If the tile and the board both end at the same spot it’s got potential to jut out, free of its neighbor.
I’d say this guy used a thin layer of thin set. I can trace the outcrop in the boards that are still exposed beside it, with the same pattern. Same gap. Or maybe the edge has a lip pushing the thing up.
It’s obvious to me now I’ve seen it once. It’s basically ribbed by the striation of the backing.
How hard is it to get one piece backing? Is he saving $ on these boards?
Now, if your wall isn’t square, it might be tricky to make it look good. In the bathroom I recently had redone, the window was crooked with respect to the floor. The contractor was able to make it look square by using a not-quite-square piece of (wooden) moulding under it. My ceiling is also sloped, because it’s right under the roof. But that’s sloped enough to look intentional. The time guy cut the tiles where the wall meets the ceiling. The cut edges of those tiles meet the ceiling tiles perfectly, though.
Can your guy do it? Who knows? Can you make him do it right? Only if he has the skills to do it.
Right now in my hallway there are 2 virgin wonderboards. They are big without seams 36 by 64 in. in the shower it looks like they are placed horizontally and have a couple of breaks.
They don’t look like the flattest things on earth, but whatever.
So what is it like for someone who has had someone do a job again?
Can you be aggressive with them in some way? Maybe ask for something or someone else, etc.? Should I request another tradesperson do it? Whats the ettiquette?
Yeah, there are things I’m not completely happy with from the bathroom job, but the carpenter and the tile guy were both extremely skilled competent craftsmen, and their work was excellent.
The boss came and checked it out. He’s going to have a more careful artiste come in. He’s going to try and keep the boards and replace some tiles and rows to make it more uniform.
Do I have good cause to ask for any discount consideration for this? I had planned on today for drying (the work) and a functional shower tonight, Saturday. As it is I will be showering elsewhere til Tues or Wed.
I would say no. It’s inconvenient but they are making it right. If it’s STILL messed up after the “better” guy comes in, I think at that point I’d ask for a discount (or fire them and not pay the rest). But that depends on a lot of factors including what you want your relationship with the contractor to be down the road, if any.
I once had my bathrooms remodeled. The shower stall was tiled and after the floor tiles were set, I complained that they were not aligned with the wall. The contractor argued that the stall walls weren’t completely square so the tiles couldn’t follow the walls. I agreed but pointed out that the tiles were not aligned with ANY of the walls. It would look much better if they were aligned with the back wall at least. He agreed and ripped out the entire floor and retiled it. He didn’t charge me for the extra tiles of course. I did not ask for any additional consideration for the mistake, nor would I consider it fair for me to have done so. He took a fairly large financial hit (almost a day of labor plus the cost of the tiles) to make it right and that satisfied me.
Thanks! Great answers from many here. It really helped me the last 24 hours.
I have a feeling the guy was an (older) trainee and they kind of give him a chance, you complain if you want, but he gets experience. They sold me on a one day tiling job, but it’s really two.
Now about that bulge on the row 5 I’m going to grill the guy on how he’s going to make that reasonably flat. I have to see it.
My mother had her guest bathroom floor tiled. The tiles are aligned to two of the walls, and look really weird at the other side, where they aren’t aligned. To avoid that problem, I asked the tile guys to tile my bathroom on the diagonal instead of parallel to any wall – so the misfit wouldn’t show. It costs a little more, because they need to cut (and use) more tiles. But it came out looking great, and you’d never notice the floor isn’t square.