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Posted

I've just discovered this plastic strip product that you can put between ceramic surfaces. It sticks to one of them and conforms to the other. My main use would be below floor mounted toilet pans.

 

Has anyone used it or have any thoughts about whether it's worth it?

 

w540.jpeg.f337b90850ae0a4e555d1d5d01f91753.jpeg

  • Like 1
Posted
13 hours ago, Beau said:

Nice idea if it works.

 

I hate sealing around toilet pans and it never looks good

 

You still need to apply a bead of silicone around the joint when done with this though so I think it's more about avoiding the ceramic on ceramic contact if that is indeed a problem 

Posted
1 minute ago, MortarThePoint said:

 

You still need to apply a head of silicone around the joint when done with this though so I think it's more about avoiding the ceramic on ceramic contact if that is indeed a problem 

In which case whats the point?

 

Silicone works just looks poor when it has to be thick, least it does when I do it haha

Posted (edited)

@Nickfromwales when you screw down toilets to a completely tiled floor do you use this stuff, pop some silicone between the pan and floor or just sit the pan straight onto the tiles?

 

Definitely needs a bead of sealant around afterwards but wondering if anything between pan and tile?

Edited by MortarThePoint
Posted

@MortarThePoint I noticed something similar looking in the diagrams for my wall hung toilet but couldn't find anything resembling this stuff as there was not any text in the instructions to tell me what it actually was, just drawings. 

I tried putting some Armaflex tape on the back of the loo pan as an isolator but it had too much give in it and the loo flexed when sat on.

@Nickfromwales I'd be interested in your thought on this too please, as my bathrooms are about to be siliconed so I can still easily fit some to my toilets if I need and can get hold of some. TIA

  • jack changed the title to Harosecur - gimmick or good?
Posted (edited)

My floor mounted toilet pan had this less than useful picture in the install instructions. 
 

image.thumb.png.340a95069d8fc7232a4222281f74e7ca.png

 

Which I assume is tile adhesive. But I still don’t understand how you can have adhesive on the bottom of the pan and then do all the movement to fit it to the two connections. Wouldn’t it make a right mess?

Edited by Nick Laslett
Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, Nick Laslett said:

Just found this blog detailing an approach, which I quite like. Install toilet, raise on packers, silicon under pan, place back down. This guy didn’t want to drill and screw mount. 
 

https://www.sunamoon.com/articles/fix-down-toilet-without-screws.htm

 

If doing that, I'd be inclined to trace round the bottom on the pan with a pencil, move it to the side and put the silicone down onto the floor and the place the pan back in position. Pencil line would then get covered by the later silicone bead finish.

 

I'm may use this approach in another room where I can't drill the floor, but tempted to use CT1 for sticking the pan down. Same approach though.

Edited by MortarThePoint
Posted
3 hours ago, Nick Laslett said:

Just found this blog detailing an approach, which I quite like. Install toilet, raise on packers, silicon under pan, place back down. This guy didn’t want to drill and screw mount. 
 

https://www.sunamoon.com/articles/fix-down-toilet-without-screws.htm

It’s what I do. 
 

@Barnboy

 

I lift the pan up on packets, drop it into clear CT1 (NOT silicone) and pull the packets out. 
 

Clean off the displaced CT1 with a load of baby wipes, cleaning it back so you can’t tell it was ever there, leaving a crevice at the bottom of the pan where it meets the floor. 
 

Use CT1 Multisolve to clean the floor. 
 

Leave to cure, and then apply cosmetic silicone to crevice. 

Posted

Not bolting down….

 

If there’s bolt holes I fit the fixings with decorative cover caps with silicone, cutting the fixings short of the floor, “for display purposes only”. 

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