Use Care in Replacing a Ceramic Soap Dish
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Q: DEAR TIM: You helped me recently when I decided to replace my showerhead. Believe it or not, the showerhead slipped from my hand and broke the shower soap dish. This small weekend project has turned into a nightmare. How do I replace the ceramic soap dish? What else can go wrong? -- Alan L., Jackson, Tenn.
A: DEAR ALAN: You are not the first person with good intentions to cause a cascade of home-repair events. Replacing your ceramic soap dish is not going to be easy. It may be time to call in a professional tile setter.
No matter who does the job, finish installing the new showerhead before the soap dish is repaired.
Your wall soap dish may be easy to replace, but then again it could be extremely hard to remove. It all depends on how old the tile job is, what sort of substrate is behind the tile, and how skilled the installer was.
The first thing to do is to locate a new ceramic soap dish that matches the broken one. This may be difficult, especially if your tile has been up for more than 10 years. You are trying to get a soap dish that will cover over the field tile, just as the broken one does. Many ceramic soap dishes have a flange that allows them to cover the adjacent tile by about a quarter-inch.
When you get the new soap dish, look at the back of it. You may discover one or two holes in the fixture. These are not defects; the holes are there to help lock the soap dish into position.
The hardest part of your task will be to remove the broken soap dish without damaging any of the surrounding tiles. For the best chance of success, first you should remove the grout that is between the soap dish and the tile. You can attempt this with a small rotary grinder that resembles a dentist's drill, or you can try to chisel it out carefully with the corner of a stiff putty knife. No matter how you do it, go slowly and tap the grout with care.
When the grout is removed, you can carefully try to break the remainder of the soap dish, making sure you do no damage to the substrate behind the soap dish. If you have access to a small hammer drill, try drilling a series of holes down the middle of the soap dish from top to bottom and side to side. The holes may act as stress-relief points, and the dish will fracture along the holes. Once you get one corner of the soap dish out, try to break the rest away, chunking the ceramic fixture toward the vacant corner. Break out small pieces at a time. Wear gloves and goggles, as the ceramic chunks are sharp.
Once the old soap dish is gone, determine whether the substrate is in good shape. If it is cement board or a true cement base set in metal lath, you should be in great shape. If the substrate is gypsum-based, inspect it to make sure it is sound.
The holes you might see on the back of your soap dish need companion holes in the same spot on the substrate. The holes allow for thinset or grout to droop into the holes and sag just as mortar oozes from under a brick. This U-shaped drooping compound, once hard and dry, is what locks a ceramic soap dish into position. The mastic you spread onto a wall for the tile is generally not intended to hold a soap dish in place.
Mix grout or thinset so it is fairly thick. The consistency needs to be plastic so that it will droop, but not so plastic that it flows. Cut two pieces of duct tape and lightly stick them on the tile near where you are working. You will need these to hold the soap dish in position as soon as you set it into place.
Make sure the substrate and the new soap dish are dust-free and slightly damp. Apply a generous amount of the grout or thinset to the back of the soap dish, making sure it is pushed into the holes. Push some into the substrate holes. Add just a little more to the back of the soap dish and push it into position. Immediately tape it along the top edge to ensure that it will not move or fall away from the wall. Wait 48 hours before removing the tape so you can grout the soap dish to finish the job.
Tim Carter can be contacted via his Web site, http:/
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