Very few things will stick to fiberglass.
Basic fiberglass itself is not too hard to bond to ... but, unfortunately, I think the shower stall is some different composite material.I used 3M spray adhesive to bond RFP to wood. Very few things will stick to fiberglass.
Unfortunately, I doubt the material is simple fiberglass from what I am seeing. Maybe some type of fiber reinforced plastic composite.

First, laminate counter material does not belong in a shower. Here is a shower surround for 109 dollars, https://www.homedepot.com/p/Delta-P...Surrounds-in-High-Gloss-White-40154/204338479, I would have done this before trying to scab in pieces not meant to be in wet locations and failing many times. You could have installed this in one day and been to painting the next. And been cheaper then all the materials and adhesives you spent money on.
At this point I may be wasting more time ...
Sheeze. You guys are optimistic !!!You know you are.
Sheeze. You guys are optimistic !!!
Flexseal tapeNope, just realistic and know that there's certain jobs where it's better to rip it down to the studs and do what I want in the long run now.
At this point I'd use white duct tape, keep and eye on it and start ordering materials for the bathroom reno.
Nope, just realistic and know that there's certain jobs where it's better to rip it down to the studs and do what I want in the long run now.
At this point I'd use white duct tape, keep and eye on it and start ordering materials for the bathroom reno.
Flexseal tape
Thanks. This is a good idea.I don't know how well these would work on the thin shower surround but I use them for frp installs in commercial kitchens. If they will hold in the thin surround material they would be better then self tapers.
Not quite ... but enough waste to get a start. The tests do not take that long ... mostly waiting. But between that and working around the day job it is causing too much loss of bathroom use. Hindsight is always 20-20. But I should have known better.Jesus you could have had the thing tiled and grouted in this amount of time.
Update: My improved prep bond + cure test of 2 part epoxy was not so good: the bond was indeed better with improved surface prep on the test part of the surround wall. BUT the bond to the pvc sheet material that I want to now use in place of the laminate was very poor (trade one problem for another ...). Silicone also bonded surprisingly ok on the surround too with good surface prep, but again, the silicone bond was poor on the pvc material. What had best overall success bonding to *both* the surround and the pvc sheet was pvc cement. That working well on the surround material was a good surprise, and it working well on the pvc sheet material was no surprise. Results were good both with and without using surface activator (primer) often used with pvc cement on plumbing.
I ordered Weld-On 719 extra heavy body and slow set pvc cement and I will try that with a long duration clamp to set. I will likely sand and use surface activator (will need to avoid drips .... messy stuff). The slow set product is to avoid the adhesive cureing during setup. I am apprehensive about this product curing in the central parts of the 22"x14" sheet, but I will clamp it for a few days and keep it warm. I am more optimistic this can work well enough to avoid using perimeter screws. But I will see ...
Is there a Garage Journal dumb fiasco award?
Nah. Not pissed. I thought it was funny. Humor does not work well in posts like these. But I am not sure if I get the snarkiness -- if that is what it is.I think you got pissed when somebody called this a hack job, unfortunately that's exactly what it is at this point
Ah ... expanding closed cell foam. That would look wonderful! Yhat stuff sticks to EVERYTHING ... especially fingers. I would be surprised if it did not bond to the surround material. I even have a foam gun ... so maybe I could make it a little neater ... err ... maybe.Iff'n ya use that camo tape, nobody gonna see it anyhow.
Iff'n yer needin a classier look than tape, treat it like a leaky roof. Just nail one of them blue tarps over it if ya got one without a lotta bullet holes in it. If yers gots too many holes, take the one off'n yer neighbors roof.
Next step up, fill them old holes with expanding foam first, then hang the tarp. Ah know its gonna cost some money, but quality ain't cheap.
Top of the line, paint the expanding foam white. Or whatever color ya got left over in the shed. Then hang the tarp.
Extra points fer using the tarp as a shower curtain too. The blue color will make sure all the kin see ya done remodeled.
Now yer done. Enjoy yer trip. Hope the ole truck don't break down on ya this year.
Likely pending given the progression of failures! Waiting for glue to arrive post holiday trip now for my "last ditch" attempt.I'm waiting for the thread on the tub and surround tear out and replacement!
If you perceive yourself as a struggling victim, there will likely be more hack-jobs in your future....
You guys are like vultures gathering around a struggling animal in the desert of bonding failures![]()
Nah, no victimization complex over my failure to recognize the difficulty in adhesive-bonding these materials.If you perceive yourself as a struggling victim, there will likely be more hack-jobs in your future.
Tip: You need not always shoot for the stars. But it is a good habit to aim for results from which you can stand back and say:
"I did that."
I'm waiting for the thread on the tub and surround tear out and replacement!
I'm waiting for the thread on the tub and surround tear out and replacement!
There are a couple really good reasons to do a job right the first time. But there seem to be an infinite number of reasons to rationalize doing a hack job.6 months from now there will be a thread about water damage and mold behind the shower enclosure
There are a couple really good reasons to do a job right the first time. But there seem to be an infinite number of reasons to rationalize doing a hack job.![]()
That is true. Particulrly in a price per value sense.But Japanese faucets are so much more superior to the **** we all use everyday
