Instead of replacing the drywall behind the tile with more drywall, I chose to use concrete board, and product called Wonderboard Lite. It has styrofoam grains in it, so is a bit like air-crete. Cutting this material to size is as simple as scribing it with a utility knife, and breaking it. Since it won’t show, an absolutely clean edge is not important.
Next, it was a simple matter of mounting the concrete board in place.
People with a tile saw can cut and set tile at their leisure, but since I had to rent one by the hour, I wanted to have everything ready in advance to minimize time with the saw. That included putting on liquid membrane.
I let the liquid membrane dry for a couple days to be sure, then went to Home Depot to rent a wet tile saw. It was $31 for one day, and when they say one day, they really mean it. If you return it 10 minutes late, they will charge you extra. Home Depot also rents a scribe-and-break cutter for less, but that’s somewhat less precise (I’ve used them before), and useless for anything but straight cuts all the way across the tile.
Learning: setting big wall tiles takes a long time. I averaged 45 minutes per tile. There’s a lot of leveling and adjusting. Part of the problem was that the tiles were being fit into imperfect space, not just going from one edge to the other, as in a build from the ground up.
At least, all the pieces I thought I needed were cut, and I could return the tile saw first thing the next morning. The next day, I did a fit check for a corner shelf.
I had some trouble with the 2 little pieces around the shower arm. That’s documented in a separate post.
Learnings about grout:
When you first add the powdered grout to water, the result will be very hard, like sand castle sand. Add just a tablespoon of water at a time – careful! – and it will flow like a milkshake.
Put the grout on fast, fast, fast. It may seem like a liquid at first, but it hardens in minutes.
Mix grout in small amounts. It hardens fast, but moreover, a little grout goes a long way.
It took me about an hour to put on the grout: maybe 10 minutes to get it into all the cracks, and the rest of the time to smooth it and clean it off the surfaces of the tiles. One a previous job, I left the grout haze on the tile surfaces, thinking I could clean it later. That took hours of scrubbing. Clean it again and again while it’s still moist. You’re welcome.
Learnings:
Check the fit of any plates or shelves before setting tile, if at all possible.
A wet tile saw is a real asset. I later discovered that people were selling them on craigslist for $15 and $25! Cheaper than renting.
That was the end of the main part of the shower. A few more finishing touches are in the next article.