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Ajax123

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Please checkout the following advertisement.
Cemfloor is an additive driven liquid screed tested by CSTB by manufacturer Cemexa

The CSTB certificate reference is
Document Technique d’Application
Référence Avis Technique 13/13-1214*V1
Cemfloor
Cemfloor Macro
Cemfloor Métal

Here is the link if you want it....

13/13-1214*V1 - Document Technique d'Application - http://evaluation.cstb.fr/avis-technique/detail/13-13-1214-v1/
you can use Google translate if you have a whole to spare.

The relevant section is 4.54

It says
L’applicateur doit procéder à l’élimination de la pellicule de surface.
Le ponçage s’effectue à l’aide d’un appareil monobrosse équipé d’un
disque abrasif (grain 16) ou d’une brosse nylon dure ou métallique.
Cette opération est suivie d’un dépoussiérage efficace

This translates as follows
The applicator must remove the surface film.
Sanding is carried out using a single-piece machine equipped with a
abrasive disc (grain 16) or a hard or metallic nylon brush.
This is followed by effective dust removal

Up to you of course....
 

Ajax123

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If you're deliberately ambiguous if give you plenty of options to say what the tiler did wrong if it fails .

Yup. Best advice is sand the screed. If you do that you can't really go wrong and no one can argue.
 
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Hi Ajax thanks for your advice. If I could get your opinion on another thing that the screeder said about floor; he said to treat it like a sand:cement screed or a cement based quick drying flowing screed that comes in bags. Is there a reason why these don't need to be sanded?
 

Ajax123

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The need for sanding us much misunderstood. It does a number of things and us particularly important where liquid screeds are concerned as these gave a tendency to firm eigher a naturally occurring surface skin in the case of self curing screeds or an artificial skin in the form of a curing agent in the case of usually cement based screeds. Sanding removes these layers. Liquid screeds also have a tendency to form a much more closed surface than hand applied screeds so sanding helps open the screed to allow your primer to penetrate into the surface. Equally importantly is the need for the screed to be "clean and free from dust, dirt and contaminants likely to affect adhesion" which us what the floor covering standards all say. Active building sites can be dirty places with mortar, plaster, https://www.tilersforums.com/forums/tile-adhesive/, filler, and plenty of other surface contaminants getting on the screed. Regardless of screed type it is best practice to lightly and are all screeds and concrete prior to applying bonded floor coverings. I would not differentiate between bagged, fast drying hand applied or liquid screeds or indeed powerfloat concrete. My advice is sand the screed. Just because you don't does not make it right. If you were to paint a gloss paint on your wooden doors at home you would sand them first. If not you would see the paint peel off soon after. It's the same principal. If it didn't peel off it would be down to blind luck. I would rather advise based on sound sensible practice than trust to luck.
Trouble is when I argue this point It can come across as sour grapes as i work for an anhydride company. I have worked with most ttypes of screeds in my time jnckuding liquid cement based screeds and self comlacting concretes as well as hand applied screeds. My advice has never changed.
 

Glynn

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If you have any doubt stick to your tried and trusted method, sand and prime. arguing over preparation is a pointless task. It must be done. We do masses of testing with our adhesives and competitors adhesives and I have not found any results that were better not primed. we have adhesives that will go direct to a sand/cement screed un-primed but sanding and priming will give you a stronger bond and more sleep at night. This is our industry and we are the ones who pick up the tab when things go wrong not the screed company. Which industry do you trust most?
 
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Glynn, I agree 100% with your comment; but if the screeder is saying that he isnt going to sand the screed then why should it be the tiler that has to foot the bill for doing the screeders work? Have tilemaster carried out any tests on cemfloor screed yet?
 

Ajax123

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Glynn, I agree 100% with your comment; but if the screeder is saying that he isnt going to sand the screed then why should it be the tiler that has to foot the bill for doing the screeders work? Have tilemaster carried out any tests on cemfloor screed yet?

The tiler should not foot the bill for preparing the screed. It should be priced for as part of the floor so that the client picks up the bill. Tat way it gets doe to the tilers satisfaction so there is no argument about whether its sanded enough or not. I have always felt that the sanding should be part of the preparation and as such is best carried out by the tiler. that is also the opinion of the Contract Flooring Association. That said the cost of sanding 100m2 is maybe £150 to £200. The cost for replacing the tiles if they fail for whatever reason will be significantly more and you can bet your life that neither the screeder, the screed supplier, nor the https://www.tilersforums.com/forums/tile-adhesive/ company will stump up any cash for that.

Its really very simple. Take the screeders word that it needs no sanding and take the risk and hope it works. It might well do but there's no real guarantee and there will be an argument as too who is responsible if it does go wrong... and it'll cost you. Sand the screed in the way you normally do and in the way you appear comfortable with so that you have the peace of mind that you have done it correctly and avoid the risk. As I said in my previosu post .... up to you. Not up to the screeder, BAL technical, the screed supplier or anyone else... its up to you.
 

Glynn

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Ajax 123 is right and BS 5385 basicly states "make sure the substrate is fit for tile". That is the fixers responsibility to make sure it is fit to tile. If you have to do the extra prep work then you should charge for it or explain and let the client organise it themselves. We have not done any testing with the Cemfloor Screed but would automaticly treat it has any other sand/cement screed. Sand, prime, fix.
 
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Well they say everyday is a school day.

Saw someone post on LinkedIn about CEMFLOOR

"Cemfloor pumped in, curing agent sprayed over, ready to accept tiles in as little as 2 weeks with no sanding or special primers."

f16e23d6665c28938b90e3f981aaf109.png


Should have known to check here shouldnt i!

So it does need surface removal?
 

Ajax123

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Well they say everyday is a school day.

Saw someone post on LinkedIn about CEMFLOOR

"Cemfloor pumped in, curing agent sprayed over, ready to accept tiles in as little as 2 weeks with no sanding or special primers."

f16e23d6665c28938b90e3f981aaf109.png


Should have known to check here shouldnt i!

So it does need surface removal?

Yup. It has a during agents on which will prevent primer penetration and subsequent adhesion. Quite a few people have fallen for the "it doesn' t need sanding" spin but simple fact is that the cemex cstm certificate mention earlier in the thread is pretty categorical. It should be abraded...
 
D

Dumbo

Yup. It has a during agents on which will prevent primer penetration and subsequent adhesion. Quite a few people have fallen for the "it doesn' t need sanding" spin but simple fact is that the cemex cstm certificate mention earlier in the thread is pretty categorical. It should be abraded...
Can I take it that it can't be sanded for two weeks otherwise you will take of the curing agent
 

Ajax123

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Dont know but would seem logical. Problem is so many screeners and suppliers are saying this does not need to be sanded so it' gonna go wrong at some point...
 
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This screed is becoming more popular by the month and I’m coming across it more and more... I’ve tiled a quite few jobs now where this screed was used and I’ve followed the manufacturers instructions re not sanding and I haven’t had any failures yet(touch wood). I had a visit from the cemfloor rep and he said the agent on the surface acts as an evaporation control and as a primer once the screed as hardened. All I’ve done is give it a good sweeping with a yard brush and clean up any dust from the surface. So far so good from my experience tile to it...
 

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