Originally posted by oraclesmith
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Reply to: chipped tile
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Previously on "chipped tile"
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Had a similar situation when drilling through tiles to fit a shower a while ago.
Use tile adhesive or one of the other solutions and colour in any small gap at the cracked edge with a coloured felt pen. It will soak in and make the edge almost unnoticeable.Last edited by gadgetman; 17 June 2009, 04:58.
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There is always someone worse off than you, as they say in hospital (though maybe not when the sheet says nil by mouth and do not resuscitate).Originally posted by expat View PostTheoretically that line of reasoning could be applied to any situation short of the worst imaginable.... it could be worse, and perhaps it will be.
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If a chipped tile is your biggest worry count yourself lucky!Originally posted by expat View PostWhich is what you will then have to do
Unfortunately some of the tiles are part behind the washbasin so that would have to come off too........ so a bit of plumbing, sealing, as well as tiling and painting.....
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Which is what you will then have to doOriginally posted by TimberWolf View PostYeah, I think it's a bit of a mare trying to get a tile off a wall without chipping or cracking it. You'd have at least two chipped tiles to handle afterwards. But the good news is that once you've got one tile out, the rest (perhaps a dozen or more by this time) will be much easier to remove.
Unfortunately some of the tiles are part behind the washbasin so that would have to come off too........ so a bit of plumbing, sealing, as well as tiling and painting.....
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You know you can add that 'PZZ' as a signature so you don't have to type it each time right?Originally posted by pzz76077 View Posthttp://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-cow-catcher.htm
You should really start a new thread for something so trivial as this one is dedicated to a serious matter.
PZZ
Many Kind Regards,
Amiga500.
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Yeah, I think it's a bit of a mare trying to get a tile off a wall without chipping or cracking it. You'd have at least two chipped tiles to handle afterwards. But the good news is that once you've got one tile out, the rest (perhaps a dozen or more by this time) will be much easier to remove.Originally posted by expat View PostGood thought. (though as I said, if I were careful I wouldn't be in this position...)
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Swap it with a tile that isn't in a conspicuous place (being careful not to chip the good one when you take it off).
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I could ignore the chipped tile. But there is a transitive 2-step relation that you are not taking account of:Originally posted by Andy2 View PostJust ignore the chipped tile
Relax and have a beer
Partner does not ignore chipped tile.
I do not ignore partner.
If it were me, I'd replace it too, if I had a spare. I keep spares but the previous owner did not.Originally posted by lilelvis2000 View PostAnyway...if it were me...I'd replace it. Its pretty easy to remove a broken tile. Remove the cement below and replace. Then redo the grout.
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I always get confused between the toilet - the actual think you tulip in - and the room. For a moment there I thought you had a toilet made of tiles!
Anyway...if it were me...I'd replace it. Its pretty easy to remove a broken tile. Remove the cement below and replace. Then redo the grout.
If the house was forsale I'd just leave it.
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