I have a framed glass shower, the type with a metal channel along the bottom that has weep holes for water that falls down the glass to escape back into the shower floor. Both sides of the glass have a channel along the metal frame, that has been covered with a rubber strip that has become brittle and needs replacing. Just outside the shower, mold has formed on the wall, in a patch about 4 inches round, and growing slowly. It has been wet to the touch.
I have also noticed that on the outside of the metal frame, water has begun collecting, I assume the seal between the inside and outside has broken - I don't think the outside of the channel should be wet. Even though water should not be getting through I still can't quite connect this with the mold. I realize water is getting though into the walls but I just can't figure out exactly how.
I am tempted to run a bead of silicone caulk down in the inside of the channel, but not at all comfortable that's either wise or sufficient to fix the problem.
Now that I have had all this exposed (by removing the rubber strips) and let it dry for a few days, the moldy patch on the wall is now dry.
We also have high mineral content which has caused quite a buildup, I am working on it with CLR and it seems to be helping. No idea if this is related to the leak issue.
Questions:
1) Is the metal frame just resting on the tile or is it screwed in ? If so, then could water be getting through the screw holes ? If so, what the heck would I do about that ?
2) Do I run the danger of clogging the weep holes if I caulk inside the channel ? It appears I could caulk down in the crevice between the glass and the channel without building it up high enough to meet the weep holes. It might be tricky but doable.
3) Am I going about this the right way or do I need a different approach ?
Overall shot:
Close up of outside channel with rubber strip removed, see small patch of mold on wall:
Close up of other side of shower wall, rubber strip removed.
Suspicious grout discoloration inside shower door:
More grout discoloration on outside of door:
I have also noticed that on the outside of the metal frame, water has begun collecting, I assume the seal between the inside and outside has broken - I don't think the outside of the channel should be wet. Even though water should not be getting through I still can't quite connect this with the mold. I realize water is getting though into the walls but I just can't figure out exactly how.
I am tempted to run a bead of silicone caulk down in the inside of the channel, but not at all comfortable that's either wise or sufficient to fix the problem.
Now that I have had all this exposed (by removing the rubber strips) and let it dry for a few days, the moldy patch on the wall is now dry.
We also have high mineral content which has caused quite a buildup, I am working on it with CLR and it seems to be helping. No idea if this is related to the leak issue.
Questions:
1) Is the metal frame just resting on the tile or is it screwed in ? If so, then could water be getting through the screw holes ? If so, what the heck would I do about that ?
2) Do I run the danger of clogging the weep holes if I caulk inside the channel ? It appears I could caulk down in the crevice between the glass and the channel without building it up high enough to meet the weep holes. It might be tricky but doable.
3) Am I going about this the right way or do I need a different approach ?
Overall shot:
Close up of outside channel with rubber strip removed, see small patch of mold on wall:
Close up of other side of shower wall, rubber strip removed.
Suspicious grout discoloration inside shower door:
More grout discoloration on outside of door:
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