Film, Media & TV3 mins ago
Is There Any Way To Fix
14 Answers
a join in kitchen surface where water has seeped in and about three inches have risen up a couple of millimetres or do I need to get it all replaced?
Answers
I reckon nope, once it's blown, it's knackered
19:32 Tue 20th May 2014
Psybborg... nothing to add except that whoever fitted the top needs a slap.
It's a common problem when tops are cut out for sinks, or simply butted together. They don't bother to seal the cut chipboard ends. Soaks up water like a sponge.
Think about using "Corian" or other similar materials. Scratches and damage can be sanded out rather like timber.
It's a common problem when tops are cut out for sinks, or simply butted together. They don't bother to seal the cut chipboard ends. Soaks up water like a sponge.
Think about using "Corian" or other similar materials. Scratches and damage can be sanded out rather like timber.
A good warning. My brother has a kitchen where the wall unit doors are, veneer over, I assume, chipboard. He thought no more of it until he realised steam from the kettle had achieved this bulge effect. (Solution, buy solid wood.) He tried to get a replacement door, but that style had been discontinued :-(