Silly Car wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 9:28 pm
When I did ours, I got everything from National Plastics, the advice I was given was to get the 1m wide panels as there are fewer joins and they look neater IMO.
They are just stuck to the walls and into the trims.
I sort of want to do this in my shower room, cos it's tiny and would be more simple I think
Just got to track down a supplier out here. And find a bright and cheerful colour - cos it's way too tiny for that sort of dark wall colour!! LOL
Kind of a shame cos I do love tiling
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
Silly Car wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 9:28 pm
When I did ours, I got everything from National Plastics, the advice I was given was to get the 1m wide panels as there are fewer joins and they look neater IMO.
They are just stuck to the walls and into the trims.
How flexible are the panels? I need to do my wet room soon and I'll have to bend them to get round the corner into the bathroom.
Amazon sell it under the Home Store brand, it sticks like shit to a blanket and helps stop water tracking behind the panels, I siliconed the bottom as well using these to get a neat finish
Already installed over the weekend mate and yes i have done a small sealant bead top and bottom as well to try and keep out moisture. I got the 1M wide ones that interlock
Taipan wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 9:15 pm
I like the idea of panelling, instead of tiles. Where did you get it from?
Company in Yorkshire called rather unimaginatively "panelcompany.co.uk" Order placed and delivered by the company who drove down in their own van to drop off 3 panels, all trims and grab adhesive i ordered rather than sending by DPD. I found same panels elsewhere costing more plus delivery. This lot did free delivery
Mussels wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 9:41 pm
How flexible are the panels? I need to do my wet room soon and I'll have to bend them to get round the corner into the bathroom.
The ones i got barely flex at all and getting them into the corners as they interlock was a pain in the arse but doable ...just
They are large 2M 40 by 1M wide so you need room to work with them.
I'll bang some pics over on the DIY/Shed forum once i have some time and its all finished in next couple of days as tomorrow is cutting up a 2M oak worktop into many pieces and hopefully plumbing in sink and taps
Silly Car wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 9:28 pm
When I did ours, I got everything from National Plastics, the advice I was given was to get the 1m wide panels as there are fewer joins and they look neater IMO.
They are just stuck to the walls and into the trims.
How flexible are the panels? I need to do my wet room soon and I'll have to bend them to get round the corner into the bathroom.
The ones I used are 1m wide, 2.4m tall and had some flex (around 12mm thick) but I wouldn’t call them flexible...
They do come in different widths and if you went with something white based, you could always use liquid plastic (Stelmax 1961 Gap Filler) to weld them together in situ to prevent leaks. I’ve got one join (well away from the shower) and 2 internal corners (floor to top bead) so less worried about leaks).
Having seen yin’s post now, the ones I used also interlocked on the join but had to be bonded into the corner beads. We ended up with a spare sheet (decided against having the join dead centre) so had enough left to make a shelving / cubby hole unit for the remote valves and the 3,000 bottles of fuck knows what the Mrs has in the shower!
The ones I used are 1m wide, 2.4m tall and had some flex (around 12mm thick) but I wouldn’t call them flexible...
They do come in different widths and if you went with something white based, you could always use liquid plastic (Stelmax 1961 Gap Filler) to weld them together in situ to prevent leaks. I’ve got one join (well away from the shower) and 2 internal corners (floor to top bead) so less worried about leaks).
Having seen yin’s post now, the ones I used also interlocked on the join but had to be bonded into the corner beads. We ended up with a spare sheet (decided against having the join dead centre) so had enough left to make a shelving / cubby hole unit for the remote valves and the 3,000 bottles of fuck knows what the Mrs has in the shower!
I used the same size panels and the shower area is one panel per wall sealed top and bottom with their specified corner trim to mount it so no joins within the main water area which was 900 X 760 so well within the 1000 of each panel. The only joins i have were because i extended it along the window wall so a few cuts and joins there around the window reveals but kept them to a minimum where i could. I bought 2 panels to cover the main wet area completely and a third to be cut up for all the other bits i wanted to keep the same colour along that wall and had some left over
This morning I got the news that my step Dad had to put his little dog to sleep. When my Mum was alive she loved the little dog to bits and after she died, he has loved and looked after the dog like she would have. He said looking after the dog is the last thing he could do for her and now there is nothing left. He is very upset, which isn't his character at all. Sad.
The good side of the day was I asked on FB where to buy stainless ballustrade/handrail with the wires going through it. I like the look of them and want to make up two of these for going up the 2 steps to my front door. I'm such a nice person that they are now being made up and installed for free!
Taipan wrote: ↑Wed Mar 03, 2021 2:40 pm
This morning I got the news that my step Dad had to put his little dog to sleep. When my Mum was alive she loved the little dog to bits and after she died, he has loved and looked after the dog like she would have. He said looking after the dog is the last thing he could do for her and now there is nothing left. He is very upset, which isn't his character at all. Sad.
Pet deaths can reopen old wounds.
When I was 12 and a few months after my mother died my dog took sick and died. I vividly remember my Da with the tears running down his face saying to the dog,"you're not going to leave us too,are you"?
It's just another part of what was a good time that's gone for your stepdad.
Yesterday I got the paperwork to keep my health insurance for another year. The deadline is next Wednesday. I dropped by the office this morning & discovered that the person who takes care of this has been fired & is unlikely to be replaced until sometime in April at the earliest.
Anyone else see a slight problem with this?
I did actually see the guy at his office in January & was told "no need to do anything until March".. He was fired on Feb 26th.
Bigyin wrote:
I'll bang some pics over on the DIY/Shed forum once i have some time and its all finished in next couple of days as tomorrow is cutting up a 2M oak worktop into many pieces and hopefully plumbing in sink and taps
Had a phone call from the insurance company that covers my Fazer 600 for instructing asking if i had done any training in the last few weeks so i replied as politely as i could that due to the national lock down funnily enough, no i hadnt.
I was then told that the underwriter had withdrawn business cover a few weeks ago so if i had been working i would have been uninsured...nice. They have moved me to a new underwriter so i have valid business cover but i have lost 4 months NCD as its a new policy starting again from now instead of last Oct. But fortunately as the cock up wasnt down to me the additional premium for the more expensive provider has been swallowed by the insurance company.
Logged onto our HR system at work and realised that yesterday was the 24-year anniversary of me joining my current employer.
24 years!! Man and boy. 'Ardest game in the book. Seen more changes than you've 'ad 'ot dinners. They don't realise how easy they 'ave it these days. Ad infinitum.....
One more year and I get given a half-decent watch and a nice dinner with the big boss (global pandemics permitting). I'll be 52 by then and a good time to have a serious think about my options going forward.
Until then, join me in a bitter-sweet round of teas and coffees as we contemplate what I could have achieved in 24 years other than sitting at a desk.
gremlin wrote: ↑Thu Mar 04, 2021 6:31 am
Logged onto our HR system at work and realised that yesterday was the 24-year anniversary of me joining my current employer.
24 years!! Man and boy. 'Ardest game in the book. Seen more changes than you've 'ad 'ot dinners. They don't realise how easy they 'ave it these days. Ad infinitum.....
One more year and I get given a half-decent watch and a nice dinner with the big boss (global pandemics permitting). I'll be 52 by then and a good time to have a serious think about my options going forward.
Until then, join me in a bitter-sweet round of teas and coffees as we contemplate what I could have achieved in 24 years other than sitting at a desk.
Did you get a paid sabbatical at 20? We do, 6 weeks and you can buy more annual leave and tag it on <very smug grin>. I've got three years to go (I think) and would like to spend it touring.
Did you get a paid sabbatical at 20? We do, 6 weeks and you can buy more annual leave and tag it on <very smug grin>. I've got three years to go (I think) and would like to spend it touring.
Didn't get a by-your-leave or kiss-my-arse at 20 years.
Where I work is very different now from when I join. Back then it was a small investment bank with a few high net worth individuals. Now it's a retail bank, trying desperately hard to be different in a sea of other banks. In order to grow, it's had to recruit a load of retail bankers who are the dullest of the dull yes-men and corporate ladder climbers to a man/woman/non binary*.
Thank fuck in the dealing room we can close the door on all that shit, although there is a deep mistrust of anything with a whiff of the treasury about it, so I think the room's days are numbered, just like mine.
*If nothing else the D&I training has made an impact.
Fitted a new satellite dish and wall bracket, spent an hour sodding around trying to point the dish in the right direction with various satellite finder apps to no avail. I resorted to using the time honoured tradition of shouting at the wife from the top of the ladder whilst she watched the signal strength and quality bars on the telly going up and down as I "aimed" the dish. Job done in 10 minutes.
"Of all the stories you told me, which ones were true and which ones weren't?"
"My dear Doctor, they're all true."
"Even the lies?"
"Especially the lies."
MingtheMerciless wrote: ↑Thu Mar 04, 2021 1:36 pm
I resorted to using the time honoured tradition of shouting at the wife from the top of the ladder whilst she watched the signal strength and quality bars on the telly going up and down as I "aimed" the dish. Job done in 10 minutes.
I used to do that but my sat dish is a loooong way from the telly - so the patience of my 'assistant' has been sorely tested on a number of occasions (similarly when sweeping the chimney and 'is it out yet!?' shouting matches)
Once I actually read the instructions on the inline signal strength doohickey (the one that screeches at you) it was actually quite straightforward and could be done without any major sulking.