Guest viewing is limited

Discuss Edwardian Floor - deep set ground in dirt in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

D

Deleted member 52248

Good afternoon all,

Discovered a beautiful Edwardian floor underneath some horrific 60s bright orange floor tiles in our new house. Had a quote to get it cleaned up but way out of our budget so decided to have a crack at DIY. Took it from this:

Ns0fQmt.jpg


To this:

DhKPYkw.jpg



However whilst it looks good overall, once you get close and look at individual tiles they still have a fair bit of ground in dirt, and I'd like to get this removed before I go on to sealing the floor. Example:

09MjwGZ.jpg


Tile is perfectly smooth to the touch (apart from that sadly cracked one, RIP!). I've been using "Lithofin KF Tile Restorer" which has done a decent job overall but can't seem to get me to the next stage where I want to be. Is there a better product I could be using, a better application method, or do I need to be looking at floor polisher hire/purchase? If so, what advice on products/pads for those (never used one)

Thanks in advance for your knowledge and advice,
Tom.
 
T

Tile Shop

First off, good job so far. Hate to see lovely floors like that get covered and neglected.

You may find a light acid wash will even the colour and remove some of the staining. Something like the Lithofin Cement Residue Remover. Diluted about 1:8ish, mop it over, give it a good scrub and rinse.

Our resident Lithofin chappy @Lithofin BOB will castrate me or anyone who does not mention, do a small inconspicuous test area first and avoid contact with metal.... and keep the area well ventilated.

If the black specks are excess bitumen from the vinyl tiles, you may find a product like the LTP Solvex will help.

Once cleaned as best as possible, give it a seal with the Lithofin Stain Stop or the LTP Mattstone.

Don't expect any miracles though. Based on what was over it, you may have already reached the limit of what is achievable but the above may help take some of the ground-in grimeyness away.

Best of luck :)
 
C

Concrete guy

These tiles can be mechanically polished (actually you can grind off the top 0.5mm to 1mm and refinish them) but I think it starts to look unnatural and a bit fake.

Like other respondents I'd be very happy with what you've done so far, maybe try some of the suggested chemicals but leave it there.

It's a main entrance and it's going to get used and grubby, particularly in winter so just enjoy it for what it is, a floor that looks attractive despite being close to a century old.
 

Reply to Edwardian Floor - deep set ground in dirt in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com

Subscribe to Tilers Forums

There are similar tiling threads here

    • Like
Hello, this is my first post here, but I have been doing some reading. I am going to be tiling...
Replies
7
Views
420
Hi all, I'm an enthusiastic DIY'er (first time poster) who has been slowly chipping away at an...
Replies
10
Views
215
I had a small leak in the main water line before the stop tap in my 1950s house. The copper pipe...
Replies
1
Views
2K
    • Like
Hi, I am planning on tiling my concrete garage floor with porcelain tiles. The concrete was laid...
Replies
2
Views
2K
We are having some issues with our newly laid tiles. Within several weeks of being laid, we...
Replies
9
Views
4K
David John
D

Advertisement

Thread Information

Title
Edwardian Floor - deep set ground in dirt
Prefix
N/A
Forum
Canada Tile Advice
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
10

Which tile adhesive brand did you use most this year?

  • Palace

    Votes: 9 6.1%
  • Kerakoll

    Votes: 14 9.5%
  • Ardex

    Votes: 11 7.4%
  • Mapei

    Votes: 44 29.7%
  • Ultra Tile

    Votes: 17 11.5%
  • BAL

    Votes: 35 23.6%
  • Wedi

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Benfer

    Votes: 2 1.4%
  • Tilemaster

    Votes: 21 14.2%
  • Weber

    Votes: 18 12.2%
  • Other (any other brand not listed)

    Votes: 15 10.1%
  • Nicobond

    Votes: 7 4.7%
  • Norcros

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Kelmore

    Votes: 4 2.7%
Top