re laying old quarry floor tiles?
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ace llani
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re laying old quarry floor tiles?
I'm renovating the basement room in my old Victorian terrace.
The floor had no damp proofing, just the old fashioned 25mm thick tiles, laid touching, onto blobs of cement.
I dug the floor out, laid a DPM, 100mm Kingspan, 100mm concrete, so now solid, dry and level.
I want to re use to old tiles to keep the character, and I'm wondering what to set them with?
Guess ordinary floor tile adhesive would suffice?
The floor had no damp proofing, just the old fashioned 25mm thick tiles, laid touching, onto blobs of cement.
I dug the floor out, laid a DPM, 100mm Kingspan, 100mm concrete, so now solid, dry and level.
I want to re use to old tiles to keep the character, and I'm wondering what to set them with?
Guess ordinary floor tile adhesive would suffice?
- mangocrazy
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Re: re laying old quarry floor tiles?
I think that quarry tiles are normally set into a screed or cement mix, tile adhesive doesn't really have enough grab for quarries. I had a quarry tile floor laid in two rooms and they were laid onto a cement and sand mix with 10mm gaps all round, then when the cement/sand had set, the tiles were grouted with more sand and cement mix, in my case with black pigment added.
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- mangocrazy
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Re: re laying old quarry floor tiles?
Due to various unplanned events I found that either cat piss or fresh orange juice will clean any cementitious residue on quarry tiles that remains after grouting. The problem I found is persuading the cat to piss with equal coverage across the floor. Orange juice (or diluted brick cleaner) is easier to apply...
There is no cloud, just somebody else's computer.
