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Jo[_5_] February 12th 11 07:34 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
Having a very small shower room, we are looking to replace our current
shower with a 900cm quadrant shower enclosure. We do not really want the
door to open out into the room so we have looked at both inward-opening and
single sliding doors. We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.
We'd appreciate any views on this from anyone who has either models.

Jo



MuddyMike February 12th 11 07:50 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 

"Jo" wrote in message
o.uk...
Having a very small shower room, we are looking to replace our current
shower with a 900cm quadrant shower enclosure. We do not really want the
door to open out into the room so we have looked at both inward-opening
and single sliding doors. We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.
We'd appreciate any views on this from anyone who has either models.

Jo


I can recommend the type that hinge in the middle and open inwards.

Mike



Invisible Man[_2_] February 12th 11 07:54 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
On 12/02/2011 19:34, Jo wrote:
Having a very small shower room, we are looking to replace our current
shower with a 900cm quadrant shower enclosure. We do not really want the
door to open out into the room so we have looked at both inward-opening and
single sliding doors. We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.
We'd appreciate any views on this from anyone who has either models.

Jo


My mother has a quadrant with a folding door. I don't know whether it is
poor quality or poorly installed but the nylon sliders are so poor that
I regularly put silicone spray on it or she would not be able to close it.
We have a Merlyn Black Box offset quadrant with sliding curved doors.
They are on wheels and slide beautifully. Very easy to install.

Neither leak.

Make sure that the tray is rigidly supported. Our floor gives a bit so I
have finally used TeleSeal10 to seal between the tray and enclosure.

Skipweasel[_4_] February 12th 11 07:56 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
In article ,
says...
We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.



Watertight - no problem. There's a fin vertically down the far end of
each door which presses firmly against a return on the frame upright.
The join between the doors is a magnetic strip - like a fridge.

Ours has never leaked.

As for durability - the only problem we had was the rubber buffers that
stop the doors in the right place pushed through the screws and split.
Easy to fix - just carved a couple from a bit of softish plastic.

--
Skipweasel - never knowingly understood.

fred February 12th 11 10:19 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
In article , Skipweasel
writes
In article ,
says...
We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.


Watertight - no problem. There's a fin vertically down the far end of
each door which presses firmly against a return on the frame upright.
The join between the doors is a magnetic strip - like a fridge.

Ours has never leaked.

As for durability - the only problem we had was the rubber buffers that
stop the doors in the right place pushed through the screws and split.
Easy to fix - just carved a couple from a bit of softish plastic.

I've also seen a sliding door setup (1 on each glazed side, half width)
where one is closed first, then the other and a convex surface on one
edge meets a concave one on the other and the seal is made, no rubber to
degrade and no leaks.

Setup is about six years old and runs freely.

The shower head was deliberately positioned so that the flow did not
directly play on the joint.
--
fred
FIVE TV's superbright logo - not the DOG's, it's ********

SS[_2_] February 12th 11 11:40 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 

"fred" wrote in message ...
In article , Skipweasel
writes
In article ,
says...
We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.


Watertight - no problem. There's a fin vertically down the far end of
each door which presses firmly against a return on the frame upright.
The join between the doors is a magnetic strip - like a fridge.

Ours has never leaked.

As for durability - the only problem we had was the rubber buffers that
stop the doors in the right place pushed through the screws and split.
Easy to fix - just carved a couple from a bit of softish plastic.

I've also seen a sliding door setup (1 on each glazed side, half width)
where one is closed first, then the other and a convex surface on one edge
meets a concave one on the other and the seal is made, no rubber to
degrade and no leaks.

Setup is about six years old and runs freely.

The shower head was deliberately positioned so that the flow did not
directly play on the joint.
--
fred
FIVE TV's superbright logo - not the DOG's, it's ********

I hope I am not hijacking this now but we have a sliding door on shower.
One half fixed the half slides. When closed the `vertical fin` seals between
the 2 halves.
Been installed for around 5 years and decided to take the fin off to clean
behind it.
I cannot get it back in situ as it has gone quite rigid.
I soaked in very hot water but didnt help.
The fin sort of fits into a groove.
Any ideas.
P.S. It still doesnt leak with the fin/ seal removed.



Invisible Man[_2_] February 12th 11 11:50 PM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
On 12/02/2011 22:19, fred wrote:
In article , Skipweasel
writes
In article ,
says...
We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.


Watertight - no problem. There's a fin vertically down the far end of
each door which presses firmly against a return on the frame upright.
The join between the doors is a magnetic strip - like a fridge.

Ours has never leaked.

As for durability - the only problem we had was the rubber buffers that
stop the doors in the right place pushed through the screws and split.
Easy to fix - just carved a couple from a bit of softish plastic.

I've also seen a sliding door setup (1 on each glazed side, half width)
where one is closed first, then the other and a convex surface on one
edge meets a concave one on the other and the seal is made, no rubber to
degrade and no leaks.

Setup is about six years old and runs freely.

The shower head was deliberately positioned so that the flow did not
directly play on the joint.


Ours has 2 doors which meet in the centre when closed. Each door has a U
section seal where the U grips the glass. Seal is magnetic and because
it is some sort of plastic it can be adjusted on the glass so it meets
perfectly from top to bottom.

Triffid February 13th 11 09:26 AM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
Jo wrote:
Having a very small shower room, we are looking to replace our current
shower with a 900cm quadrant shower enclosure. We do not really want
the door to open out into the room so we have looked at both
inward-opening and single sliding doors. We'd prefer the latter but
are unsure as to how durable these doors are and also how watertight.
We'd appreciate any views on this from anyone who has either models.


Personally I would recommend sliding door(s). I have an off-set quadrant
shower unit with two sliding doors and they are still very easy to open and
shut after several years of use. Our two sliding doors have a magnetic seal
where they meet - and are 100% waterproof.

I find the folding doors, even in showrooms, are often stiff and difficult
to open and shut.

--
Triff


Lobster February 13th 11 10:14 AM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
On 13/02/2011 09:26, Triffid wrote:
Jo wrote:
Having a very small shower room, we are looking to replace our current
shower with a 900cm quadrant shower enclosure. We do not really want
the door to open out into the room so we have looked at both
inward-opening and single sliding doors. We'd prefer the latter but
are unsure as to how durable these doors are and also how watertight.
We'd appreciate any views on this from anyone who has either models.


Personally I would recommend sliding door(s). I have an off-set quadrant
shower unit with two sliding doors and they are still very easy to open
and shut after several years of use. Our two sliding doors have a
magnetic seal where they meet - and are 100% waterproof.

I find the folding doors, even in showrooms, are often stiff and
difficult to open and shut.


We have two showers at home; one with sliding doors (10 yrs old) and one
with opening-inwards (5 yrs old). Neither has ever shown any signs of
leaking. I prefer the sliders (wouldn't fit in the 2nd shower for
reasons not relevant here) - the opening-in type are just a bit more
awkward to enter the shower, plus it has more in the way of moving parts
so if one of the doors ever goes wrong, I reckon it will be that one.

Ultimately of course it's all going to depend on which particular model
of door you buy.

David


Steve Firth February 13th 11 11:11 AM

Quadrant Shower Enclosures
 
"Jo" wrote:
Having a very small shower room, we are looking to replace our current
shower with a 900cm quadrant shower enclosure. We do not really want the
door to open out into the room so we have looked at both inward-opening and
single sliding doors. We'd prefer the latter but are unsure as to how
durable these doors are and also how watertight.
We'd appreciate any views on this from anyone who has either models.


We have exactly that. A 900mm
quadrant shower with two sliding doors. Made by Duschelux (known as
Showerlux in the UK) so far it has had 15 years use. Never any problems
with the doors and it still looks like new. Doors have never leaked, they
seal magnetically.

The sliding doors are much better than the inward opening type and safer
IMO.


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