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J

jobirdster

Hi;

I am a homeowner who recently had an extension built with a ensuite, we bought Pro warm electric underfloor heating kit and a 600 x 600 tile for the floor

We had them installed pre Christmas and this last week the middle section of the tiles have all lifted / peaked up and cracked. 4 tiles right in the middle of the bathroom are affected but all the other tiles now sound hollow too when we tap them.

The method for install was a thermal board, electric matt, screed and primer which came with the pro warm mat.
The tiler insists he has used a good quality adhesive Ultra Flexible
We did not turn the electric mat on for at least 6 weeks after install.
When I look at the back of the lifted tiles they are clean, no adhesive on them... adhesive seems to have stayed on the screed.

My questions.
Do we need expansion gaps on this size of floor with electric underfloor heating ? size is no larger that 3m x 3m tiles are 600mm x 600mm porcelain matt and are sold as suitable for underfloor

I have had another tiler out and he states that its either substandard adhesive, not being primed properly or no back buttering of the tiles.

The tiler who fitted them said he never back butters, the primer he used was supplied from the underfloor heating kit and the adhesive he used was Ultra Flexible.

Can anyone shed any light on what could have happened please ?

I need to find a solution/ idea of whats gone wrong so I can get the tiler to correct it.
 
J

jobirdster

Hi Julian;

Thank you for your comments.

Here are some pics. Tiler who did the job told me no expansion gaps is needed on such a small area and he only back butters to fill up on an uneven floor gap, but not as a standard way to install.

Pics are attached to show you
 

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Upvote 0

eddcottee

Arms
76
493
Ipswich
Julian, if there is no expansion gap around the perimeter then I get that is the likely cause, however when re-installing, along with the necessary expansion gap, would a decoupling membrane not be a good idea given what has happened to that floor already? Or do you not feel it necessary? Large format tiles with UFH says decoupling membrane to me, but I'm still learning the trade. Cheers. Edd
 
Upvote 0

Dhtiling

TF
Arms
112
463
Alaska
Pretty poor contact and trowel technique. Expansion joints at all edges are required. Back buttering helps with bonding, but not required. Heated floors were done properly for years before membranes came out, just looks to be a bad install. Shouldn't be able to see ridges from trowel.
 
Upvote 0

eddcottee

Arms
76
493
Ipswich
Pretty poor contact and trowel technique. Expansion joints at all edges are required. Back buttering helps with bonding, but not required. Heated floors were done properly for years before membranes came out, just looks to be a bad install. Shouldn't be able to see ridges from trowel.
I did wonder about those swirls from the trowel. I was taught you have them all running in the same direction, then when you set the tile in, move it a few mm each way and back into place which collapses the ridges and gives you a good bed. Was also taught to back butter and have seen what a difference this makes whenever lifting to occasionally check a tile. Usually immediately after setting a tile down, if I have to lift it for some reason, it's really very hard work to pull the tile back up. I can't imagine those tiles would have taken any effort to lift back up.
 
Upvote 0
J

J Sid

Julian, if there is no expansion gap around the perimeter then I get that is the likely cause, however when re-installing, along with the necessary expansion gap, would a decoupling membrane not be a good idea given what has happened to that floor already? Or do you not feel it necessary? Large format tiles with UFH says decoupling membrane to me, but I'm still learning the trade. Cheers. Edd
No membrane is needed with those tiles, thin porcelain and stone, yes.
Bad fixing technique, a membrane would not have helped in this situation Edd
 
Upvote 0

widler

TF
Esteemed
Arms
2,334
1,328
England
Is there skirting on, is it tiled up to wall tiles , a couple mm gap then Silicon or gap than no Silicon then skirts
[automerge]1582196135[/automerge]
Just seen its tiled up to tile, so Silicon .
I know every customer says it gradually turned the heating on, but hand in hete , did u wack it in full pelt straight away ?
[automerge]1582196175[/automerge]
‘Hand on heart’
 
Upvote 0
J

J Sid

Thanks to you all. You have mentioned exactly what the tiler who came to look at it said.

Just so I know, for an expansion gap what does it consist of ? Is the gap filled with Silicon or with tile grout ?
5mm gap round room, clean of adhesive and grout then silicon this gap
 
Upvote 0
J

jobirdster

Is there skirting on, is it tiled up to wall tiles , a couple mm gap then Silicon or gap than no Silicon then skirts
[automerge]1582196135[/automerge]
Just seen its tiled up to tile, so Silicon .
I know every customer says it gradually turned the heating on, but hand in hete , did u wack it in full pelt straight away ?
[automerge]1582196175[/automerge]
‘Hand on heart’

There is wall tiles on most of the walls, just two areas with a small tile skirt. Rest butt up to wall tiles.

We didn't have the electrics connected for at least 6 weeks, (might have been even longer) after the tiles were laid. We waited ages for the sparky to come back.

Hubby turned on and is sure he put it on 16 degrees at start and then up to 20 .
 
Upvote 0

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Title
Bathroom tiles lifted
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Best Bathroom Tiles
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Which tile adhesive brand did you use most this year?

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