Discuss Preparing the floor in the British & UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

M

Mike Mike

Actually I said controversial Jay...

Agree that getting a good key is crucial which is why I said prime it and put down a thin layer of smoothing compound instead of tiling directly onto the painted concrete.

That is what smoothing compound is for: providing a good, flat, smooth, strong key for the finished floor covering, whether it is tiles, glued vinyl / homogenous PVC / linoleum, or whatever else.

We do all those kinds of flooring, not just tiling. Thousands of m2 a year, literally, in hospitals, schools, large office buildings, as well as hundreds of wet rooms with 2mm vinyl tanking on the floor and walls, hot welded.

The advice I gave that chap will work and he will save time, money and mess.

If you want to try and talk him out of it that's fine, but please direct any further doubts and worries to him instead of me. I know that the 136m2 school library I have to sand, prime and apply smoothing compound to tomorrow in readiness to receive linoleum on Friday will also work, and that if I tried to use an 8" angle grinder it would take me until Christmas to get the concrete clean of all "deleterious or unstable layers".... :sleep1:
 
M

Mike Mike

Find that a bit over the top, I work with Swedes and they say Norway is much stricter than Sweden and we only go up 15cm of the wall in wetrooms with the vynal


Hello Fliselege,

I don't know about Norwegian regulations but regulations for wetrooms in Sweden say whole floor must be tanked, plus 10cm up the walls. In the Wet Zone 1 (shower +1m either side) the walls must be tanked, and if the shower is on an outside wall then the entire wall must be tanked.

Our firm tanks the entire wetroom walls in vinyl, exactly the same as if the customer was just having våtrum plastmatta as the finished wall covering, except we tile over it. Here are the approved systems. Godkända plastmattor som tätskikt under kakel och klinker - GVK.se

That is in excess of the regulations but thatäs how we do it, and customers are happy to pay for it, for the extra peace of mind. It also means that "Papa Polska" cannot do it, because it takes more skill and specialist tools than tätskiktsfolier, so it differentiates our firm.

I assume if you only use vinyl on the floor then you're using tätskiktsfolier or vätskebaserade tätskikt in Wet Zone 1??? That's fine, we could do it that way too, but choose vinyl instead.
 
S

slacker

well it looks like the paint is going to be removed, found a few places where it is flaking.
I was hoping i wouldn't have to strip the paint and it looks like there are quite a few layers of the nasty red stuff.
I wont be using paint stripper and a heat gun though, If the fumes dont kill me the fire probably will lol.
 
M

Mike Mike

well it looks like the paint is going to be removed, found a few places where it is flaking.
I was hoping i wouldn't have to strip the paint and it looks like there are quite a few layers of the nasty red stuff.
I wont be using paint stripper and a heat gun though, If the fumes dont kill me the fire probably will lol.

Out of interest, when you have done it, would you mind uploading a photo and advising what method you used and how long it took please? I'd be curious that's all...
 
S

slacker

Out of interest, when you have done it, would you mind uploading a photo and advising what method you used and how long it took please? I'd be curious that's all...

Will do, It will be in a few weeks time due to lack of funds at the moment because the person who was going to do the work for me had me waste a lot of money on ditra matting and adhesive that i didn't need probably for one of his other jobs but thats another story.
 
M

Mike Mike

Cheers Slacker, I'm not trying to be funny or anything, I'm just curious to know what exactly the guys here mean by "you need to remove the paint", and how it's done. As I said, in my firm we sand all floors with a rotary floor machine and 24 grit paper, prime and then apply smoothing compound (which is not the same as SLC) then apply the finished flooring to that (tanking where appropriate).

The rotary floor machine gets rid of any flaking paint but does not remove it completely. So, short of a scabbling machine taking the top few mm off the screed, I'm intrigued as to what actually removes all the paint from a concrete screed, and how long it takes. Thanks.
 

Reply to Preparing the floor in the British & UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com

Subscribe to Tilers Forums

There are similar tiling threads here

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, Can't seem to find a solid answer as I realise so much depends on multiple factors. I'm...
Replies
0
Views
2K
We're quoting to rip up and replace a tiled floor with Limestone tiles. I'm looking for advice...
Replies
8
Views
3K
    • Like
Hi, I am planning on tiling my concrete garage floor with porcelain tiles. The concrete was laid...
Replies
2
Views
2K
Hello all, Hoping that once again I can get some good advice on here, you were invaluable when...
Replies
3
Views
2K

Trending UK Tiling Threads

UK Tiling Forum Popular

Advertisement

Thread Information

Title
Preparing the floor
Prefix
N/A
Forum
British & UK Tiling Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
25

Which tile adhesive brand did you use most this year?

  • Palace

    Votes: 9 6.0%
  • Kerakoll

    Votes: 14 9.4%
  • Ardex

    Votes: 11 7.4%
  • Mapei

    Votes: 44 29.5%
  • Ultra Tile

    Votes: 17 11.4%
  • BAL

    Votes: 35 23.5%
  • Wedi

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Benfer

    Votes: 2 1.3%
  • Tilemaster

    Votes: 21 14.1%
  • Weber

    Votes: 18 12.1%
  • Other (any other brand not listed)

    Votes: 16 10.7%
  • Nicobond

    Votes: 7 4.7%
  • Norcros

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Kelmore

    Votes: 4 2.7%

You're browsing the UK Tiling Forum category on TilersForums.com, the tile advice website no matter which country you reside. Our UK based online tiling forum has 48,000 members and started out in 2006.

Top