P
Pete G
Hi there. Firstly thanks to those who answered a previous post on this subject. I have some more details now..
Basically i'm getting a loft extension done & plan to tile most (if not all) of the loft floor. I undertand this is not common, but not unheard of.
The floor structure will be 2 metal beams at each end, across the width of the house. Wooden joists (not sure if 4"x3" or 6"x4") will be laid across these, from front to back. (Floor area is @22'x18').
It will be 1 large living space, except for a 10'*6' walled area containing a bathroom.
The builders generally lay tongue-&-groove mdf floorboards, 18mm thick. Following advice here i've said i'll need 12mm ply sheets screwed on top of that. However, the intention is to lay down electric matting underfloor heating. I understand that, with a wood substrate (ie. not concrete), i won't need insulation board, but i read a post earleir where travertine tiles had cracked on ply with underfloor heating, which a member suggested was due to expansion/contraction of the ply, & somthing that a layer of Durabase CI (between the ply & tiles) would have prevented.
SO question is, will i need to use Durabase (or similar) matting to be on the safe side, & if so is it expensive? And does the combined
18mm mdf + 12mm ply (screwed every 300mm) + (underfloor heating mat) + flexible adhesive + 1cm thick (prob. ceramic) tiles sound solid enough not to move? (Sorry for the long explanation, i tried to cover all the details!)
I've negotiated the ply into the quoted cost but anything else i'll have to pay for & the budget is pretty stretched..
Basically i'm getting a loft extension done & plan to tile most (if not all) of the loft floor. I undertand this is not common, but not unheard of.
The floor structure will be 2 metal beams at each end, across the width of the house. Wooden joists (not sure if 4"x3" or 6"x4") will be laid across these, from front to back. (Floor area is @22'x18').
It will be 1 large living space, except for a 10'*6' walled area containing a bathroom.
The builders generally lay tongue-&-groove mdf floorboards, 18mm thick. Following advice here i've said i'll need 12mm ply sheets screwed on top of that. However, the intention is to lay down electric matting underfloor heating. I understand that, with a wood substrate (ie. not concrete), i won't need insulation board, but i read a post earleir where travertine tiles had cracked on ply with underfloor heating, which a member suggested was due to expansion/contraction of the ply, & somthing that a layer of Durabase CI (between the ply & tiles) would have prevented.
SO question is, will i need to use Durabase (or similar) matting to be on the safe side, & if so is it expensive? And does the combined
18mm mdf + 12mm ply (screwed every 300mm) + (underfloor heating mat) + flexible adhesive + 1cm thick (prob. ceramic) tiles sound solid enough not to move? (Sorry for the long explanation, i tried to cover all the details!)
I've negotiated the ply into the quoted cost but anything else i'll have to pay for & the budget is pretty stretched..