Tile Forum | America Tile Forum

Welcome to America Tile Forum, the USA Tile Industry. The Tile Association of America.

Discuss Floor and wall tiling in a damp (ish) environment in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums. The USA and UK Tiling Forum (Also now Aus, Canada, ROI, and more)

P

philstor

Hi

First time posting, please bear with me as I am definately an amateur!

I am converting a downstairs room in my house to a shower room. The old wooden floor was rotten so has been replaced with a breathable limecrete floor (this avoids the problem with introducing a concrete subfloor which pushes any rising damp into the walls) I would like to tile with terracotta tiles, but need a laying/sealing method that will allow moisture to permeate through the tiles and adhesive - does anyone know of any products/methods for accomplishing this?

I also want to tile the walls, but again as they do not have a damproof course there is a small amount of rising damp. A building regs officer suggested a product called Olroyd P which is fixed to the wall and then rendered over before tiling - has anyone used this product and if so does it work? Are there any other products/methods that people have used that would allow me to tile onto a slightly damp wall?


Phil
 
U

user123

Hi Philstor and welcome to the forum!

That's a really interesting question you posted there, hence the thankyou, sorry I can't help you with that but before long the cavallery will arrive and tell you all about it, I'm sure. There are enough waterproofing options out there, but as to the 'but need a laying/sealing method that will allow moisture to permeate through the tiles and adhesive - does anyone know of any products/methods for accomplishing this?', well, I'm lost. Think mildew etc... quite a horrible thought.

Good luck to you and your project anyhow. :thumbsup:
 
D

DHTiling

Hi phil.....

Schluter do a membrane that will be perfect for your project...... Schlüter-DITRA - Schlüter-Systems

You will need a slow setting flexible adhesive for sticking this membrane onto the walls and floor.....With damp still present within the substrates then a slow set adhesive will hold better as fast setting adhesive will be hindered by the moisture....then the ditra membrane will allow the walls and floor to breathe and the moisture will vapourise within the dovetail of the matting.....

You can then tile onto the membrane with a standard set or rapid set cement based adhesive....

Suitable adhesive for sticking the membrane are Mapei keraflex maxi or ultraflex mono...or if you can only get BAL then.. green screed adhesive or BAl single part flex.

You will need to check with the adhesive tech line for suitable primers for lime crete screeds..:thumbsup:
 
P

philstor

Many thanks for the replies everyone - certainly some interesting products suggested. I'll chase up some suppliers and get quotes this week.
 
D

doug boardley

when using limecrete philstor, obviously wear gloves, and apply some vaseline to your face, it will act as a barrier cream, lime burns can be very nasty!:thumbsup:
 

Reply to Floor and wall tiling in a damp (ish) environment in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com

Or checkout our tile courses and training forum or the Tile Blog / Latest Blog Posts

Please note that this thread is old so replying to it may not get a response. You'd be best posting a new thread with a good 4 or 5 word title.
This website is hosted and managed by www.untoldmedia.co.uk. Creating content since 2001.
Please visit our sponsor websites, they keep the forum free to use!
Tile Contractor Forum. The useful tile contractor website.

UK Tiling Forum Stats

Threads
67,366
Messages
881,194
Members
9,530
Latest member
Apatel
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock    No Thanks