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Discuss Quarry floor, no damp course. in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

R

Rookery

I would be wary. I've seen quarries in 19th century houses just laid to earth and I decline to quote. Too much risk for me.
 

Ajax123

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Liquid DPMs are for suppression of residual moisture only not for rising damp as you will have in this issue. I would have thought Ditra or similar would be more appropriate as this allows the moisture to move around and migrate. I would have a conversation with Schluter. Under the quarries will be a weak lime screed mix that will fall to bits if you take up the quarries. that way lies trouble... been there done that
 
O

Old Mod

Liquid DPMs are for suppression of residual moisture only not for rising damp as you will have in this issue. I would have thought Ditra or similar would be more appropriate as this allows the moisture to move around and migrate. I would have a conversation with Schluter. Under the quarries will be a weak lime screed mix that will fall to bits if you take up the quarries. that way lies trouble... been there done that
Ahh!
Sorry Alan should of remembered you'd know!
Sounds like a safer route all round.
 

Andrew

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i would not apply a liquid DPM over these quarries, if the property is 200 years old a breathable system is a must, creatimg a moisture barrier will just force moisture into surrounding walls and cause all sorts of problems!
I did a project recently were we chose a porous limestone and fixed it with a French lime mortar product called hourdex and silver sand straight over the quarries, this maintained a moisture permeable floor problem solved!
Talk them out of porcelain and let the floor breathe as it has done happily for it's lifetime.
 
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A while ago I had a similar thing with quarries and they wanted to go over the top with more quarries in a different size, I was recommended by Weber to use a good acrylic primer e.g. pr360 and to just use the standard grey weber set as it's breathable, but definitely not a flexi if that helps anyone for the future :)
 

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Quarry floor, no damp course. > Page 3 > Tiling Advice - Tilers Forums
Search the forum,

Discuss Quarry floor, no damp course. in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

R

Rookery

I would be wary. I've seen quarries in 19th century houses just laid to earth and I decline to quote. Too much risk for me.
 

Ajax123

TF
Esteemed
Arms
Reaction score
931
Points
1,213
Location
Lincolnshire
Liquid DPMs are for suppression of residual moisture only not for rising damp as you will have in this issue. I would have thought Ditra or similar would be more appropriate as this allows the moisture to move around and migrate. I would have a conversation with Schluter. Under the quarries will be a weak lime screed mix that will fall to bits if you take up the quarries. that way lies trouble... been there done that
 
O

Old Mod

Liquid DPMs are for suppression of residual moisture only not for rising damp as you will have in this issue. I would have thought Ditra or similar would be more appropriate as this allows the moisture to move around and migrate. I would have a conversation with Schluter. Under the quarries will be a weak lime screed mix that will fall to bits if you take up the quarries. that way lies trouble... been there done that
Ahh!
Sorry Alan should of remembered you'd know!
Sounds like a safer route all round.
 

Andrew

TF
Reaction score
6
Points
413
Location
surrey
i would not apply a liquid DPM over these quarries, if the property is 200 years old a breathable system is a must, creatimg a moisture barrier will just force moisture into surrounding walls and cause all sorts of problems!
I did a project recently were we chose a porous limestone and fixed it with a French lime mortar product called hourdex and silver sand straight over the quarries, this maintained a moisture permeable floor problem solved!
Talk them out of porcelain and let the floor breathe as it has done happily for it's lifetime.
 
Reaction score
16
Points
1,003
Location
Bedford
A while ago I had a similar thing with quarries and they wanted to go over the top with more quarries in a different size, I was recommended by Weber to use a good acrylic primer e.g. pr360 and to just use the standard grey weber set as it's breathable, but definitely not a flexi if that helps anyone for the future :)
 

Reply to Quarry floor, no damp course. in the Canada Tile Advice 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

    • Like
Bathroom floor. I would be grateful for advice on how to prepare my bathroom sub floor ready for...
Replies
1
Views
398
  • Article
123 Year Old Johnson Tiles Factory to Close Down Causing 110 Job Losses 123 Year Old Johnson...
Replies
9
Views
2K
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
Good morning all. After a little advice. I'll post pictures a bit later. However.... The...
Replies
6
Views
740
Hi all! Just wondering what the best advice is for book-keeping? Been self employed now for a...
Replies
1
Views
547
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