So we purchased a different towel rack and need to remove the entire ceramic towel rack.
Ceramic towel bar holder removal.
The towel rack is the kind you see in classic 1970s bathroom design.
The towel bar and toilet paper holder are glued to the wall.
Ceramic towel bar anchor posts rarely fail.
Applying new adhesive against remnant setting material pushes the replacement fixture away from the drywall giving a raised uneven appearance.
It s important to sand and sp.
These ceramic bar holders are not budging and are permanently on the wall for life.
Short video on how to remove standard ceramic bathroom fixtures.
Once it has turned halfway the bar should pop out tired of those old towel bars.
Removal of such items always leaves a whole that needs to be patched with drywall unless you can remove it neatly enough to place another one in its place and that s a tough job.
I need to know what kind of putty cement etc would be best to re affix it in this hole.
What is the best way to remove them without to much damage to the wall or if one ceramic holder and be found i am open to replacing the broken one and reinstalling the acrylic rod.
The receiver ends part that holds the bar should be a separate part than the part connected to the wall.
But the plastic bar can snap sag develop cracks fade or discolor as it ages and is exposed to cleaning chemicals.
The towel bar and toilet paper holder are glued to the wall.
All ceramic towel bars and paper holders i ve seen are cemented to the drywall tile and often to a stud with a whole mess of this gooey cement.
Points awarded for best answer.
One of the ceramic porcelain towel holders fell off the wall leaving a square hole in the dry wall where it used to be this is how it was originally installed.
This same procedure should work for similar items that are mounted to drywall.
Slowly turn the receiver end upwards.
Remove the old towel bar.
Once the bar pops out remove it.
The original bar is one piece and since the ends are locked into place you can t just slip in a new one.
There s just caulking around them towel racks bath tissue holders i can see no visible screws or anything no idea how they re attached to the walls very little demolition experience haha o i ve tried experimenting on one of the tissue holders that was mounted to a vanity by cutting the caulking with a box cutter then trying to crow bar it off but with a fair bit of force it showed.
When replacing a towel bar or other ceramic fixture that fell off the wall due to abuse or poor installation simply remove all the old setting material and reuse the existing hole.
Cut your new replacement bar to size.
Continue to unscrew the receiver ends.
Replace a cracked sagging or ugly towel bar.