Hello.
I am helping my Son refurbish his ensuite bathroom. One of the reasons for the refurb was that the existing shower tray was cracked. It was in this condition when they bought the house, so they dont know the cause of it. It had been repaired, but obviously not Ideal
I am not a professional, but after doing up four of the five houses that we have owned in our lifetime, I have tackled most jobs that I am legally allowed to.
The last shower tray that I fitted was in our own bungalow about eight years ago, and it is fine. These days however there seems to be a lot of discussion as to the correct method, and seeing it is for my son and daughter inlaw I want to get it right.
The tray will be going down upstairs on a 18mm sheet of ply that will replace the chipboard flooring in that area, and there will be no joints in it. The tray is a Millano lithic. It is a polymer resin tray, and very light. One feature that is unusual, is that it can be cut to fit around obstructions, although we wont be doing that. I notice that identical trays seem to be on offer from othe companies but under different names, and thaf their fitting instructions are more or less identical.
The instructions with this tray say to lay it on "compound adhesive or contact adhesive " troweled to a suitable thicknesses. I have contacted the supplier to ask what is ment by compound adhesive, and all they did was send a screenshot of the manual, that we already have. As for contact adhesive, well I dont fancy that as there is zero working time.The only "compound adhesive that I have found comes in 330ml tubes and is 14 quid a pop. I am sure it is not intended as a bedding compound that should be trowed.
The underside of the tray is not rough like I was expecting it to be, but the same smooth surface as the top, so I think sand and cement wouldn't do.
I did see somwhere that any adhesive that will bond ABS will be ok, and this is the path that I am inclined to go down. Has anyone else came across this particular type of tray? If so I would be keen to hear from you.
That went on a bit, sorry.