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🚀 Upgrade Your Shower Game!
The Tile Redi RT3460R-PVC-SQBN Shower Pan is a premium, all-in-one solution for your bathroom renovation. This one-piece, leak-proof shower base features a pre-pitched design for optimal drainage and comes ready to tile, allowing you to customize the look to match your style. With easy installation and a designer brushed nickel drain included, this shower pan is both functional and aesthetically pleasing, making it a perfect choice for modern bathrooms.










| Manufacturer | Tile Redi USA, LLC |
| Part Number | RT3460R-PVC-SQBN |
| Item Weight | 28 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 34 x 60 x 5.75 inches |
| Country of Origin | USA |
| Item model number | RT3460R-PVC-SQBN |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Size | 60" W x 34" D |
| Color | Brushed Nickel |
| Style | Right Designer Grate |
| Finish | Brushed Nickel |
| Material | Polyurethane |
| Shape | Rectangle |
| Item Package Quantity | 1 |
| Special Features | CommericalADA Compliant |
| Included Components | Drain Plate, Shower Pan, 2-inch Drain |
| Batteries Included? | No |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Warranty Description | 3 Year Limited |
O**A
Fit right in my bathroom tab to shower remodel
Contractor was pleased with the quality and ease of install.
C**O
Awesome Product
I’ve put dozens of these in and never run into any issues. I actually won’t do a shower without it. Not leaks. Easy to install. Tile it. Done. I don’t use their epoxy. I just use thinset.
M**E
Very light weight material (styrofoam) for what your paying for ...
Very light weight material (styrofoam) for what your paying for. Comes to you most likely damaged,needs product improvement. TOO HIGH PRICED !!!!!!! Seller did resolve problems with this order. Excellent customer service.
S**N
Box came damaged,didnt open, amazon would not help!
Product might be fine box isnt. Amazon would not return or help. Hope this 800 dollar item is worth the thousands I spend a year, goodbye Amazon will be canceling everything!
A**R
Overpriced
I expected the pan to be stronger and more durable for the price that I paid, the part came with a piece broke off . the company offered to replace the pan but I had a project that had to be finished. The glue that they told me to buy didn't work well either.
T**.
Bad product.
Installation instructions don't and can't work for the 3' x 5' pan. Check the blogs for installation. Will never buy again, waste of time.
J**A
Update to: Dont buy!!!
Update 3 months after install comments: the tile redi pan has started to flex more, indicating the bond between it and the plywood subfloor is degrading. The grout lines are popping between the 2" hex shower floor tiles, in the center so it has to be flexing. Since I had shot about 5 cans of foam into the thing when I first installed it (and it had not stuck to the submortar- see initial comments, below) im going to have to remove some of the shower floor tiles, then sink screws down thru the Redi pan, mortar, foam and into the subfloor ply and try to pull the thing down. Then seal the holes and retile. Im not optomistic. Sad thing is, i had bought two of these and now im very afraid to install the second one. Close to a grand wasted. Sigh. Original review- I like the concept of the waterproof shower pan, and looked forward to saving the time and labor of the various steps involved in making a mortar based shower pan on the second floor of a wood frame house. I like the light weight and one piece construction, and the fit was exact to dimension. What I did NOT like were, in order of observation: 1) the finish on the top (tile side) is not what I expected for a product costing in the vicinity of a grand. Sure, it is going to be tiled over but his thing has pronounced ridges spaced every 4 inches of so in the corners where the sides meet the bottom. Since you are directed many times to NOT cut, drill, sand, perforate or otherwise disturb the coating, it means I will have to use a fairly thick layer of thinset to smooth the surface before I lay the tile, thicker than I had planned as the notched trowel bumps over these ridges. 2) Im installing this on a plywood floor so it requires I make a waterproof pan to put this waterproof pan into. HUH? sure, I understand you dont want the plywood to leach the water out of the mix, but by using a tarpaper, visqueen or garbage bag barrier, how does the mortar "glue" the Redi pan to the subfloor? (Clue- it doesnt, it just relies of its own weight when applied over wooden subfloors, I compromised and used the same red stuff I used on the concrete backerboards). Ohkay.... it says I have to do this so the "milkshake consistency" bedding mud required under this waterproof pan doesnt leak down thru the plywood. This was a step I had not anticipated, and caused a lil consternation as to how to keep the thin mud from flowing down the borehole in the plywood for the drain but not be so high a dam as to keep the pan from seating fully. I ended up using kids playdoh around the borehole, stuck pretty good to the red waterproofing layer I painted on the plywood first. 3) I had to measure and calculate the thickness of a mud bed to seat this into based on the depths of the pockets underneath. Seems to me since these are uniform at the factory, they could just TELL you how deep to make the "milk shake consistency' base. It doesnt change!! 4) Because of #2&3 the bedding mud is supposed to fully fill those pockets underneath BUT there is no place for the air being displaced to go! Think pushing an invereted glass down into a sink of water, keeps wanting to pop up. Kinda hard to push down too, particularly when the instructions stress you are NOT supposed to stand on it. Be prepeared to shoot screws into the studs just above the pan to help lock it down as it floats. Surely the company could have drilled air release holes in the sides??? And 5) the main complaint....the drains are an EXACT FIT WITH ZERO zero (did i mention zero?!) TOLERANCE. There is no compression ring, everything must be glued pvC or abs. Now this isnt tough if you have access to the drain from underneath, just take your time and dry fit before you glue. However in my case I DIDNT have access. What a pain in the @$$! I had to create a new P trap with 2 inch pipe so there wasnt a lot of flex, or literal wiggle room. I contacted Redi company on this asking if there was some sort of compresssion fitting I could use. Short answer was no. I asked how I was supposed to apply the pvc glue, lower the pan into place and compress/level it as I aligned the glued joints up within the 30 seconds or so i had before the glue hardened- particularly as I was not sure how far the pan was going to sink down onto the drain stub up. Sure I was able to test and dry fit the pvc but had no idea how far it was going to sink in the mud, and how much stub to leave up. The company reps suggestion was to "start at the drain and work fast". Gee thanks. I ended up making a series of bushings (with the help of a rotary tool) that allowed the stub to actually stick up thru their pan about a foot high. I "greased" the whole thing with the slowest setting pvc glue (after I laid the bedding mud) I could find and used it to align the pan as it slid down- one less thing to worry about as I leveled. Then I used one of those internal pvc pipe cutter discs to cut the pipe off at a the right depth. Woulda been a bunch easier if they had provided a compression seal but the company rep said they didnt make one for the trench drains. Despite my issues, I ordered a second one for an identical shower install since I have now fig¿ured it out. Great product? Not by a long shot. Worth the high $$$$? Possibly; but the best I can rate it is poor for use above wood subfloors in this no access situation.
Y**G
$700 dollar wasted in
Bought it and, it broke during installation. $700 dollar wasted in water
Trustpilot
3 days ago
1 week ago