The Morning Call (Sunday)

Replacing a cracked undermount sink

- By Tim Carter

Q: My bathroom was remodeled about two months ago, and the vanity has a granite top with a china undermount sink. Yesterday I noticed a long crack in the sink that extends up from the drain hole. The contractor claims I did it by dropping something. I didn’t. He won’t repair it. What can be done? Howmight it have happened? I feel I need a new sink, but I can’t figure out how to install one because when I lay on my back and look up I don’t see any clips holding the sink to the underside of the stone. I’m so angry at the contractor. Help!

A: Few things are more frustratin­g than contractor­s who run away from problems instead of running toward them. Based on the incoming help requests at my website, I see an alarming trend of contractor­s who are reluctant to honor warranties. It’s hard to comprehend, but I feel it’s caused by the huge demand for building services right now. Contractor­s can just start a new job and make more money rather than go to a past job to work for free fixing an error or faulty product.

I’ve been a master plumber for decades and have installed countless sinks, including china undermount ones like the reader has in today’s question. Fortunatel­y, the photos they sent showed that they have plenty of room to work under the sink, and putting in a new sink shouldn’t be that hard.

First, let’s look at why the sink might have cracked. The first thing I’d consider would be the drain assembly. The plumber that installed the drain might have overtighte­ned the nut on the drain assembly that compresses the drain trim ring to the china surface. The drain stopper fits inside this trim ring that you see from above when you brush your teeth.

In all my years I’ve never seen a china sink come from the factory with a firing crack defect. It’s possible, but it’s very rare. No matter how the crack happened, there’s no acceptable fix in my opinion other than to remove and replace the existing sink.

The lack of clips or hardware under the sink to hold it tight against the stone top is very unusual. I’d never install an undermount sink this way. It appears the contractor, or his subs, used silicone caulk to hold the sink in place. This is a recipe for long-term disaster. I can’t begin to share with you the number of failed sink photos homeowners have sent me where sinks were installed just with caulk and suddenly drop once filled with water or heavy dishes.

I’d empty everything out of the vanity cabinet below and disconnect the sink from the

drain piping. I’d also remove the drain tailpiece from the sink. Then I’d stack some old towels or empty cardboard boxes in the vanity base to catch the sink when it suddenly releases from the stone top.

Next, I’d get a new stiff 1.5-inch putty knife and, using a hammer, I’d carefully tap the knife at an angle so one tip of the knife, not the entire flat edge, drives between the underside of the stone and the top rim of the sink. I’d do this from above looking down on the sink — not from below, lying in the cabinet. Hold the knife parallel to the underside of the stone top and

tap it carefully. Avoid having the hammer touch the polished edge of the stone top cutout. You surely don’t want to chip that.

If the sink is held in place with silicone caulk, as I suspect, the knife will cut through the caulk. At some point, you’ll start to see the sink sag, although it could drop suddenly with no warning. This is why you have the cushioning in place to prevent damage to the vanity.

Once the sink is out, scrape any excess caulk from the underside of the stone top. You can buy solvents that will soften silicone caulk. Read the safety

warnings about working with these chemicals indoors.

You’ll install the new sink using an undermount hardware kit. There are several available, and many require you to epoxy a threaded post to the underside of the stone top. These are easy to work with; you just have to make sure you install them in the right position so they don’t touch the outer rim of the replacemen­t china sink.

It’s important to understand that the epoxy will not adhere well to any stone that has silicone caulk smeared on it. You either have to remove the caulk smear or grind it off using a small rotary tool so you expose rough stone that the epoxy will stick to with no issues.

Numerous online videos show how to install undermount sinks and how to hold the sink in place as you tighten the hardware to the epoxied threaded posts.

When you go to reinstall the drainpipe assembly, understand that the cone-shaped washer that fits inside the hole is what helps create the seal. You don’t need the nut overtighte­ned to get a leak-proof seal. Hand-tight plus an additional one-half to three-quarters turn is all you need.

 ?? TIM CARTER ?? The red arrow points to a nasty crack in the china bathroom sink. Overtighte­ning of the nut on the drain assembly may be to blame.
TIM CARTER The red arrow points to a nasty crack in the china bathroom sink. Overtighte­ning of the nut on the drain assembly may be to blame.

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