Fitting a shower tray
Discussion
I asked advice last month on how to fit a tray and thanks to all who replied. I'm now at the stage of actually fitting it.
My bathroom is 1650 wide and the shower tray is 1700so it' a bit too big Professional bathroom company who supplied the resin stone tray said to dig 50mm out of the wall to let it fit flush, but the destructions say to cut some of each end. Of course whatever I do I'll leave a bit of clearance but what have/would you do?
TIA, much appreciated
My bathroom is 1650 wide and the shower tray is 1700so it' a bit too big Professional bathroom company who supplied the resin stone tray said to dig 50mm out of the wall to let it fit flush, but the destructions say to cut some of each end. Of course whatever I do I'll leave a bit of clearance but what have/would you do?
TIA, much appreciated
Get a smaller tray.
I presume the tray has a profiled top and cutting it means losing some of that.
Decent trays are also heavy and you would need to cut quite a bit of wall away to get it in.
Only fitted one of that size (1800*800) and while they are good they are not easy to handle, ours was getting on for 50 kg.
I presume the tray has a profiled top and cutting it means losing some of that.
Decent trays are also heavy and you would need to cut quite a bit of wall away to get it in.
Only fitted one of that size (1800*800) and while they are good they are not easy to handle, ours was getting on for 50 kg.
Cut the tray. Stone resin is perfect for such adjustments, in fact some even have this option as part of their specifications, but be aware it might be ridiculously heavy and manhandling something of that size will be awkward on your own.
Top tip, do any cutting outside and wear a mask.
Top tip, do any cutting outside and wear a mask.

Company who are supplying the stuff, inc the resin tray came round today to deliver other bits and I mentioned this problem again. He was most insistent that I dig out the wall, said he'd never heard of anybody cutting the tray. It's only one or maybe two cm's each end to get it to fit. Only smaller tray is 1600 so that'd leave a big gap to fill.
So leaning towards digging out the wall. Will decide over the weekend when I've got the tools out.
Thanks for all your advice
So leaning towards digging out the wall. Will decide over the weekend when I've got the tools out.
Thanks for all your advice
Other tray suppliers have different opinions. Some even offer "How To" guides.
https://www.bathroomtakeaway.com/enclosures/shower...
https://www.noken.com/en_gb/blog/how-cut-shower-tr...
https://www.tissino.co.uk/journal/how-do-i-cut-a-g...
...and so on.
I took 40mm off the length of my tray when I refurbed my ensuite about a year ago so it would fit into a space that isn't catered for by off-the-shelf sizes.
https://www.bathroomtakeaway.com/enclosures/shower...
https://www.noken.com/en_gb/blog/how-cut-shower-tr...
https://www.tissino.co.uk/journal/how-do-i-cut-a-g...
...and so on.
I took 40mm off the length of my tray when I refurbed my ensuite about a year ago so it would fit into a space that isn't catered for by off-the-shelf sizes.
OutInTheShed said:
Why on earth does anyone want a 1700mm shower tray?
Washing a shetland pony maybe?
Valves out of the water so you can turn on and get up to temperature without a cold blast.Washing a shetland pony maybe?
Also, in a long room a longer shower tray and partially open enclosure makes the room look thousands of times better than a square (or almost) one.
ColinM50 said:
Only smaller tray is 1600 so that'd leave a big gap to fill.
You can get 1650 trays.Example here https://www.plumbingworld.co.uk/mx-elements-low-pr...
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