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Repairing/Improving Insufficient Mortar Slope

Discuss Repairing/Improving Insufficient Mortar Slope in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

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bmurphywa

Well I installed my first shower (in my own home) and carefully created a pre-slope, used a three-piece drain, weep hole guard and created a properly sloped mortar bed (almost). I have not yet laid the floor tiles. My question relates to the "almost" qualifier. Generally, the mortar bed is sloped properly but there are a few low spots away from the drain. I would like to improve this situation before laying the tile and I am wondering what the best way to do this is. Can I just mix up some more mortar and lay that on top of the current cured mortar bed? Would thinset work better? Something else? Thanks in advance!

Bill Murphy
 
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R Montgomery

Yea thin set.If it's a larger area than your flat trowel can deal with use a straight edge or a length of redwood lath.You said "pre-slope"so this is the float that will be under the shower pan liner?
(Thanks for the 1 in 40 fall Leatherface.It's 1 in 48 in the states ie 1/4 inch per foot.)
You're at home so you might not be having a shower pan inspection but if you are make sure the fall is steep enough as the inspectors may stick a tape measure in the water.If you are not having it inspected I would still make sure that you do a water test.
 
B

bmurphywa

Actually, it's the main slope I'm talking about. I completed the pre-slope and that was fine and installed a shower pan liner over that into which I am installing the mortar bed with the "main" slope. By the way, the other reason I am doing this is that I created the 1/4" slope and then read that 1/2" is better as I am installing a pebble floor rather than flat tiles and the extra slope is recommended to ensure the water drains well around the pebbles.
 
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Rob Z

Bill

For all the pebble "River Rock" floors we have done in showers, we sealed them and used epoxy grout. I think the lower porosity of the epoxy, as well as the sealed surface of the stone, prevents water from "grabbing" the surface and resisting the run to the drain. If you can use Laticrete Spectralock, you will find it quite user friendly and will get good results.

For the same reasons that R Montgomery mentioned, we try not to exceed 3/8" per ft slope in showers.
 
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Rob Z

Hi Bill,

if those low spots are too low, then I would skim them with thinset. The deck mud that you used to make the shower floor won't bond to the existing mud nor will it work in a thin cross-section.:thumbsup:

Hi Bill, I just re-read this and realize I had a bit of a typo. I meant to say if those low spots aren't too low, then skim with thinset. Thinset won't fix areas that are wide and deep ...we usually won't skim an area that is any deeper than ~1/4" with thinset.

I see you're near Seattle...my wife and I took our honeymoon up the West Coast in '94.. we ended up in Seattle for three days and loved it! :thumbsup:
 

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