Y
Your opinion
My bathroom tiles, fitted by a contractor, are crackingexactly along the joins in the plywood boarding underneath.
The ceramic tiles were laid on 6mm ply on top of tongue and groove floorboards using (I'm told) flexible adhesive. The ply was laid with the long side running front to back in line with the boards underneath (not 90 degrees)
The contractor is trying to tell me that the reasons for the cracks is because there's movement in the joists. The joists have been laid for 70 years, a surveyor has looked and sees no sign of movement or rotting and so I could do with some advice on what could be the cause of the cracks.
In my mind, they should have used minimum 12mm of ply and laid it at 90 degrees to minimise the natural flex in the floor.
Does anyone else have experience of this?
The ceramic tiles were laid on 6mm ply on top of tongue and groove floorboards using (I'm told) flexible adhesive. The ply was laid with the long side running front to back in line with the boards underneath (not 90 degrees)
The contractor is trying to tell me that the reasons for the cracks is because there's movement in the joists. The joists have been laid for 70 years, a surveyor has looked and sees no sign of movement or rotting and so I could do with some advice on what could be the cause of the cracks.
In my mind, they should have used minimum 12mm of ply and laid it at 90 degrees to minimise the natural flex in the floor.
Does anyone else have experience of this?