Lincolnshire Ian Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Hi folks The shower tray has been fitted and I have a 12mm gap between the edge of the shower tray and the plastered wall. My wall tiles are 8mm thick and I'm guessing the adhesive will be around 2mm. I obviously would like the tiles to overhang the shower tray to give a good waterproof seal. How could I bridge the 2/3mm gap needed without reskimming the wall. Many thanks
jfb Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago More adhesive? or a 9mm board stuck on. Why does it need to be skimmed if you are tiling?
Lincolnshire Ian Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 4 minutes ago, jfb said: More adhesive? or a 9mm board stuck on. Why does it need to be skimmed if you are tiling? It doesn't need skimming, I am trying to find an alternative way to build the wall out and still have a good seal between the tiles and shower tray.
Redbeard Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) I searched: "'flashing' for joint between shower tiles and shower tray" and there seem to be the 'shower versions' of a roofing 'undercloak' which, it seems to me, might 'safely' and reliably bridge that gap. I have never used one, but they seem to be what I would be looking for if I had this issue. If the 'lip' of the flashing is a bit wimpy you might have to gun-in some gunge to provide a 'back-stop'. I hope that may help. Edit: Of course many would simply get a (say) 6mm cement-based tile-backer board and screw or stick it on before tiling. Edited 2 hours ago by Redbeard Cement board sugg'n 1
Nestor Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Personally I would not tile onto a skimmed plasterboard wall, they will become loose. I would fit 6mm Hardie backer board on all 3 sides and space accordingly with packers for even dimensions. 1
Redbeard Posted 49 minutes ago Posted 49 minutes ago 1 hour ago, Nestor said: Personally I would not tile onto a skimmed plasterboard wall, they will become loose. I would fit 6mm Hardie backer board on all 3 sides and space accordingly with packers for even dimensions. I don't disagree with you in principle, but I have just been thwacking hell out of the peripheries of a tiled insulated-plasterboard-and-skim wall in a shower cubicle done about 25-30 years ago - surely provoking potential falling-off if it was going to happen - and all is completely well (I wouldn't do it like that now, but it has obviously survived extremely well).
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