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I noticed some water seeping out of the tiled shower stall into the bathroom. I cant really afford to rip it up and replace the pan and tile. Is there some way to seal or poss re-grout. The tile are about 1 inch square. I used a brush on sealer from Home Depot but it began seeping again after about 4 months.

I thought maybe a good cleaning and then putting on a top coat of grout and then a sealer. Will this work??

2006-12-26 02:25:28 · 3 answers · asked by altamonte1999 2 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

3 answers

If water is leaking into your bathroom, it may also be leaking into the walls, which will cause the wood framing to rot. That's not good.

You might try regrouting the floor and the first several inches of the wall tile with a siliconized acrylic tile caulk, like that shown in the link below. The advantage of this product is that it is flexible, and will form a better seal than concrete grout. This may help keep the water from getting to the pan, and minimize your leaking. Be sure to remove the old grout first, as well as you can.

I would view this as a temporary fix until you are able rip up the tile and repair or replace your pan. Possibly the pan can be repaired using a roofing material like Henry Wet Patch, but that's another story.

2006-12-26 03:11:28 · answer #1 · answered by Tech Dude 5 · 2 0

Shower stall should have a built up curb of at least 4 inches that pitches back into the shower floor. If yours does not have a curb as some ADA types are designed it should have the same waterproof pan material as the shower pan on the floor outside the shower.
First of all double check all wall penetrations, inside corners and floor to wall joints. All sould be properly sealed with caulking rather than grout as this allows for expansion and contraction that would crack a grout joint.
Grout should be installed only after removing the existing grout to a depth to allow the new grout to have something to hold on to.
If the shower is located above an unfinished space check from below to make sure the pan or wall waterproofing materials are not damaged.
Cleaning and sealing are good for maintainance measures but they will not overcome design flaws or material failures.
Good Luck

2006-12-26 05:02:31 · answer #2 · answered by paul r 2 · 0 0

I believe you approximately looking after fiberglass. It gets intense priced to maintain repairing it so consistent with risk it may well be extra constructive to have a sparkling bathe stall put in. that may not decrease priced the two. we've not accomplished ours yet the two yet have seen some pricing on some. i decide on one with a door that opens and not anymore sliding glass doors because of the fact they constantly leak by or come off the music. we've browsed by a pair places and that's what you will would desire to do. i desperate to have a expert bathe installer are available and do the activity because of the fact we additionally produce different themes because of the water leaking onto the flooring and rotting the floor. it particularly is my rationalization for not extra maintenance on our very own. terrific of success to you and look at some places on line for cost strategies.

2016-12-15 08:20:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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