![]() Plastic Welding a Cracked Shower. The tiles to accomodate the shower tray. Tip.I had practised on a scrap plastic cover and knew that the repair isnt. Do you have a damaged washroom floor in your motorhome? Don't despair – Donna Garner explains how to repair a cracked shower tray yourself, for just £87! Light machine v1.02 plugin for etc. Light.machine.v1.02.retail.for.re: octanerender for archicad v1. Logowanie.the plugin sitephotoshop plugins, plugins.light machine v1 02 plugin for retail version. Light machine v1.02 plugin for adobe photoshop. retail version.. Beta available.light machine is the ultimate digital dark room tool. Thanks, Yes it does flex a lot and there is no access to the underside to fill with foam etc, although I may try cut a hole in the floor under the van and see if I can gain access this way. I don't know if fibre glass would work as I think the tray is plastic? What does motd mean? And why cant I start a new paragraph on this forum? Its a Mcclouis Glen 440 (2005) and they were never really popular in the UK, and the tray is also the floor for the entire bathroom. At the moment it has thick white sticky tape which is ok, but we are intending to sell it soon and 'shower tray held together by sticky tape' does not sound good on the descr. My shower pan, made of gel-coated fiber glass, has three cracks, as shown in the photo below. The cracks radiate fairly straight from the drain in the center at twelve, four, and eight o'clock. (All of the other white streaks are just gel-coat coloring.) I ground away the cracks and filled them with epoxy, which seems to work okay for the time being. But I would like to know what my options are for a more permanent fix that won't significantly reduce the value. Replacing the pan is the last thing I want to do. The pan matches the shower walls and a whirlpool bath. A lot of things would have to come out to get to the pan, and I can't imagine a matching pan replacement would be found. I saw a video where someone had what appeared to be a process for this kind of repair. ![]() This involved what looked like an epoxied sheet that covers the entire pan bottom on the top side. I don't know what this is called and I don't know what kind of tradesman I should contact to do this sort of fix. (It doesn't seem like something that a plumber/pipe-fitter type would specialize in.) If someone can point me in the right direction for this, I would appreciate it. Any other ideas on what I can do and what is common for addressing this sort of problem would be appreciated. The shower is on the second floor and there is some water damage to the ceiling below. As I walk around the shower pan, I can hear some creaking, and I assume this will lead to flexing and open the cracks up again. I may need to resolve that, too, in the final fix. Does anyone have any suggestions about this? Also, help with the tags would be appreciated. Update From what I have seen in the answers and comments, I need to seriously reconsider how I might remove the pan from the top, remove the subfloor, mitigate any water damage between the subfloor and ceiling below, then rebuild in reverse.
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