Silicone sealant

I have just finished selaing my bath with silicone with the intention of putting some of that plastic sealing strip on top to make it look neater. Now that the silicone has cured (dried, or whatever) and I put the trim in place, it looks crap! I'd prefer just the silicone finish. The problem is that I didn't ensure a 'perfect' finish to the silicone (it's quite good, but has the odd bump) when I put it in, so I either need to;

1) Add extra silicone for a nicer finish (is this possible?), 2) Rip it up and try again (I don't like this option), or 3) Use some other self-adhesive edging. Suggestions? Thanks.
Reply to
Graeme
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A solid barrier is always the best solution to sealing around the sides of the bath, so I'd say go for another seal strip, or place a wooden beading strip on top the silicone and give it a couple of coats of varnish it, with a good yacht varnish.

Reply to
BigWallop

I know the feeling! I hate applying a silicone bead around a bath or worktop, as it takes a knack that only comes with practice. That practice, however, is probably something that only a plumber or kitchen refurbisher would acquire, since most DIYers only have the one bath or worktop to *uc* up.

I have tried everything I can to facilitate the application of an even bead without bumps or pits. I've applied clean-edge masking tape (the blue stuff) on both sides of the bead. I've tried various backs of spoons, and my finger, wetted, to smooth and shape the bead after application and before curing starts. But it still remains a very messy, imprecise, hit and miss job that I try to avoid for as long as possible.

I, too, tried the easy way out with the plastic sealing strip last time I went round my bath. It came on a roll from Focus DIY and was £5.99 for the 15 mm wide one. It was by Polycell, I seem to recall. It's been in place for four months but is already starting to lift away in places, despite rigorous cleansing of the surfaces before applying it, including wiping with meths. It is a poor alternative to pristine applied silicone beading, though.

I don't know what the secret is. If anyone has any tips I'd be pleased to hear them, too. But applying silicone remains one of my worst nightmares in DIY. I would rather build my own sofa than applying one single bead of silicone!

MM

Reply to
Mike Mitchell

I don't have occasion to do this that often, but have found a few things that help.

- Surfaces and hands scrupulously clean before starting.

- A pot of water with a little adding washing up liquid.

- Some clean rags and some meths for clean ups

- A decent mastic gun. The £3 from the DIY store are OK to a point, but sometimes the mechanism jams a little and results in unevenness. I bought a better one in France for about ?20 but have since seen them here as well. They are pretty obvious because the mechanisms are much better. Nowadays I also have one that works with air from a compressor. These cost about £10 from Axminster and elsewhere and work really well. You can regulate the flow well and it is contnuous once you squeeze the trigger, so as long as you move across the work smoothly you get a nice even bead. Of course you do need compressed air....

- Don't try to overdo the amount of gap filling for one hit. It is much better to build in layers.

- Once the bead is in place, make sure that you position yourself so that you can run your finger along the entire bead without stopping or getting into an awkward position if at all possible

- Wet the finger in the pot of water and run it quite lightly, in one movement over the entire length of the bead. Lightness of touch is one important part of all this. You can remoisten the finger and run it over with an even lighter touch again.

- Remove any silicon that accumulates (it shouldn't) on the finger.

- Don't muck about with the silicone for too long. It skins very rapidly and then further attention to it will make a mess.

- If you get it wrong, wipe it all off, clean with meths and do it again

- Buy twice the amount of sealer that you think you will need and return the unused tubes for refund.

- Forget about application tools and tape.

Using these methods I get pretty good results most times on the first attempt. The most important I've found is the quick light touch.

.andy

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Reply to
Andy Hall

Try spraying the silicone once applied with a solution of washing up liquid & water (from a hand spray gun) - then run your finger along - that's the pro's way

Reply to
Colin eclipse 2

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