steveml
Well-Known Member
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- Mar 13, 2014
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I would be surprised if a piece of wood fell and did that, and for that reason I've never suggested it. When I mentioned lined, I don't mean leaned, I apologise - I should have been clearer and said aligned (but still fastened).In which case, why didn't it fall off completely? This issue is less how thick the panel is, but how strong the screws holding it in place.
The whack was strong enough to pull screws out and leave a huge dent - on a flimsy dust cover lined up against the edges of the bath frame, this would have been enough to make it fall off completely.
I am truly flummoxed that anyone can look at that panel and think a falling plank of plywood could do that. The depth of the dent itself, perfectly centred proves that force was aimed squarely at the middle. This is inconsistent with a bit of wood falling from above.
A screw and it's size only become relevant when we see what it's screwed into. Most baths are timber framed, but we'd need to know that before we can be confident. I agree that it looks like something has hit it in the middle, it would need a kick or something to dent it like that.
Ask any plumber if you don't believe bath panels are merely dust covers. They're nearly always very thin plastic, steel or wood, and are for decoration only, they don't need to carry a single ounce of weight. Have a look at your own. You'll be able to dint it with a kick quite easily (don't try this though).