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Discuss expansion joint in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

D

DHTiling

If you have any movement between the timber and the concrete the an isolation membrane won't work......Ditra is designed to isolate lateral movement and not deflection. Howard i would try and straighten the joint up by cutting the timber side straight ( i.e removing the " F " from the floor) and infill with concrete.
Then put the movement joint where they meet and then use Ditra to isolate the stress between the floors , but still continue the joint through the substrate / Ditra and tiles........

good luck......
 
J

JEC-CTD

It would be good if you can do as Dave suggests but I suspect that replacing the timber section with concrete will not be easy if the timber section is a typical suspended floor. If it is suspended then how big is the gap underneath, overboarding may be one solution but as Dave said I believe it is the deflection that is your biggest problem.

Pictures really would help to give an informed opinion rather than us all guessing at the construction of the floor.
 
J

JEC-CTD

Not easy that.

Peoples memories get short when they have aproblem with work you've done and they suddenly seem to forget that they said "just do it as cheaply as possible"

You want the work but you don't want a customer giving you a bad reputation, bad news travels faster than good.

Who is the customer, will they accept a disclaimer written into the price etc.

You could point them here I suppose.
 
J

JEC-CTD

If the timber floor is very well supported then it may be OK for a while but I really would not trust it for long with a solid material like tile or stone.

I would be honest with them and say I'd only tile it if they accept in writing that you cannot be responsible for settlement or deflection between the two floor types.

If they say no then you have your answer.

Just my opinion.
 

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