Hi, I have a 2003 Stirling Eccles Sapphire and the shower tray has a hairline crack in it. I've been quoted £400 for a repair which involves spraying a resin on top of the existing tray, The tray would not need to be removed and should take approx 5 hours to complete.
Does anyone have any experience of this type of repair and do you think the quote is good value?
Thanks very Much Paul.
That's about the going price for that type of repair.
A friend of mine sprayed his own with stone guard for cars it worked on his but was a slightly off white colour.
i would get another shower tray and do it myself ,have you tried a caravan breakers for another one,if its only a crack ,why not remove it then fibre glass the crack from underneath ,
------------- when you reach the crossroads ,get the sat nav out
You say your shower tray has a hairline crack is it a leaking crack or just a crack in the gel coat which will not leak but looks unsightly.
This can be repaired with a kit from fibre-glass suppliers or manufacturers its diy but a lot cheaper than quoted.
Hi thanks for all the advice. I went to have another look at the van today and on closer inspection there are two main cracks running parallel to each other so could be a bigger job than I first thought
On previous threads it has been pointed out that cause of cracks is due to no support under shower tray & it was suggested that shower tray should be removed & wood battens for support should be fixed underneath. So if shower tray must be removed it would be cheaper to diy repair tray as suggested.
If your going to tackle it yourself a couple of months ago a member had the same problem and this is how he fixed it.
Drill a hole at the end of the cracks to stop them spreading.
Open up the cracks slightly with a file and use this stuff to fill the cracks back in..Click
Repaint the tray with Plastikote which comes in all colours and does all sorts of jobs from metal to enamels Click
I used stixall in a tube and extruded on with the gun and spread on, smoothed off. Not beautiful but practical and stopped the leak. Fibre glass would be better though - either from underside as suggested or on top if covering with silicone.
Depends is you want it to look like new or just waterproof and passable.