The glass itself appears to be very robust to me. The edges are sanded clean. A plastic frame, the lamps and the suspension (2x metal elements) are glued back clean. For the power connection a sufficiently long cable with plug is available. The can - like me - also cut to get the mirror to the wall outlet. The cable itself is then "captured" between the wall and mirrors from plastic profile, so it is not sticking out the bottom. Good solved.
The light of the mirror, however, is a joke. We have deliberately chosen for T5 lamps, because they make a much brighter and usually more pleasant light than LED strips. This only works if the T5 tube is mounted directly beneath the frosted glass, and not next to it. Then who comes up with something? The light that is to emerge from the mirror actually forward, now enters the left and right of - because the lamps show from the inside out, and at the outer edges, there's no reflector or something. Thus the wall is illuminated behind the mirror basically - and which is reflected from the wall, comes forward through the milk glass.
In ancient bath as a mirror not only half the space well and especially the face very well-lit. This mirror here is more of a small Funzel, details on the face can be recognized only with difficulty. In my view, a bad design. We will keep it anyway and install behind the frosted glass cutouts either homemade reflectors, or complementary LED light strips. For this purpose it needs then probably an extra transformer. Pity!
Three stars because the glass well and the assembly is simple.
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Update: After a request from the shop, was sent to me material so that I can improve the "light" situation itself. Because this happened on goodwill and also still carried out an explanation of the originally selected construction method, I have raised the rating to 4 stars.