W
WetSaw
A green screed is one that hasn't completely cured.
Ah I see, so do you think I'd get away with, digging the tiles, putting down a polythene sheet screeding with 1:4 cement:sand mix.A green screed is one that hasn't completely cured.
You should lay a screed of at least 50mmThanks Albert, is this the one? What sort of depth should I go to with that?
https://www.bal-adhesives.com/products/quickset-cement/
Sorry pdc, I didn't follow that. Are you suggesting I could put green screed down on the quarry tiles, with the Schluter Ditra on top of that?
Thanks Bond, so I'd dig my tiles up, lay down the polythene sheet and then lay this cement on top?
Thanks Ajax, I've had word from one supplier who couldn't supply such a small amount. But I've given Breedon a try now too.
I've got the same issue. Did you find any solution?just resurrecting this thread as have a similar situation but wanted to keep information all in one place for any other users. Quarry tiles on top of soil/ash with no dpc in 1930s kitchen; sloping 10mm left to right across the room. In addition, 1990s extension has concrete floor with dpc, which also very uneven (bad workamnship) but is also 24mm lower than the height of the quarry tiles in original part of house. If i remove the quarry tiles, could i did up a small amount of the soil and lay 50mm cement layer with dpc then self level the whole thing?