Discuss Bathroom backer boards in the Bathroom Tiling Advice area at TilersForums.com.

hi Rich,so does this mean to say that for the last god no how many years i have not been dooing the job right theese backer boards do you know how long they have been around? just finished a job today where it states on the tile boxes to use ply on wooden floors and also use pva to seal it with {whitch i dont use by the way}, been tiling a long time now but im always willing to listen
 
R

Rich

Did you read all the replies to that thread? Had some brilliant responses from guys that know a lot more than me. The problem is really the poor quality of the ply on the market now a days. I do not tile straight onto ply anymore as I have seen so many failures (thankfully not with my own work) when tiles have been laid onto ply. The backer boards give a fantastic surface to tile onto and for the price I think they are well worth using. A very large percentage of my work is correcting failed installations and 9 times out of 10 tiles have lost their bond to a ply back round.

This isnt to say that every floor tiled straight onto ply is doomed, but if using backer boards reduces the risk of failures then I think its worth it.
 
M

MickFussey3

I am taking up the floor boards because if I put the backing board or the ply on top of the existing floorboards then the tiles I would have at least a 16mm if not more of a trip hazard into my bathroom.
As I explain in the previous email there is only 22mm to play with to the height of hallway threshold, I want as little trip as poss , so I have decided with the help of all to take up the floorboards put noggin's in frequently, lay 12mm ply screwed to the joists & noggin's, then water proof membrane stuck to the ply, 6mm backing boards stuck and screwed to the ply and not the joists then 10mm tiles giving me 6mm threshold. When I lay my new carpet I will put a chamfered gradual wedge under the carpet to lose the trip.What do you think ? is that solid enough or will it crack???
 
C

chille

think i will stick to what i know works best,old school hard to change Rich all this newish stuff who knows,why fix it if its not broken

I can see where your coming from, but if we all believed/carried on with the things we did 5 years ago there would be no improvements. It wasn't that long ago that asbestos was the best thing to use for a whole load of things, now we know different and try to improve on things.
 
C

chille

I am taking up the floor boards because if I put the backing board or the ply on top of the existing floorboards then the tiles I would have at least a 16mm if not more of a trip hazard into my bathroom.
As I explain in the previous email there is only 22mm to play with to the height of hallway threshold, I want as little trip as poss , so I have decided with the help of all to take up the floorboards put noggin's in frequently, lay 12mm ply screwed to the joists & noggin's, then water proof membrane stuck to the ply, 6mm backing boards stuck and screwed to the ply and not the joists then 10mm tiles giving me 6mm threshold. When I lay my new carpet I will put a chamfered gradual wedge under the carpet to lose the trip.What do you think ? is that solid enough or will it crack???

I really hope it works ok for you, but if it was my house 12mm ply on top of joists wouldn't even be considered. If you want to avoid a 16mm step up then use Karndean or something similar
 
M

Mike

I am taking up the floor boards because if I put the backing board or the ply on top of the existing floorboards then the tiles I would have at least a 16mm if not more of a trip hazard into my bathroom.
As I explain in the previous email there is only 22mm to play with to the height of hallway threshold, I want as little trip as poss , so I have decided with the help of all to take up the floorboards put noggin's in frequently, lay 12mm ply screwed to the joists & noggin's, then water proof membrane stuck to the ply, 6mm backing boards stuck and screwed to the ply and not the joists then 10mm tiles giving me 6mm threshold. When I lay my new carpet I will put a chamfered gradual wedge under the carpet to lose the trip.What do you think ? is that solid enough or will it crack???
12mm ply is not thick enough to prevent deflection, you need at least 15mm (bs standards)
 
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