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[email protected] April 25th 17 02:37 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
Mirror is about five feet wide x four feet tall. Crack is in the top half, about two feet long, terminating at an edge. What are the chances a professional can cut the top half of the mirror off, leaving the bottom intact?

Caution to others: I cracked the mirror when I was re-installing a light fixture. A drywall screw passes through the mirror and into a stud. I must have overtightened. A few hours later, the crack appeared.

[email protected] April 25th 17 02:43 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On Tue, 25 Apr 2017 06:37:33 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

Mirror is about five feet wide x four feet tall. Crack is in the top half, about two feet long, terminating at an edge. What are the chances a professional can cut the top half of the mirror off, leaving the bottom intact?

Trivial thing if you can take the mirror down.

dpb April 25th 17 02:50 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On 04/25/2017 8:37 AM, wrote:
Mirror is about five feet wide x four feet tall. Crack is in the top
half, about two feet long, terminating at an edge. What are the chances
a professional can cut the top half of the mirror off, leaving the
bottom intact?


'Bout 100% -- if don't want to try to cut too close to the break; very
small cutoffs are difficult to near impossible to get clean edge.

But, of course, you're wanting to save all the unbroken piece. :)


--


Oren[_2_] April 25th 17 09:31 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On Tue, 25 Apr 2017 06:37:33 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

Mirror is about five feet wide x four feet tall. Crack is in the top half, about two feet long, terminating at an edge. What are the chances a professional can cut the top half of the mirror off, leaving the bottom intact?


A glass and mirror shop can cut whatever you want. An oval mirror or
anything your heart desires.

Caution to others: I cracked the mirror when I was re-installing a light fixture. A drywall screw passes through the mirror and into a stud. I must have overtightened. A few hours later, the crack appeared.


Don't do that. The glass may crack :-)

[email protected] May 8th 17 09:44 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
Thank you for confirming this possibility, gfre, dpb and oren. I youtubed for instructions on how to take a mirror attached with construction adhesive down. Per the youtube videos, I bought a package of wood wedge shims at Home Depot for $1.75 and went at it yesterday. I got the mirror down slowly, via steady prying with the shims, per several youtube.com videos.

Today I located a glass cutting shop and drove the mirror there. They cut the mirror in half, sanding the edges, for a mere $5. I am delighted.

I am now repairing where the wallboard paper got tore off from the old adhesive. I will repaint and then re-hang the mirror within a week.

It's been a good adventure in home repair, once again with thanks for the insight here.

Oren[_2_] May 8th 17 09:59 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On Mon, 8 May 2017 13:44:50 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

Thank you for confirming this possibility, gfre, dpb and oren. I youtubed for instructions on how to take a mirror attached with construction adhesive down. Per the youtube videos, I bought a package of wood wedge shims at Home Depot for $1.75 and went at it yesterday. I got the mirror down slowly, via steady prying with the shims, per several youtube.com videos.

Today I located a glass cutting shop and drove the mirror there. They cut the mirror in half, sanding the edges, for a mere $5. I am delighted.

I am now repairing where the wallboard paper got tore off from the old adhesive. I will repaint and then re-hang the mirror within a week.

It's been a good adventure in home repair, once again with thanks for the insight here.


I'm happy for you.

Ed Pawlowski May 9th 17 02:42 AM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On 5/8/2017 4:44 PM, wrote:
Thank you for confirming this possibility, gfre, dpb and oren. I youtubed for instructions on how to take a mirror attached with construction adhesive down. Per the youtube videos, I bought a package of wood wedge shims at Home Depot for $1.75 and went at it yesterday. I got the mirror down slowly, via steady prying with the shims, per several youtube.com videos.

Today I located a glass cutting shop and drove the mirror there. They cut the mirror in half, sanding the edges, for a mere $5. I am delighted.

I am now repairing where the wallboard paper got tore off from the old adhesive. I will repaint and then re-hang the mirror within a week.

It's been a good adventure in home repair, once again with thanks for the insight here.


Thanks for reporting back with the result. Few people bother and we
appreciate those that do so.

CRNG[_2_] May 9th 17 01:16 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On Mon, 8 May 2017 21:42:08 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote
in

Thanks for reporting back with the result. Few people bother and we
appreciate those that do so.


+1
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

[email protected] May 15th 17 08:21 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
My pleasure, Oren, Ed, and CRNG.

A bit mo The original mirror had roughly 4 feet x 2-inch trim pieces, one on each vertical side of the mirror, attached with double-sided tape. The trim's long edges are beautifully beveled. Today I marked the new length of the trim that I wanted with a sharpie marker; put on safety glasses, thick gloves, and a breathing mask; and etched the trim using a 3/4-inch diameter diamond rotary cutting disc. The disc was mounted on my ordinary Black and Decker electric hand drill using the mandrel that came with the discs. I bought these little discs at Harbor Freight some years ago for a metal project. See https://www.harborfreight.com/diamon...-pc-69657.html . The discs were not helpful for the metal project. They were great for cutting these mirror trim pieces.

I put the trim on the sharp edge of a work table, tapped on the back a little with an ordinary hammer, flipped the trim, and easily snapped it to the marked length. I sanded the cuts a bit with 100-grit sandpaper. After some practice with scraps, the last cut I did is so good it is hard to tell the difference between it and the professionally done ends.

Oren[_2_] May 15th 17 10:02 PM

Cut Off Top Half of Cracked Bathroom Mirror?
 
On Mon, 15 May 2017 12:21:34 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

My pleasure, Oren, Ed, and CRNG.

A bit mo The original mirror had roughly 4 feet x 2-inch trim pieces, one on each vertical side of the mirror, attached with double-sided tape. The trim's long edges are beautifully beveled. Today I marked the new length of the trim that I wanted with a sharpie marker; put on safety glasses, thick gloves, and a breathing mask; and etched the trim using a 3/4-inch diameter diamond rotary cutting disc. The disc was mounted on my ordinary Black and Decker electric hand drill using the mandrel that came with the discs. I bought these little discs at Harbor Freight some years ago for a metal project. See
https://www.harborfreight.com/diamon...-pc-69657.html . The discs were not helpful for the metal project. They were great for cutting these mirror trim pieces.

I put the trim on the sharp edge of a work table, tapped on the back a little with an ordinary hammer, flipped the trim, and easily snapped it to the marked length. I sanded the cuts a bit with 100-grit sandpaper. After some practice with scraps, the last cut I did is so good it is hard to tell the difference between it and the professionally done ends.


Good for you. Post a final photo on a free hosting photo hosting site
and post a link back here. Like Ed states, we like follow-ups when or
if things work or not. I've seen some nice mirrors that are sand
blasted or acid etched. No limit to imagination ;-)

http://tinypic.com/


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