Welcome to Tilers Forums Tiling Forum
The UK's Biggest Tiling Forum for DIY and Professional Tilers; find
- » Tile Advice for Bathroom Tiles, Kitchen Tiles, Wall Tiles, Floor Tiles
- » Customers can Find a Tiler, or Wall and Floor Tilers can Find Customers
- » Tiling Tools, Tile Adhesive, Tile Grout and other Tile Products
- » Advice and Discussion related to Tiling Courses and Tiling NVQ's
- » Professional Tilers can find Business Advice, Discounts, Trade Accounts
DIY and Professional Wall and Floor Tilers are Welcome
Advice from by Tilers, Manufacturers, Distributors and Tile Suppliers
REGISTER HERE FOR FREE
p.s.: Registered members will not see this ad
Discuss
The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed in the
Tile Adhesive, Grout and Substrate Preparation at TilersForums;
As an ongoing contract i have been tiling a property with screed that i was told was Freeflow screed. No problems up till now. The screed was dry and any ... -
The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
As an ongoing contract i have been tiling a property with screed that i was told was Freeflow screed. No problems up till now. The screed was dry and any laitance was removed and then 2 coats of primer (90 degrees to each other) were laid. Dural Ci was laid with SPF adhesive then the Travertine laid on top of the dural again using SPF.
The problem is now, the next stage of the job is ready for tiling....or should i say, the owner is wanting it tiled. The floor is still very wet, this is known by the colour and feel. I do have a cheap moisture tester and this said the same.
I have told them of all my concerns and they understand but still they need the job doing. I wont be tiling until i am happy the screed is fully dry, my problem now is finding the appropriate literture that i could print off and show them. Something in plain English would be ideal, do any of you know any links that i may be able to get this from?
Also what is the best way of drying a floor?
I have said that open doors and ventilation is the best, second would be a dehumidifier. They are saying a space heater !, I feel this could make thinks worse by making the room sweat and maybe crack the floor if heat was to high and too close .
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
dehumidifer i would say is the way forward a space heater makes the room sweat as you have said yourself .we have only done 2 floors on anhydrite screed the first was a showroom in summer preped as you did no brobs the 2nd was a house in winter floor was dry when we tiled it then over the christmas shutdown they left the de hum on it overflowed went under the tiles and the whole floor come up will not tile on this stuff any more not worth the agro that comes with it
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
Doesn't the durabase work the same way as Ditra Neale, in that you can use it on new screed as long as it is solid. The construction allows the moisture to get out and doesn't lock it in?
Grumpy
tiling@grouters.co.uk
Balancing Act Accounting
Turnover is Vanity, Profit is Sanity, Cash is reality!
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
grumpy what do you stick the durabase down with?
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
Yep just spoke with client and explained i wont take the risk. He is understanding and after talking with Mapei i feel i have made the right decision.
Just have to wait for the floor to dry out before i can start.
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed

Originally Posted by
grumpygrouter
Doesn't the durabase work the same way as Ditra Neale, in that you can use it on new screed as long as it is solid. The construction allows the moisture to get out and doesn't lock it in?
Having just got off the phone with Mapei tech they say floor must be dry, if not the screeded floor can "turn to mush" (their words not mine).
My way of thinking was that the water would eventually come out on way or another and could debond the adhesive holding the Dural Ci.
I prefer the safe option and let the floor dry, i like to sleep at night.
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed

Originally Posted by
top tiler
grumpy what do you stick the durabase down with?
Thats a good question. I have not had to tile a wet screed yet so have not had to think about it. I believe (though don't quote me) that Schluter say your normal choice of adhesive for the substrate is sufficient.
Grumpy
tiling@grouters.co.uk
Balancing Act Accounting
Turnover is Vanity, Profit is Sanity, Cash is reality!
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
I would also like to point out that this area to be tiled was in the open for a few weeks before the roof of the conservatory was put on. Although they did put up a make do roof out of polythene, it collapsed with teh bad winds and heavy rain. This left the floor flooded with over 20mm of water all over.
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
Can't you treat it like a swimming pool Neale?
Grumpy
tiling@grouters.co.uk
Balancing Act Accounting
Turnover is Vanity, Profit is Sanity, Cash is reality!
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
thats the problem! you would have to grind the floor put 2 coats of sealer on it then the matting so you have sealed the floor? anhydrite is a diffrent animal to normal screed its just like tiling on to plarster but softer and it soakes up all the moisture in the air like tiling in a big spounge
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
I know its a pain in the ****
-
-
Branty
Guest
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed

Originally Posted by
Sir Ramic
Having just got off the phone with Mapei tech they say floor must be dry, if not the screeded floor can "turn to mush" (their words not mine).
My way of thinking was that the water would eventually come out on way or another and could debond the adhesive holding the Dural Ci.
I prefer the safe option and let the floor dry, i like to sleep at night.
Thats a new one on me.
As far as Im aware, your floor has to have less than 0.5% residual moisture to tile onto, and 2% if you're going to use an uncoupling system (you will need a moisture reader for that).
The reason for this, is the same as it is for any substrate with miosture in it, screed, render, plaster etc... shrinkage. With your pourable screeds you get a lot of moisture, epscially when exposed to the elements.
The adhesive debonding from the bottom of the matting, is what it is supposed to do (hence uncoupling membrane). With 0.5% residual moisture a good single part can deal with any minute shrinkage that may occur. With 2% residual moisture, if the screed shrinks then cracks, it will cause the adhesive to debond from under the matting, where the crack is located, but that crack and the stresses of that crack will not transfer to the tile field.
As for mush!
Last edited by Branty; 01-10-2008 at 07:12 PM.
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed

Originally Posted by
Sir Ramic
Having just got off the phone with Mapei tech they say floor must be dry, if not the screeded floor can "turn to mush" (their words not mine).
My way of thinking was that the water would eventually come out on way or another and could debond the adhesive holding the Dural Ci.
I prefer the safe option and let the floor dry, i like to sleep at night.
Anhydrite does not turn to "mush" when wet. What happens is that any moisture in the screed once the anhydrite has fully chrystallised to gypsum (generally between 24 and 72 hours) is surplus to requirements and must be removed. If it is left in the screed it sits at the gaps bewteen the chrystalls effectively lubricating the joints. This causes a reduction in the strength of the screed usually of approximately 30%. As the screed is generally 30N compressive it is still pretty strong even when wet. A typical sand cement screed achieves around 20N compressive when fully compacted (full compaction is rare) If the anhydrite screed is kept permanently saturated it can swell slightly but even this will not cause any serious disruption for a long time. Temporary wetting simply leads to a wet screed which then needs drying out again. On drying it returns to its full strength. A decoupling membrane can normally be laid at 2% on anhydrite although the anhydrite manufacturers might be nervous about this level of moisture. At least one manufacturer has also approved the use of Epoxy DPM's on anhydrite subject to it meeting certain criteria.
-
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Ajax123 For This Useful Post:
Dan (03-04-2009), Dave (03-04-2009)
-
Regular TilersForums Contributor
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
Definitely wouldn't use a space heater. This drives the moisture back into the fabric of the building.
If your client is adamant that they require tiling asap would recommend using a liquid dpm covered by a 2 pack latex prior to tiling.
Hope this helps
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed

Originally Posted by
bighen
Definitely wouldn't use a space heater. This drives the moisture back into the fabric of the building.
If your client is adamant that they require tiling asap would recommend using a liquid dpm covered by a 2 pack latex prior to tiling.
Hope this helps
not really the job was in October last year
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Sir Ramic For This Useful Post:
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
-
-
Regular TilersForums Contributor
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed
I was in charge of a 1 mill pound contract a few years back. It was under a JCT 80 contract and during the build period the weather had done nothing but rain.
The slab was saturated and even months after the roof being installed the RH was still 98 - 99% despite the doors being left open during daytime.The RH would drop during the day but overnight would rise again. We recommended that a liquid DPM be used prior to the final floor installation. After many meetings with the clients and the architects, an extension of time was finally granted re the floor as the client did not wish to pay extra for the DPM. The client waited a further 6 months for the slab to dry to the level permissible for the finish floor to be laid.
I understand that your original post was back in October of last year, but a saturated floor requires time to dry naturally especially during the inclement months. Unless as posted by Ajax earlier you are prepared to install a liquid DPM!
-
-
Re: The dreaded Anhydrite/freeflow screed

Originally Posted by
bighen
Definitely wouldn't use a space heater. This drives the moisture back into the fabric of the building.
If your client is adamant that they require tiling asap would recommend using a liquid dpm covered by a 2 pack latex prior to tiling.
Hope this helps
I agree that space heaters are of little use unless the area being dried can be sealed. They do work very well in conjunction with dehumidifiers but again the area needs to be sealed so one sort of compliments the other. By far the best way to dry an anhydrite screed is of course to use an underfloor heating system. This coupled with good ventillation (and I don't mean windows open on trickle venting I mean windows and doors open to blow some draght through) will speed up drying significantly. The biggest issue I come across with anhydrites is the depth they are spec'd. They should eb as thin as possible (min depth 35mm) but architects love screed to be 75mm deep. This does nothing for the drying time at all. If no underfloor heating is available I tend to suggest 1 of 3 courses of action, forced heating using hot air blowers with natural ventillation (reasonably quick and easy but needs care), cocoon drying (specialist application) or a liquid DPM subject to strict rules (not available for all calcium sulphate screeds) -or of course just wait for the floor to dry naturally which at 75mm. Forced drying is something which is vastly under used in the UK. It happens all the time in Germany, France and Holland where anhydrites are much more popular.
-
Similar Threads
-
By ecopaddy in forum Tile Adhesive, Grout and Substrate Preparation
Replies: 12
Last Post: 16-02-2011, 12:32 AM
-
By ecopaddy in forum Tile Adhesive, Grout and Substrate Preparation
Replies: 33
Last Post: 20-04-2009, 09:07 PM
-
By JOHNNYCLARKE in forum Tiling Forum
Replies: 29
Last Post: 22-04-2008, 05:56 PM
-
By willbones in forum Tiling Forum
Replies: 5
Last Post: 05-08-2007, 12:58 AM
Visitors found this page by searching for:
anhydrite floor screed
,
liquid screed problems
,
anhydrite screed drying time
,
problems with liquid screed
,
anhydrite floorscreed
,
anhydrate flowing screed
,
latex screed anhydrite
,
is it normal for latex screed to crack,
what do you to seal anhydrite,
sealing liquid screed,
liquid anhydrite screed material class,
anhydrite floor screed problems,
anhydride floor screed,
free flowing screed,
tiles on liquid screeds,
flow screed how long before tiling,
flow screed floor drying out time,
sealing anhydrite screed floor tiling,
anhydrite screed dpm,
flowing screed essex,
problems with anhydrite screed,
problems with anhydrite screeds,
cocooning floor screed,
pourable screeds,
freeflo in tile adhisive Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Tilers Forums is the UK's largest wall and floor
tiling forum. Advice is provided free of charge to all users. Tilers Forums does not take responsibility for any loss or damage caused due to following advice found on this forum. All wall and floor tiling should be carried out by a qualified wall and floor tiler. Views expressed on this forum are of the users and not
Tilers Forums. Views expressed on this tiling forum are of the contributor only and not the forum as a whole. Not all views should be taken as fact but simply the opinion of the person posting. Readers are reminded to seek professional advice before undertaking any wall and floor tiling project.
Tilers Forums is a Trading Style of Untold Developments Ltd.
Search Engine Optimisation, Web Development and Online Marketing for the UK.
Bookmarks