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Floor Tiling On Concrete - Several Questions About Floor Prep and Laying

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Hi

We've knocked through our kitchen and dining room and taken up old stone/porcelain tiles in the kitchen and carpet in the dining room. There are several questions I have before I start tiling.

Here is a share link to a Google Drive folder with images: Tiling - Google Drive - https://drive.google.com/open?id=1S2VjLvGCncb-S9F_YU-DRGE3hKUe0sGd

The issues are as follows - following the numbering of images:

1. When I took the dining room carpet up there was what looked like a leveling compound under the underlay. But obviously, with no protection from traffic, it has crumbled in places. I think it was there because there were some very light pocks in the concrete / or it's just standard practice. It has been down since the house was new 20 years ago. I have got most of it up but there are patches remaining where it is 1mm thick.

Question: is it OK to prime and tile over these patches that remain? (They are firmly bonded to the concrete.)

2. In the kitchen I took up tiles and tile adhesive and under that was a cheap laminate that was cracking so I took that up. The adhesive underneath is like concrete itself. I've chipped most of it up (hired a tool but it wasn't that effective) but there are patches up to 2mm thick remaining.

Question: is it ok to prime and tile over these patches.

3. Between the kitchen and dining room was a wall we were told (by a neighour) wasn't load bearing but it was. There is a row of engineering bricks in the floor that the wall 'sat' on.

Question: my plan is to removed plastic covering bricks, fill cavities in bricks and level with the concrete floor on either side - bricks are about 5mm lower. Is this an acceptable plan and if so what is best to use to fill and level given I will be tiling over them - could I use a quick set like mastercrete - which is easy to work with.

4. Where the dining room meets the living room I plan to tile up to the separating wall on the living room side. At some point, I will put down a wooden floor in the living room.

Question: I will need to insert a metal or wooden strip between tile and wooden floor - what is the best way to leave the tiles now to make this easy to do in future without having to take a row of tiles up - usually the strip inserts under the tile. At this point, I don't know what depth the wooden flooring will be.

5. Where the dining room floor meets the patio door to the garden the concrete floor drops by about 5 or 6mm (once I've removed the failed levelling compound).

Question: I don't really want to put leveling compound down. Can I just make up that 5mm with a bit more adhesive? The drop away starts about 6cm from the door.

Other details:

- pics 6 & 7 are the Benfer Primer (I plan to roll that onto the floor) and the Benfer slower setting adhesive.
- The total floor space is about 20m.
- Tiles are porcelain 59x59cm
- I am using a TileEasy leveling cap system

My plan is to give a final scrape on the concrete (there will be no friable bits left), hoover, mop away any remaining dust (twice), let dry and then prime, leave overnight and begin tiling.

Thanks for any help received!!
 
Hi Andy - Thanks for comments. I had just hoped to avoid a self-leveling compound if possible. Firstly because if that goes wrong I've got yet another layer to take up and secondly the cost of covering the entire 20m area.

Edited to add - I've just had a look at the floor and the concrete is nice and flat, there are just patches of adhesive bonded to it - but only about 1 - 2mm thick and not at all friable. So if I can tile over that I'd rather.

Maybe I can use the leveling compound to raise by the patio door and cover and level the row of engineering bricks.

So the key question is - is it ok to tile over concrete with patches of strongly bonded adhesive that is 1 to 2mm thick.
 
Last edited:
I've continued to scrape up old adhesive and I'm down to practically nothing now. A combination of Big Mutt Pro, Garden Half Moon and an old putty pallette. When I lay a straight edge down any 'low points' are negligible ie. they won't even be felt under the trowel.

Question now is whether to fill engineering bricks:
3.engineering-bricks-between-kitchen-and-dining-room.jpg - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Vo5_TqVioYpcSjXZv-Pbiso6ggc6Y4nT/view?usp=sharing

and then level over those (a 1 or 2mm difference to floor level) with a leveling compound? And if so what to fill them with?
 
But it's difficult to assess when it's the people giving the advice who are clearly not following it themselves - as evidenced by the photos on their websites. The answer to all questions cannot be "put a self-leveling compound down". I've checked my floor with a spirit level - it is perfectly level. Putting a self-leveling compound down introduces an unnecessary step that could fail.
 
W

WetSaw

But it's difficult to assess when it's the people giving the advice who are clearly not following it themselves - as evidenced by the photos on their websites. The answer to all questions cannot be "put a self-leveling compound down". I've checked my floor with a spirit level - it is perfectly level. Putting a self-leveling compound down introduces an unnecessary step that could fail.

First of all you had 1-2mm thick patches of old adhesive on the floor then a few posts ago some imperceivable dips, if now you're happy that it's perfectly flat then crack on with the tiling.
 
Because there are still 2 questions unanswered:

1. There is a row of engineering bricks across the middle of the floor - where a wall used to exist. Engineering bricks have cavities in them. What is the best way to fill these cavities before tiling over?

2. What is the best way to set up the transitions between rooms now so that in future when I change the floors in other rooms I can insert the strips between tile and wooden floors (which are currently carpet).

Thanks.
 

Boggs

TF
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A rapid repair mortar to fill in the voids in the bricks, or mix a bag of self levelling and pour in.


One of these for tile to carpet so it can be swapped when changing over to wood.
736A9AF3-DFC7-4290-9E98-BD9488EA41CE.jpeg
 

Albert

TF
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Because there are still 2 questions unanswered:

1. There is a row of engineering bricks across the middle of the floor - where a wall used to exist. Engineering bricks have cavities in them. What is the best way to fill these cavities before tiling over?

2. What is the best way to set up the transitions between rooms now so that in future when I change the floors in other rooms I can insert the strips between tile and wooden floors (which are currently carpet).

Thanks.
You could stick crack-mat over the bricks
 
I may be off track here, but did the engineering bricks once form a DPM? on an exterior wall has this house been extended? I ask because I saw what looked like black DPM material.
Hi Phil - the engineering bricks are there because there was an internal wall that turned out to be load bearing so it had 4" blocks sat on the engineering bricks. I have looked at the house plans and it seems the DPM runs under a raft foundation. The engineering bricks run right across the kitchen including where the doorway was. The engineering bricks were exposed in the doorway and it seems they've been mortared over before being tiled over (with the original vinyl put in by the housebuilder). Plus building control had nothing to say about that when they inspected the wall removal and RSJ and they've been a nightmare about DPM in a garage extension. So I'm confident there is no issue there. Do you have other thoughts? (I will start tiling tonight or tomorrow so keen to know if you think there's an issue)
 
T

The Legend; Phil Hobson RIP

Hi Phil - the engineering bricks are there because there was an internal wall that turned out to be load bearing so it had 4" blocks sat on the engineering bricks. I have looked at the house plans and it seems the DPM runs under a raft foundation. The engineering bricks run right across the kitchen including where the doorway was. The engineering bricks were exposed in the doorway and it seems they've been mortared over before being tiled over (with the original vinyl put in by the housebuilder). Plus building control had nothing to say about that when they inspected the wall removal and RSJ and they've been a nightmare about DPM in a garage extension. So I'm confident there is no issue there. Do you have other thoughts? (I will start tiling tonight or tomorrow so keen to know if you think there's an issue)
If all is well as you say.Go for it imho, good luck.
 

Boggs

TF
Arms
Esteemed
4,729
1,118
Uk
Thanks Boggs - how quickly can I tile over a repair mortar? And do you have one you'd recommend?


I use Tilemaster products, I think it’s 90 mins or so.
 

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