Hi Everyone,
It's been a few months since I've been around here, as unforeseen circumstances have kept us occupied, but I started working on the shower for our master bath again a few weeks ago. To bring everyone up to speed, I have completed everything up to hanging the concrete board, finishing the mortar bed, and building the curb. However, the curb is where my problem lies.
I built the curb a week ago, as best as I could from the instructions in the "Building a shower pan..." picture tutorial by Harry Dunbar. I used "SAKRETE TYPE-S high strength Mortar Mix" mixed with a similar consistency of the deck mud (balls up in your hand leaving it dry, and easily crumbles). It was my first curb, and it took probably 1.5 hours to do it, but when finished it looked really nice. Very straight, uniform in height and width, nice square edges, and a slight slope into the shower.
However, now a week later, I still can't help but think that something is wrong. The curb is surely dried by now, but I can touch spots of it, and still have mortar mix easily scrape away (similar to the finished mortar bed), or have little pieces "crumble" off, or knock little pieces off the nice clean edge. Surely the curb shouldn't be like this... should it?!?!
What's happened? Did I do it wrong? I'm fairly sure the mortar mix I used is the stuff I'm supposed to. Did I just mix it too dry? I did notice several times when building the curb that if I wasn't very careful, and didn't pack the mortar pretty hard when building it, that it would just crumble and fall apart... is this a sign of too little water? I didn't want to put in more water, because I didn't want to ruin it. If the mix was too dry, is it possible for me to wet the curb over and over again over the next few days and see if it'll soak it up or is it too late? Does this have nothing to do with the water/consistency at all?!?! Do I have to tear this curb back out?!
I'm so confused, because when i did the curb, it seemed like it went smoothly, and looked great, so it finally seemed like a job well done on this project.... but now this.
Any and all ideas and advice greatly appreciated.
Thanks so much!
JackOfAllTrades
(Master Of None)