DIY Bath panel

Apologies, I realise this is an old thread but really interested in replacing my cracked P shaped bath panel.

The soffit looks ideal. Do they slot together? If not, how do you connect them together seamlessly?

Thanks.
 
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Apologies, I realise this is an old thread but really interested in replacing my cracked P shaped bath panel.

The soffit looks ideal. Do they slot together? If not, how do you connect them together seamlessly?

Thanks.
Just slots together .
 
Just sorted one for my nephew, used soffit pvc, its twin walled so ripped the rear every panel to reduce it to single thickness which bends easily.
Lay ply or board over top edge to mark shape of curve , cut this out and fix to floor inline to hold the base of panel and finish with pvc trim to form a skirting. water proof and easily cleaned.
White silicon to seal all gaps.Best of all just £10 for plastic.
View attachment 186486
Dragons, I come here today looking for £80k in exchange for 20% of my business ...
 
Just sorted one for my nephew, used soffit pvc, its twin walled so ripped the rear every panel to reduce it to single thickness which bends easily.
Lay ply or board over top edge to mark shape of curve , cut this out and fix to floor inline to hold the base of panel and finish with pvc trim to form a skirting. water proof and easily cleaned.
White silicon to seal all gaps.Best of all just £10 for plastic.
View attachment 186486
Might be a silly question, but what did you use to rip the back layer off? Some of the soffit I'm looking at says it's a honeycomb construction.
 
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Did not rip the back off , just rip cuts vertically to leave single skin to front which allows it to flex. Use mini circular saw set to 5mm depth of cut.
I think I need to see a bit of soffit to understand what you mean. Thanks for the reply .
 
I think I need to see a bit of soffit to understand what you mean. Thanks for the reply .

I was also wondering what Foxhole meant on the original post. It is a really neat and economical solution.

Vertical slices through the rear layer to allow the front layer to bend
Only needed for the rounded sections
 
I think I need to see a bit of soffit to understand what you mean. Thanks for the reply .

So are the internal fins only attached to the back? Carefully cut along the two long edges to separate ? Would a Dremel multi tool do the job?
 

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I was also wondering what Foxhole meant on the original post. It is a really neat and economical solution.

Vertical slices through the rear layer to allow the front layer to bend
Only needed for the rounded sections
Ah, so don't " remove " the rear layer?
 
Ah, so don't " remove " the rear layer?

Correct.
and vertical relative to the way the soffit will sit when fitted on the side of the bath?
Yes.

You need 'slots' cut in the back layer to allow the front to bend.
Google kerf cuts to give an idea of what you are doing.

Foxhole used a mini circular saw.
Dremel or Stanley might do it but you would need to be careful not to damage the front layer.
Cheap enough to experiment until you get it right.
 
Foxhole used a mini circular saw.
Dremel or Stanley might do it but you would need to be careful not to damage the front layer.
A circular saw with the depth limited to a few millimetres and a guide fence (basically a stick) would do. The main things are to keep the kerfs absolutely parallel and evenly spaced - like the kerfs on the bendy stuff I published a photo of above
 
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So are the internal fins only attached to the back? Carefully cut along the two long edges to separate ? Would a Dremel multi tool do the job?
Correct, there are 15 cells to that profile so where you need that section to bend you make 15 slits to the rear.
 

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