouTubes, nobody seems to be using that concave shower tray trim anymore, (that would go between the lowest tile and the shower tray) it's all 2-5mm gap and Silicon.
The most concise thing I found was this:
"Is there a gap between the wall and the tray? i.e. greater than the width of the tile when fitted.
If not, tile straight down onto the tray. Silicon the gap first, tile it, then silicon between tile and tray. Much Neater"
Is the 'tray trim' a thing of the past or is it situational? What's your opinion and experience on this?
I am not an experienced tiler, so I'm doing my learning.
Looking on the YouTubes, nobody seems to be using that concave shower tray trim anymore, (that would go between the lowest tile and the shower tray) it's all 2-5mm gap and Silicon.
The most concise thing I found was this:
"Is there a gap between the wall and the tray? i.e. greater than the width of the tile when fitted.
If not, tile straight down onto the tray. Silicon the gap first, tile it, then silicon between tile and tray. Much Neater"
Is the 'tray trim' a thing of the past or is it situational? What's your opinion and experience on this?