I bought a sink from victoriaplum that it said was 600mm wide on the specs.
Perfect I thought - exactly the size I need!
Got it today and it turns out the basin is actually 620mm wide - which means it doesn't quite fit right and overhangs the door architrave more than I would like.
What would you suggest is the best solution here? (see pics). Potential options as I see them are:
1. Send it back and get a smaller one (problem is plumber is coming on Saturday to plumb it in and haven't found another unit that I like at the right size/price yet)
2. Drill/grind a channel out of the freshly laid tiles that the left side of the basin could sit in. (problem is don't really want to ruin the new tiling and might not work well - potential for disaster.
3. take those 2 tiles off the wall (to the left of the basin) and replace with tiles that have had a channel cut on the tile saw that the basin could sit in (same disadvantage as above)
4. Cut 15mm off of the left side of the sink and butt it up to the tiles - as with 2. above, advantage that it would mean the unit itself could go flush to the wall as there would be no overhang on the basin on that side. Disadvantages: Is it even possible to cut the edge of the basin like that and get a good edge with a tile saw (same thing used to cut the travertine - the top is relatively flat and about the same thickness...
5. Get a deeper architrave and chase the sink in on that right side (planning on getting a thicker architrave on the door anyway as currently the 12mm travertine is basically flush with it and looks a bit odd...
6. Stop being so fussy. Stick it in its fine.
Perfect I thought - exactly the size I need!
Got it today and it turns out the basin is actually 620mm wide - which means it doesn't quite fit right and overhangs the door architrave more than I would like.
What would you suggest is the best solution here? (see pics). Potential options as I see them are:
1. Send it back and get a smaller one (problem is plumber is coming on Saturday to plumb it in and haven't found another unit that I like at the right size/price yet)
2. Drill/grind a channel out of the freshly laid tiles that the left side of the basin could sit in. (problem is don't really want to ruin the new tiling and might not work well - potential for disaster.
3. take those 2 tiles off the wall (to the left of the basin) and replace with tiles that have had a channel cut on the tile saw that the basin could sit in (same disadvantage as above)
4. Cut 15mm off of the left side of the sink and butt it up to the tiles - as with 2. above, advantage that it would mean the unit itself could go flush to the wall as there would be no overhang on the basin on that side. Disadvantages: Is it even possible to cut the edge of the basin like that and get a good edge with a tile saw (same thing used to cut the travertine - the top is relatively flat and about the same thickness...
5. Get a deeper architrave and chase the sink in on that right side (planning on getting a thicker architrave on the door anyway as currently the 12mm travertine is basically flush with it and looks a bit odd...
6. Stop being so fussy. Stick it in its fine.