I had heard it might be slightly easier on the fingers if they're wetted first before pressing/smoothing the caulk into the gap. Additionally, I wear latex gloves while doing this so that there is close to zero chance I get caulk stuck to my skin (so glove + a little moisture is what I would add). Thanks for showing.
What I was originally looking for was the tile-to-tub interface (whereas this is tub to flooring). My main question is whether there is supposed to be grout behind the caulk.
@rchandraonline If there is floor tile abutting the tub, yes you should grout there. Then you can apply a grout sealer, and possibly a narrow bead of clear silicone caulk over the grout line where it comes in contact with the tub.
...Or you can squeeze out some caulk and cut off a short cylinder from the end of the tube to 'tool' the caulk bead. You can squeeze the cylinder and scoop along the bead, taking off just the highest spots, squeeze to a tighter radius and scoop along again taking a little more so when you smooth with a spit-moistened finger it won't spread too much. Dry finger or tool to remove excesss & spit-moistened finger to smooth to a glossy finish so there are no 'edges' to catch dirt. Practice once first
What is the best type of caulking to use for where the floor meets the tub? Are some products not suitable for this purpose? Would appreciate any advice. Thanks.
Thanks for posting. Have to do this today. But the one thing I did not like was the finger-thingy. Looks uneven, so I belive I will follow jmh40guy `s advice about the masking tape on both sides.
What is the pr way to do this is masking tape on both surfaces leaving your gap in the joint to the desired size. apply caulk take a spoon and smooth it into the joint. Remove masking tape and you will have a machine like application. I do this on boats all day long...it comes out perfect with little mess and not much need for wet rag.
Try it...it's easy and comes out beautiful with a perfect bead. I mean Prefect.
Yep, masking tape - apply bead, smooth with finger or smoothing tool (spoon, etc). Remove masking tape and run finger down the bead again, perfect seal, masking deals with the excess, saves messing about with stanley knife later on.
@juanalvy : try putting a few drops of undiluted washing-up liquid on the tip of your finger before running your finger along the caulk - believe me this works - it really smooths the caulk and prevents it from sticking to your finger. (An old-school handy-man gave me that tip.)
Im a plumber and use that method mainly around basins, baths like shown here and against walls/cupboards where it is needed so water doesn't seep through.
I had heard it might be slightly easier on the fingers if they're wetted first before pressing/smoothing the caulk into the gap. Additionally, I wear latex gloves while doing this so that there is close to zero chance I get caulk stuck to my skin (so glove + a little moisture is what I would add). Thanks for showing.
What I was originally looking for was the tile-to-tub interface (whereas this is tub to flooring). My main question is whether there is supposed to be grout behind the caulk.
rchandraonline 7 months ago
@rchandraonline If there is floor tile abutting the tub, yes you should grout there. Then you can apply a grout sealer, and possibly a narrow bead of clear silicone caulk over the grout line where it comes in contact with the tub.
HomeAdditionPlus 7 months ago
cool vid thxs!!! helped BIG TIME THXS
bennra26008 10 months ago
...Or you can squeeze out some caulk and cut off a short cylinder from the end of the tube to 'tool' the caulk bead. You can squeeze the cylinder and scoop along the bead, taking off just the highest spots, squeeze to a tighter radius and scoop along again taking a little more so when you smooth with a spit-moistened finger it won't spread too much. Dry finger or tool to remove excesss & spit-moistened finger to smooth to a glossy finish so there are no 'edges' to catch dirt. Practice once first
Philc2 1 year ago
excellent
hyenalaugh09 2 years ago 3
I agree with Etherglide.. It's called Cornertape! The system helps you remove old caulk, clean the surface and apply new perfect joints!
MorKri71 2 years ago
There is a tool nowadays that removes the excess and leaves a finished, perfect bead. Masking tape is so old school. Get out of the Dark Ages people.
Etherglide 2 years ago
What is the best type of caulking to use for where the floor meets the tub? Are some products not suitable for this purpose? Would appreciate any advice. Thanks.
frankfearstone 2 years ago 2
would like to know too
juanalvy 2 years ago
Thanks for posting. Have to do this today. But the one thing I did not like was the finger-thingy. Looks uneven, so I belive I will follow jmh40guy `s advice about the masking tape on both sides.
Heimdall01 3 years ago
Thanks.
fairskyze 3 years ago
Thanks so much, this vid was clear and straight to the point.
chachacookie 3 years ago
Thanks a lot! This really helped!
MirageRC3 3 years ago
thanks
calgaynyima 3 years ago
What is the pr way to do this is masking tape on both surfaces leaving your gap in the joint to the desired size. apply caulk take a spoon and smooth it into the joint. Remove masking tape and you will have a machine like application. I do this on boats all day long...it comes out perfect with little mess and not much need for wet rag.
Try it...it's easy and comes out beautiful with a perfect bead. I mean Prefect.
Jim
jmh40guy 4 years ago 13
Hey!!! Jim very interesting!!! now a small te' spoon?
Just make a short video Jim
Thanks in avance
mytujuan 3 years ago
Yep, masking tape - apply bead, smooth with finger or smoothing tool (spoon, etc). Remove masking tape and run finger down the bead again, perfect seal, masking deals with the excess, saves messing about with stanley knife later on.
drcatuk 3 years ago
i tried this, but when i ran my finger down the bead again after removing tape, it got sticky and messed up the bead.
juanalvy 2 years ago
@juanalvy : try putting a few drops of undiluted washing-up liquid on the tip of your finger before running your finger along the caulk - believe me this works - it really smooths the caulk and prevents it from sticking to your finger. (An old-school handy-man gave me that tip.)
MaxTallon 2 years ago
@MaxTallon you can spit on your finger too its quicker and easier!!
JCPAINTWORKZ 1 year ago
Likewise here mate.
Im a plumber and use that method mainly around basins, baths like shown here and against walls/cupboards where it is needed so water doesn't seep through.
AllEyezOnM3e 3 years ago
@jmh40guy what a way to do it never thought about it have to caulk my bathroom going to try it thanks.
Maxforever2003 1 year ago
That was exactly what I needed. Thanks!
Noah773 4 years ago
I am very impressed. Please contiune to give us more lessons. Well done!
cobra168 4 years ago 2
thanks for the info, I needed to know how to do this now that I'm getting divorsed and need to fix things on my own.
yadi1998 4 years ago