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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Cutting a tile in situ?
Hi,
dumb bunny moment #23 - stuck one more wall tile on than required and now it is where a corner of the WHB should go. Offered the WHB up, and it covers part of the tile, in a curve. So: do I remove the complete tile, fix the WHB , cut a curve out of a new tile, and fix it or do I cut a curve in the tile in situ, and remove part of the tile, then fit the WHB? If so, how? Cheers Dave R [on another computer] |
#2
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Cutting a tile in situ?
"Shelagh Roberts" wrote
Offered the WHB up, and it covers part of the tile, in a curve. do I remove the complete tile, fix the WHB , cut a curve out of a new tile, and fix it or do I cut a curve in the tile in situ, and remove part of the tile, then fit the WHB? If it's a cloakroom WHB, I'd completely tile the wall then place WHB over the tiles. For a main bathroom basin, I'd do a similar job but miss out tiles should they be completely hidden under a void. I think it gives a better appearance and a useful recess for the sealant. -- Toby. NTL. Bringing you yesterday's news today, and a bit of last week's. Maybe. |
#3
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Cutting a tile in situ?
"Toby" wrote in message ... "Shelagh Roberts" wrote Offered the WHB up, and it covers part of the tile, in a curve. do I remove the complete tile, fix the WHB , cut a curve out of a new tile, and fix it or do I cut a curve in the tile in situ, and remove part of the tile, then fit the WHB? If it's a cloakroom WHB, I'd completely tile the wall then place WHB over the tiles. For a main bathroom basin, I'd do a similar job but miss out tiles should they be completely hidden under a void. I think it gives a better appearance and a useful recess for the sealant. -- Toby. NTL. Bringing you yesterday's news today, and a bit of last week's. Maybe. Toby, confused now. If I tile behind the WHB, where is the recess for the sealant? I was intending to fit WHB to wall and tile around it, as you would for a bath. This sinks the back of the WHB below the surface of the tiles and should provide a better seal against water. Problem now is what to do with one extra tile :-) Cheers Dave R |
#4
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Cutting a tile in situ?
Toby,
confused now. I see your original problem but unsure what would be best, cutting in situ sounds difficult. If I tile behind the WHB, where is the recess for the sealant? I mean between the natural radius along the back of the basin and the tile surface. | | __ _ |/ \_______/ \ ||____________/ || | Toby. |
#5
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Cutting a tile in situ?
"Shelagh Roberts" wrote in message ... Hi, dumb bunny moment #23 - stuck one more wall tile on than required and now it is where a corner of the WHB should go. Offered the WHB up, and it covers part of the tile, in a curve. So: do I remove the complete tile, fix the WHB , cut a curve out of a new tile, and fix it or do I cut a curve in the tile in situ, and remove part of the tile, then fit the WHB? If so, how? Cheers Dave R [on another computer] Dave, As suggested elsewhere, tile the wall completely (or enough to go behind the basin) and then fit the wash hand basin to the tiled surface. You should then have enough room to seal the joint between the basin and tiled wall either using tile cement or, (my preference) a silicone anti-fungicidal mastic which can then be 'tooled off' to whatever shape that you want. This is the easiest way of doing it with the minimum of tile cutting. Brian |
#6
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Cutting a tile in situ?
"Brian" wrote in message ... "Shelagh Roberts" wrote in message ... Hi, dumb bunny moment #23 - stuck one more wall tile on than required and now it is where a corner of the WHB should go. Offered the WHB up, and it covers part of the tile, in a curve. So: do I remove the complete tile, fix the WHB , cut a curve out of a new tile, and fix it or do I cut a curve in the tile in situ, and remove part of the tile, then fit the WHB? If so, how? Cheers Dave R [on another computer] Dave, As suggested elsewhere, tile the wall completely (or enough to go behind the basin) and then fit the wash hand basin to the tiled surface. You should then have enough room to seal the joint between the basin and tiled wall either using tile cement or, (my preference) a silicone anti-fungicidal mastic which can then be 'tooled off' to whatever shape that you want. This is the easiest way of doing it with the minimum of tile cutting. Brian You're just trying to talk me out of buying a new tool :-) O.K - thanks to all - will look at doing it that way! |
#7
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Cutting a tile in situ?
"Shelagh Roberts" wrote in message ... snipped You're just trying to talk me out of buying a new tool :-) O.K - thanks to all - will look at doing it that way! A bath is totally different Shelagh. A bath has water pouring along it a lot more than a WHB, because of showers and things. It also moves a lot more than a WHB so needs a better seal against the wall. A WHB is just stuck there, it doesn't move, it doesn't need anything fancy to stop it moving or seal from minor water spillage. That's why everyone is telling you to tile it before offering up the basin, then just a smear of sealant along the back edge will stop the tiny dribbles. |
#8
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Cutting a tile in situ?
David W.E. Roberts wrote:
"BigWallop" wrote in message ... "Shelagh Roberts" wrote in message et... snipped You're just trying to talk me out of buying a new tool :-) O.K - thanks to all - will look at doing it that way! A bath is totally different Shelagh. A bath has water pouring along it a lot more than a WHB, because of showers and things. It also moves a lot more than a WHB so needs a better seal against the wall. A WHB is just stuck there, it doesn't move, it doesn't need anything fancy to stop it moving or seal from minor water spillage. That's why everyone is telling you to tile it before offering up the basin, then just a smear of sealant along the back edge will stop the tiny dribbles. O.K. - try to remember I am a temporary cross dresser. So far I have fitted the other WHBs against the wall and tiled round, although they have been square(ish) ones instead of curved. Setting them in tends to hide a multitude of sins and gives that extra bit of protection against water ingress. It is possible to wash your hair in the WHB using the shower from the bath mixer (if you so desire) so splash protection is a good idea. I always tile em in. The backs are never square. Fasten em down at teh back with car body filler so they are ROCK solid, then cut teh tile top fiot the edge less a nice 3mm or so grout line, and grout em in =- or if a purist, use white silcopne (or if you were daft enough to mount only using the bits that came with em.). I have one remaining problem - I cut the waste pipe to fit with the WHB inset - I don't think the depth of tile and grout will move it out far enough to cause a problem, but we shall see! Do it my way. Get a tile cutting diaond wheel and learb to sculpt tiles with it., A fine file or emnery paper smotths teh cut edges nicely. Cheers Dave R [a.k.a.Shelagh R.] |
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