Search the forum,

Discuss Bath panel???? in the Australia Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

S

Spare Tool

Starting a bathroom Tues and the customer wants the existing plastic panel removing and tiling with 5oox500 porcelain...same tiles as floor, as the bath height is 510mm from the existing floor drops nicely...
They've had a leak before and are paranoid about having to get under the bath at some point in the future.
Was thinking of building the new bath panel out of 2x1" and hardibacker.
Does anyone know of a way of building the bath panel and tiling it so access could be gained easily without having to smash the tiles, hardi etc in bits?
Thanks in advance. Andy
 

widler

TF
Esteemed
Arms
2,337
1,328
England
I just wedge and silicone.
Personally, if its done right it shouldnt need access.
I read a thread on swedish mikes forum, that man is loon balls, he says he would recommend EVERY water joint to have a access panel , EVERYWHERE , imagine all over your house, access panels in ceilings, walls and floors , unless i read it wrong this is what i thought he was saying, i think rob(CR) was having a bit of a 'debate' on it
 

John Benton

TF
Arms
2,211
1,138
Leeds
As a human, SwedishMike is a complete goon that would benefit from a good hiding. However, I live in Norway specialising in wetrooms, and if regulations are same in Sweden as they are here, he's right. Every water joint inside a wall must have an inspection hatch, end of story.

And if you see the plumbing in some of the new build now every joint should just be left visible!!!!!
 

widler

TF
Esteemed
Arms
2,337
1,328
England
As a human, SwedishMike is a complete goon that would benefit from a good hiding. However, I live in Norway specialising in wetrooms, and if regulations are same in Sweden as they are here, he's right. Every water joint inside a wall must have an inspection hatch, end of story.

Jesus,even I trust my plumbers a bit more than that [emoji33]
I can understand a bath panel having access, but every water joint, Christ in a big wetroom it would look like a scarecrows arsehole [emoji33]
 
F

Fliselege

Jesus,even I trust my plumbers a bit more than that [emoji33]
I can understand a bath panel having access, but every water joint, Christ in a big wetroom it would look like a scarecrows arsehole [emoji33]

Yes it would. But full new bathrooms, kitchens, utility rooms etc have the pipe in pipe plastic system. No joints necessary, so no inspection hatches. Each room has an accessible box with a hot bar and cold bar, all pipes run from there to where they need to go. Even built in toilets don't need a hatch as you can take flush button off and see where it's fixed. Just old properties with welded copper joints or compression joints in walls need the hatches. Think the most I put in one bathroom was about 4 or 5. Nasty. I work with plumbers that know their job, but if regs dictate a hatch, suck it up cos that's the way it is. Welcome to Norway. ;-)
 

widler

TF
Esteemed
Arms
2,337
1,328
England
Yes it would. But full new bathrooms, kitchens, utility rooms etc have the pipe in pipe plastic system. No joints necessary, so no inspection hatches. Each room has an accessible box with a hot bar and cold bar, all pipes run from there to where they need to go. Even built in toilets don't need a hatch as you can take flush button off and see where it's fixed. Just old properties with welded copper joints or compression joints in walls need the hatches. Think the most I put in one bathroom was about 4 or 5. Nasty. I work with plumbers that know their job, but if regs dictate a hatch, suck it up cos that's the way it is. Welcome to Norway. ;-)

[emoji106] bloody Norwegians [emoji41]:)
 

Reply to Bath panel???? in the Australia Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com

Make sure to mark a post as a solution for better transparency.
Posting a tiling question to the forum? Post in Tilers' Talk if you are unsure which forum to post in. We'll move it if there's a more suitable forum.

Advertisement

Birthdays

Top