jay lillien
Jun 24, 2007, 03:32 AM
I recently renovated my bathroom, and removed the bathtub and had a seat and
Shower installed. The shower enclosure was to be a frameless 3/8" tempered glass 5ft straight run which includes a 24" door. The door was to be hinged against the wall. So the enclosure runs across the seat, down the vertical front of seat, and across the tile retaining wall.
The original problem was that the door was ordered the wrong height, so the framed polished chrome stationary section was installed, and I waited a week to get the correct door. I never checked to see if the stationary side was level. I just assumed it was.
Well, the tile wall that the door frame sits on is perfectly level, but
The vertical stationary glass is not level. Although, It is within the two lines in
The center of the level, but over to the right a bit.
Today, when they came back to install the door, they lined it up evenly
Across the top of the enclosure, but at the bottom it starts 1/2" off the
tile and at the hinged side it's 1" off the tile. The rubber sweep touches
Bottom on one side, but there is a gap on the other side, even when I pull the sweep down as far as it goes, there's a 1/4" gap.
I believe they ordered the wrong door height, because of the gap.
The problem is that the stationary side is also not level, so even if they
order a slightly taller door, and level it against the wall, the gap where
the door meets the stationary side will be uneven.
The shower door is heavy, and doesn't open easily.
Is this because it is not perfectly level?
My installer wants to stick a rubber strip on the tile to close the gap.
He even suggested that that last horizontal base tile be removed, and reinstalled with an
upward pitch to close the gap.
Will a shower door that is hinged, and not level, eventually break,
or pull away from the wall?
Should I insist that he do the complete job over again?
I paid him in full, but he's owns a reputable company.
He's a friend, and he gave me a good deal, but that's no excuse.
Am I being too picky?
I guess I really want to know that if the yellow liquid on the level falls between the two
lines, does that fall within an acceptable range of a "leveled door"?
HELP! I CAN'T SLEEP. Please respond quickly, I'm going to call him Sunday.
(Oh, that's today already!) If you need more information I'll get right back to you.
Thank you for your advise and help in this matter.
Sincerely,
Jay Lillien
Shower installed. The shower enclosure was to be a frameless 3/8" tempered glass 5ft straight run which includes a 24" door. The door was to be hinged against the wall. So the enclosure runs across the seat, down the vertical front of seat, and across the tile retaining wall.
The original problem was that the door was ordered the wrong height, so the framed polished chrome stationary section was installed, and I waited a week to get the correct door. I never checked to see if the stationary side was level. I just assumed it was.
Well, the tile wall that the door frame sits on is perfectly level, but
The vertical stationary glass is not level. Although, It is within the two lines in
The center of the level, but over to the right a bit.
Today, when they came back to install the door, they lined it up evenly
Across the top of the enclosure, but at the bottom it starts 1/2" off the
tile and at the hinged side it's 1" off the tile. The rubber sweep touches
Bottom on one side, but there is a gap on the other side, even when I pull the sweep down as far as it goes, there's a 1/4" gap.
I believe they ordered the wrong door height, because of the gap.
The problem is that the stationary side is also not level, so even if they
order a slightly taller door, and level it against the wall, the gap where
the door meets the stationary side will be uneven.
The shower door is heavy, and doesn't open easily.
Is this because it is not perfectly level?
My installer wants to stick a rubber strip on the tile to close the gap.
He even suggested that that last horizontal base tile be removed, and reinstalled with an
upward pitch to close the gap.
Will a shower door that is hinged, and not level, eventually break,
or pull away from the wall?
Should I insist that he do the complete job over again?
I paid him in full, but he's owns a reputable company.
He's a friend, and he gave me a good deal, but that's no excuse.
Am I being too picky?
I guess I really want to know that if the yellow liquid on the level falls between the two
lines, does that fall within an acceptable range of a "leveled door"?
HELP! I CAN'T SLEEP. Please respond quickly, I'm going to call him Sunday.
(Oh, that's today already!) If you need more information I'll get right back to you.
Thank you for your advise and help in this matter.
Sincerely,
Jay Lillien