T
t5_nel
Hi all,
I posted here a few months ago while I was getting estimates to have a large floor area tiled.
A large amount of the floor was wood parquet floor. The job seemed to go well and all was well BUT recently some of the tiles came loose (grout started to crack) and then some clearly are no longer attached well to floor.
The tiler said that as the parquet was still sound on the floor and not varnished adhesion would be okay. So basically he said we did not have to lift the wood and it would be fine
I would say about 10% of tiles are affected. The tiler came back to look and did painfully(!) accept responsibility. He has agreed to rectify it at his cost (parts and labour) but has said that we need to prepare the floor - so although I am pissed off about it I am just going to move on and accept that it happened.
From his research he thinks that what has gone wrong is the fact that the parquet floor is on bitumen and this causes the issue (I think Dunlop - adhesive manufacturer said this). Apparently you should not even latex over bitumen as ther can be issues
What I really want to know is what is the best course of action now as it is my responsibility to prepare the floor for retiling. Basically tiles and wood need to come up (tiler will do that) and then I will be left with sticky old bitumen on concrete floor. Tiler does not want to go on top of bitumen as adhesive manufacturer said bad idea. Also some of the rooms will not need retiling as they were on concrete , latex or marmox board (complex I know) and I would like to keep the levels as close as possible.
Option one is to ply it all - can I use a thinner ply than 18mm??? This will be awful for the levels. I was justwondering because the ply does not need to level the floor or reduce deflection but just provide some height and provide a good substrate for bonding
What other options are there that will not cost the earth (I have been quouted £900 inc. to ply the area)
Thanks
More detail available
Tim
I posted here a few months ago while I was getting estimates to have a large floor area tiled.
A large amount of the floor was wood parquet floor. The job seemed to go well and all was well BUT recently some of the tiles came loose (grout started to crack) and then some clearly are no longer attached well to floor.
The tiler said that as the parquet was still sound on the floor and not varnished adhesion would be okay. So basically he said we did not have to lift the wood and it would be fine
I would say about 10% of tiles are affected. The tiler came back to look and did painfully(!) accept responsibility. He has agreed to rectify it at his cost (parts and labour) but has said that we need to prepare the floor - so although I am pissed off about it I am just going to move on and accept that it happened.
From his research he thinks that what has gone wrong is the fact that the parquet floor is on bitumen and this causes the issue (I think Dunlop - adhesive manufacturer said this). Apparently you should not even latex over bitumen as ther can be issues
What I really want to know is what is the best course of action now as it is my responsibility to prepare the floor for retiling. Basically tiles and wood need to come up (tiler will do that) and then I will be left with sticky old bitumen on concrete floor. Tiler does not want to go on top of bitumen as adhesive manufacturer said bad idea. Also some of the rooms will not need retiling as they were on concrete , latex or marmox board (complex I know) and I would like to keep the levels as close as possible.
Option one is to ply it all - can I use a thinner ply than 18mm??? This will be awful for the levels. I was justwondering because the ply does not need to level the floor or reduce deflection but just provide some height and provide a good substrate for bonding
What other options are there that will not cost the earth (I have been quouted £900 inc. to ply the area)
Thanks
More detail available
Tim