Shower Door
By: Amanda Campbell
Updated: March 3, 2011
INSTALLATION: (What you’ll need)
-Duschqueen glass shower door kit
-screw gun
-level
-grease pencil (for marking holes to be drilled in tile)
-two people to do the job, both to hold the glass and for safety reasons.
-1/2” spacers, which come with the kit, to hold the glass above the tub
-tape measure
The Duschqueen glass shower enclosures are part of a growing consumer market. The kit includes three panels of glass, hinges, gaskets, and stainless steel channels to hold the glass.
Step one is to attach the four hinges to the first piece of glass. There are pre-drilled holes in the glass, and gaskets come with the kit and fit inside the hinges to protect the glass from being scratched by the metal.
Step two is to lift up the largest lite (or panel of glass which weighs about 60 lbs) and hold it against the wall away from the faucet. Put the ½” spacers on the top of the tub ledge and then hoist the glass up and set it on the spacers. This will make sure that the glass, which will fold open, has enough clearance to swing open without scraping the tub.
Use a level to make sure it’s plumb and mark the tile where the hinges will attach to the wall. Drill holes in the tile and then you will use wall anchors to hold your mounting screws in place.
IMPORTANT: it is very important to use the right sized wall anchors to hold the glass to the wall. You want the anchors to be especially snug in the wall because if they’re not, the weight of the glass will pull out of the wall.
TIP: when hammering the anchors into the holes drilled into the tile, be careful! When you get close to getting the anchor flush with the tile, take another anchor and use it as a nail set to hammer the anchor all the way into the tile. This way you avoid breaking the tile with the hammer.
Attach the first piece of glass to the wall. Then attach the second piece of glass to the first, again using the hinges, gaskets and screws. Then close the doors as straight as you can across the top edge of the tub. Use the tape measure to determine if it’s straight. In other words, measure from the front of the door to the outside edge of the tub across to the other wall.
Once that’s lined up you can mark where the mounting channel is going to go against the wall closest to the faucet. Mark the channel, and that is really easy to install.
The channel for the third small piece of glass is peel and stick. On the bottom of the channel is a very high bond double stick adhesive that bonds to the porcelain with no drilling required. And because the channel is only about eight inches long, after the doors are installed, you can still sit and bathe a child or a pet without an uncomfortable channel extending across the edge of your bathtub.
Once the channel’s installed, put the third small piece of glass into the channel and line it up plumb with the wall, again using the level, and mark it.
Then drill more holes into the tile, put in anchors, and attach the wall channel vertically by screwing it into the tile.
Plastic sweeps snap onto the channels and the edges of the glass to give you a watertight seal.



