I've watched several DIY shower unit installs. I'm getting a plumber to do most of the work since it's the first time working with such units, and there was existing bath/shower combo pipe work to be removed or rerouted.
But I've got the drywall sheets up (aqua"gib"-like product). And despite many many measurements and careful sanding, it turns out the old timber frame is concave-bowed in the middle. Stud is 2400 (ie 2410mm ceiling). top and bottom line up, but there's a 5mm gap in the corner. My level is about 750mm long, and in every plane and along every stud and dwang/nog, it tested as true and flat before I put the drywall on. Vertical, horizontal, diagonal. Only a few peeks of light at the joint gaps. But put the drywall sheet on - lo and behold, 5mm bow in the center of the mixer/shower head sheet. I've haven't got a third sheet into the tiny room to check the second wall.
Is it savalageable? What can I do? it's a two sided liner with moulding to go in. I REALLY don't have cash to pay a builder or anyone else (a $10,000+ bill elsewhere to pay).
How can I not get such bow in the future - I checked this _dozens_ of times, paranoid level of checking.
And what is the fix? It's a multistory house, with handiplank wall, and I'm not going to replace the whole stud (@ good chunk of wall).