!$@#%^ 160th Official Hard Work Thread !$@#%^
#741
Community Organizer
Originally Posted by O-turn,Jun 26 2008, 02:26 PM
Thats what I figured, I hope he does not plan on installing dryall over the shower, Ill just fasten the wonderboard directly to studs
HOWEVER...
If you intend to tile the ceiling, DO NOT use drywall. The smooth surface of the drywall doesn't make for a very good bond to the tile. Durock has a very rough texture that makes for far better mechanical adhesion.
#742
Community Organizer
Originally Posted by Vadster,Jun 26 2008, 02:30 PM
all of yous come to my house and fix something.
#743
Former Moderator
Originally Posted by 3AFL S2K,Jun 26 2008, 01:31 PM
i dont fix i BREAK
#744
Registered User
Originally Posted by WhrDLMI,Jun 26 2008, 02:26 PM
You could use it but I think it is overkill for a back splash. In my opinion, that is better suited to a shower or to waterproof a basement wall.
#745
Community Organizer
Originally Posted by O-turn,Jun 26 2008, 02:34 PM
This is for shower! Well Whirlpool tub
The rule of thumb would be the height of the plumbing fixture. In a shower, the shower head is pretty high up and the water comes down on the tile during normal use of the shower. In a tub, the fixture is in the tub and the water would have to be splashed on the walls.
Unless you plan on getting giggy with it in the tub on a regular basis, the water proffer is probably overkill on the walls around the tub.
#747
Community Organizer
Originally Posted by Vadster,Jun 26 2008, 02:33 PM
I just don't fix - no has the capacity for major do-it yourself ness. My oven is brokeded - works as long as you don't need anything that requires a 3, 4, or a 5
#748
Registered User
Originally Posted by WhrDLMI,Jun 26 2008, 02:28 PM
but put roofing felt behind the board. overlap the seams like siding, too, so the water goes down, not up. I would definitely recommend Durock in that application, too... Not the thin stuff...
#749
Originally Posted by WhrDLMI,Jun 26 2008, 02:38 PM
Unless you plan on getting it with Gigdy in the tub on a regular basis, the water proffer is probably overkill on the walls around the tub.
#750
Registered User
Originally Posted by WhrDLMI,Jun 26 2008, 02:38 PM
Shower = yes... Tub = no...
The rule of thumb would be the height of the plumbing fixture. In a shower, the shower head is pretty high up and the water comes down on the tile during normal use of the shower. In a tub, the fixture is in the tub and the water would have to be splashed on the walls.
Unless you plan on getting giggy with it in the tub on a regular basis, the water proffer is probably overkill on the walls around the tub.
The rule of thumb would be the height of the plumbing fixture. In a shower, the shower head is pretty high up and the water comes down on the tile during normal use of the shower. In a tub, the fixture is in the tub and the water would have to be splashed on the walls.
Unless you plan on getting giggy with it in the tub on a regular basis, the water proffer is probably overkill on the walls around the tub.