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John January 6th 20 11:16 AM

Cabinet and damp
 
Against better jusdgement I sucumbed to instructions to have a wall mounted
cabinet under the wash basin in the bathroom.

Already there are signs of the laminate lifting at the bottom edge due to
the carcase swelling.

Any ideas to prevent this getting worse?


Tricky Dicky[_4_] January 6th 20 12:20 PM

Cabinet and damp
 
If the cabinet is typical chipboard panels which either have melamine or a foil finish, once they have swollen there is not much you can do to fix it. If you are looking to prevent further damage then you need to find the cause of damp getting to the material. In a bathroom there are likely two causes condensation or direct water contact. For the first, if you have someone who likes steaming hot baths but keeps all the windows shut then the lack of ventilation will likely be the cause of condensation, opening a window, a better fan are the solutions there. If the cause is direct water contact on edges that have edging strip and will be visible then a plastic angle liberally glued on should fix the seal without looking too bad. You say the bottom edges are where the swelling is taking place if these are simply cut edges without edging strip then a liberal smear of silicone along the edge will make an effective seal, do any other similar edges.

Richard

John January 6th 20 12:53 PM

Cabinet and damp
 
Tricky Dicky wrote in
:

If the cabinet is typical chipboard panels which either have melamine
or a foil finish, once they have swollen there is not much you can do
to fix it. If you are looking to prevent further damage then you need
to find the cause of damp getting to the material. In a bathroom there
are likely two causes condensation or direct water contact. For the
first, if you have someone who likes steaming hot baths but keeps all
the windows shut then the lack of ventilation will likely be the cause
of condensation, opening a window, a better fan are the solutions
there. If the cause is direct water contact on edges that have edging
strip and will be visible then a plastic angle liberally glued on
should fix the seal without looking too bad. You say the bottom edges
are where the swelling is taking place if these are simply cut edges
without edging strip then a liberal smear of silicone along the edge
will make an effective seal, do any other similar edges.

Richard


Most of it will be the odd dribble down the side from the washbasin.

I like the idea of a plastic angle. I will look out for something.

Brian Gaff \(Sofa 2\) January 6th 20 04:15 PM

Cabinet and damp
 
Well even my old one with epoxy impregnated chipboard and parts made from
Marine plywood is beginning to go and have had to hide the ragged edges with
plastic angles.

I like under the basin units but eventually they all succumb to the ingress
of the wet stuff in some form. What really does annoy me is that some years
down the road and you want to replace like with like, you cannot as the
sizes and designs alter it becomes a nightmare due to the matching of tiles
and colours and size of basin and plumbing and and..
grr.
Brian

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"John" Not.responding.@dotcom wrote in message
2.222...
Against better jusdgement I sucumbed to instructions to have a wall
mounted
cabinet under the wash basin in the bathroom.

Already there are signs of the laminate lifting at the bottom edge due to
the carcase swelling.

Any ideas to prevent this getting worse?




[email protected] January 6th 20 11:37 PM

Cabinet and damp
 
On Monday, 6 January 2020 11:16:33 UTC, John wrote:
Against better jusdgement I sucumbed to instructions to have a wall mounted
cabinet under the wash basin in the bathroom.

Already there are signs of the laminate lifting at the bottom edge due to
the carcase swelling.

Any ideas to prevent this getting worse?


that's easy, replace it with something fit for purpose. If you want to extend its life you can try & waterproof it but failure is inevitable.


NT


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