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#1
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Tub refinishing
I have a customer who wants his tub "touched up" after I removed a sliding
shower door. The top edge of the tub where the shower door was shows some cracking, and pieces 1/16" inch chipped off. Is there a decent way to repair these? At Home Depot I saw some spray on epoxy repair, some brush on repair but don't know which might be best. As just a guess, I'd sand down the area, remove any chips, fill with some sort of epoxy filler, sand again, prime and then spray on the epoxy. It might be close enough in color that I'd only have to do the repaired area and not have to do the rest of the tub. Does this sound doable? If so, what to use as the expoxy filler? Any other suggestions? Thanks, charles |
#2
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Tub refinishing
On Jun 26, 12:54*pm, (Charles Bishop) wrote:
I have a customer who wants his tub "touched up" after I removed a sliding shower door. The top edge of the tub where the shower door was shows some cracking, and pieces 1/16" inch chipped off. Is there a decent way to repair these? At Home Depot I saw some spray on epoxy repair, some brush on repair but don't know which might be best. As just a guess, I'd sand down the area, remove any chips, fill with some sort of epoxy filler, sand again, prime and then spray on the epoxy. It might be close enough in color that I'd only have to do the repaired area and not have to do the rest of the tub. Does this sound doable? If so, what to use as the expoxy filler? Any other suggestions? Thanks, charles I have used the brush on with good results. Frankly I think I would have better luck with the bush unless I had a lot of experience with the spray stuff. |
#3
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Tub refinishing
Charles Bishop wrote: I have a customer who wants his tub "touched up" after I removed a sliding shower door. The top edge of the tub where the shower door was shows some cracking, and pieces 1/16" inch chipped off. Is there a decent way to repair these? At Home Depot I saw some spray on epoxy repair, some brush on repair but don't know which might be best. As just a guess, I'd sand down the area, remove any chips, fill with some sort of epoxy filler, sand again, prime and then spray on the epoxy. It might be close enough in color that I'd only have to do the repaired area and not have to do the rest of the tub. Does this sound doable? If so, what to use as the expoxy filler? Any other suggestions? Thanks, charles I had my whole tub refinished in a house I'm selling. When I was looking for a company, I noticed that a number of them advertised that they did repair work. Since they have the expertise and the equipment, maybe just suggest the person hire one of those companies. Most of the sites have before & after pix of crack repairs. |
#4
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Tub refinishing
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