Discuss self levelling compound maximum thickness and alternatives in the Canada area at TilersForums. The USA and UK Tiling Forum (Also now Aus, Canada, ROI, and more)

B

brucelee

Hi all, I'm about to tile a concrete kitchen floor that needs leveling as it currently slopes and runs out by around 40 mm (from one end of room to the other). I just wanted to know whether (a) self leveling compound would do the job and if so, the maximum thickness that can be applied, and (b) are there any other alternative methods .??
 
O

Old Mod

There are brands of latex that are fibre bonded and will go to 50mm, weber and tilemaster to name but two.
 
L

LM

There are many products on the market now that can deal with this situation.
But first I'd like to ask if it's a general whole side of a floor that is high or just the odd high spot? If it's just the odd high spot it's far more economical to shave the high spots lower to reduce the amount of compound required to level the whole floor. If however it's a case that the whole floor simply lays off tilt so to speak and you have no height constraints on the low side then there are lot of options regarding levellers.
Be that the case the best way to tackle this is to insert screws with raw plugs in a grid formation of roughly 1 metre part to a level height using a spirit level from a starting point which will be the highest part of your floor slab as a 'level' reference. Then follow the instructions of the levelling product with consideration to surface prepperation,i.e. Priming and contamination etc. Then use a product like BAL level max (up to 80mm in a single application).
A level and flat floor can be achieved in one application if you plan and consider all aspects properly beforehand.

Hope this helps :)
 
B

brucelee

There are many products on the market now that can deal with this situation.
But first I'd like to ask if it's a general whole side of a floor that is high or just the odd high spot? If it's just the odd high spot it's far more economical to shave the high spots lower to reduce the amount of compound required to level the whole floor. If however it's a case that the whole floor simply lays off tilt so to speak and you have no height constraints on the low side then there are lot of options regarding levellers.
Be that the case the best way to tackle this is to insert screws with raw plugs in a grid formation of roughly 1 metre part to a level height using a spirit level from a starting point which will be the highest part of your floor slab as a 'level' reference. Then follow the instructions of the levelling product with consideration to surface prepperation,i.e. Priming and contamination etc. Then use a product like BAL level max (up to 80mm in a single application).
A level and flat floor can be achieved in one application if you plan and consider all aspects properly beforehand.

Hope this helps :)
great advice thank you
 

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