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#1
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How to shave a bit off ceramic tiles?
There are a couple of places in the house where ceramic wall tiles have
pulled away from the plaster underneath, and some more sound hollow when tapped so are likely to pull away soon. Investigation shows they won't go back in place as the wall has shrunk slightly (or else the tiles have expanded, which seems unlikely). It seems a lot of work to remove and re-lay the entire tiled wall, so I'd prefer just to re-fit the few which have pulled away, as the rest seem firm enough. But this means taking a tiny bit, less than a millimetre, off the edge of a few tiles. I am guessing that it would not be an easy thing to do with a tile cutter or a tile saw. I suspect it could be done by grinding or filing along the edge, but I'm not sure of the best tool for the job. -- Clive Page |
#2
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How to shave a bit off ceramic tiles?
On 4 Jan, 14:48, Clive Page wrote:
There are a couple of places in the house where ceramic wall tiles have pulled away from the plaster underneath, and some more sound hollow when tapped so are likely to pull away soon. Investigation shows they won't go back in place as the wall has shrunk slightly (or else the tiles have expanded, which seems unlikely). It seems a lot of work to remove and re-lay the entire tiled wall, so I'd prefer just to re-fit the few which have pulled away, as the rest seem firm enough. But this means taking a tiny bit, less than a millimetre, off the edge of a few tiles. I am guessing that it would not be an easy thing to do with a tile cutter or a tile saw. I suspect it could be done by grinding or filing along the edge, but I'm not sure of the best tool for the job. -- Clive Page What grouting gap have you got, such that less than a millimetre will make them fit ? Are they butted up or have the spacing nibs on ? You can shave a bit off with an electric tile cutter, or simply a diamond tile file (from B&Q etc). Simon. |
#3
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How to shave a bit off ceramic tiles?
In article ,
Clive Page writes: There are a couple of places in the house where ceramic wall tiles have pulled away from the plaster underneath, and some more sound hollow when tapped so are likely to pull away soon. Investigation shows they won't go back in place as the wall has shrunk slightly (or else the tiles have expanded, which seems unlikely). It seems a lot of work to remove and re-lay the entire tiled wall, so I'd prefer just to re-fit the few which have pulled away, as the rest seem firm enough. But this means taking a tiny bit, less than a millimetre, off the edge of a few tiles. I am guessing that it would not be an easy thing to do with a tile cutter or a tile saw. I suspect it could be done by grinding or filing along the edge, but I'm not sure of the best tool for the job. Often they are very soft. Rubbing on a sheet of sandpaper would so it, or a belt sander even faster. This even works with quite hard ceramic floor tiles. -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#4
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How to shave a bit off ceramic tiles?
"Clive Page" wrote in message ... There are a couple of places in the house where ceramic wall tiles have pulled away from the plaster underneath, and some more sound hollow when tapped so are likely to pull away soon. Investigation shows they won't go back in place as the wall has shrunk slightly (or else the tiles have expanded, which seems unlikely). It seems a lot of work to remove and re-lay the entire tiled wall, so I'd prefer just to re-fit the few which have pulled away, as the rest seem firm enough. But this means taking a tiny bit, less than a millimetre, off the edge of a few tiles. I am guessing that it would not be an easy thing to do with a tile cutter or a tile saw. I suspect it could be done by grinding or filing along the edge, but I'm not sure of the best tool for the job. -- Clive Page Bench grinder,if you have one? shouldn't be a problem taking off the amount you need regardless of wheel type. |
#5
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How to shave a bit off ceramic tiles?
In message
, sm_jamieson writes What grouting gap have you got, such that less than a millimetre will make them fit ? Are they butted up or have the spacing nibs on ? There seems to be no gap at all, but actually that's with the spacing nibs on. Maybe I just need to grind these off, and that will reduce the size enough. You can shave a bit off with an electric tile cutter, or simply a diamond tile file (from B&Q etc). Thanks. -- Clive Page |
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