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Bal do grey Paula,I have never had a problem at all on upstairs wet floors
One of my neighbours got a wet room done same as you impey
He had water coming in from his ceiling
I had a look and the water was going in through the grout
This had caused the tiles to fail
I lifted the tiles,let it all dry out,fixed tiles 100% coverage,can't stress enough the importance of this!
Then grouted with bal grey epoxy
It's still perfect
Sod's law I will get a phone call from him tomorrow lol
The guys who told you epoxy wouldn't work are talking rubbish
And the tiler will most certainly tell you it won't work because he doesn't want to do it
If you can establish there is no underlying problem and you are still unhappy with the finish I would suggest re grouting with epoxy
Marc
I don't know how much use the shower has had or how many people have used it in a day but moisture will find it's way through the standard grout that's why it's tanked below the tiles.
Pulled out a few wet rooms and there's allways been moisture that has made it's way under the tiles, if theres cracking in the grout then it will accelerate the process.
Thanks for this, John!This was a badly tiled tray that was letting water through the joints, the tiles were a mixture of dot and dab and using a notched trowel. There were big voids around the drain that water was sitting in and the tiles eventually came loose. I suspect that the drain had been set too high and they had to build up adhesive to the correct height.
Thanks for that, John. I've been on my hands and knees and now in daylight I can see that there are extremely fine cracks along joints in the shower, mostly where the grout meets the tiles. They are very difficult to see, but definitely there, plus gaps around the grout round the drain. I suspect this is what is happening in my tray. One question, though: if we take up the tiles, will this damage the Impey tanking underneath?
All this has been very helpful, and certainly made me look a lot more closely at what is going on with the grout, so thanks everyone who has replied!
Paula
Only thing I could do was remove the tiles, fill the voids, and then use a notched trowel, back butter the tiles, fix and grout, and no more problems.
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Thanks for this, John!
Just a quick question, if we take up our tiles, as you did, then will this damage the membrane underneath?
Paula
Recognise those mosaics JB,
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3 trays I done past couple of weeks.
Could it be from getting out of the shower wet to dry yourself? Or condensation perhaps.
I guess it doesn't matter too much what's causing it, the solution is going to be the same again I think. Regrout with epoxy?
I have not read all the replies so sorry if im repeating whats been said. I have had two wet rooms with the same issue and both times it was a leak from the shower .The only way for the water to go as the walls and floor had been fully tanked was through the grout, so it was seeping through the grout from underneath the tile, not water getting in from on top.
Stab in the dark here, trouble is the two week drying period u've just had might scupper this theory a little 😀
I recently witnessed a wet room floor that indeed kinda looked like it was leaking from beneath the screen.
In actual fact what it was, was capillary action on the screen itself.
It was sucking water uphill from the drain and trickling around the contours of the screen, making the dry bath area wet.
Just a theory mind 😀
It could be completely bonkers too haha
Are you 100% sure water isn't getting under the screen ?