Search the forum,

Discuss Do I need to back-butter my tiles? in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

E

essexsi

Hi all,

I have been reading a great deal on this website as I have a DIY job. I am fitting 600x300 ceramic tiles to the walls and 300x300 ceramic to the floor in a walk in shower that will be tanked.

I was all set, thanks to advice on here :thumbsup:, to use a 10mm square notched trowel for the adhesive.

However, I have been reading other threads which has confused me. The advice is that I may need to back butter the tiles and also use a round notched trowel. This is because of the tile size and that its being fixed in a wet environment.

I think it is because I have been reading too much I have info overload!!

Is back buttering where you apply adhesive to the wall/floor, apply adhesive to the tile, then fix the tile? Do I need to do it to either my wall or floor tiles? Still a bit confused round or square notch?

Thanks for any help. Cheers Si
 
P

Perry

all floors should be solid bed thats why i use PTB if you have scissor lifts on them all day you need to
 
Last edited by a moderator:
D

doug boardley

back buttering is giving the tiles a ribbed bed of adhesive, back skimming is giving the back of the tile an un-ribbed skim of adhesive, these methods are to be used with normal spreading of your adhesive ie on your wall/floor. I use a round notch trowel on floors and areas that are subject to a lot of water, this is a solid bed technique. A square notched trowel is used in areas that aren't subject to drenching.
Hope this clears things a bit:thumbsup:
 
M

Mozza

Pete, do you mean you use a 13mm square for floors? What would you use if your after 100% cover on walls?
 
2

225driver

i was always told to back skim the floor tiles as you need 100% coverage back skimming fills any voids on the rear of the tile then trowel floor as normal should get 100% coverage. This is what i do please enlighten me if im wrong

Andy
 

beanz

TF
Reaction score
3
Points
1,003
Location
Berkshire
I honestly can't see why you would need to back-skim!?! Surely if you are floating the tile into the addy it'll go into the voids too? I know when i've layed a tile, then pulled it up, the whole tile had adhesive on; it doesn't just sit on the ridges...
 
D

doug boardley

as whitebeam mentioned beanz, it's when the biscuit is profiled, it fills out the profiles and makes sure you get total contact
 
E

essexsi

Thanks for all your input.

As its a shower room the floor will be getting wet regularly, so from your info I will need a solid bed under the 300x300 tiles going on the floor. I will get a solid bed trowel.

Now with the 600x300 wall tiles I take it I will be ok with a 10mm square notch trowel with adhesive only on the wall, no back buttering on the tile. Correct? If it makes any difference there is a sort of profiling of small squares on the back of the tile. What I am trying to say is that its not smooth!

Thanks very much for your help. Si
 

Reply to Do I need to back-butter my tiles? in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com

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

There are similar tiling threads here

10 Tiling Tips for Fixing Tiles to Bathroom Walls = From UKTilingForum.co.uk There are a few...
Replies
1
Views
649
I had a small leak in the main water line before the stop tap in my 1950s house. The copper pipe...
Replies
1
Views
585
Hi all. Just wanting some advice and wondering what the pros in here are using nowadays for...
Replies
2
Views
513
    • Like
Bathroom floor. I would be grateful for advice on how to prepare my bathroom sub floor ready for...
Replies
1
Views
397
Hi! I'm looking for some advice, I have laid some SLC (Mapei 1210) in our conservatory in...
Replies
5
Views
534

Advertisement

New Tiling Questions

Replies you've not seen

Top