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you just mentioned that youve been in the game for 22 years, which is very interesting..Look back at this thread and others and i think we will find that many of the contributors to threads about anhydrite screeds are long time served tilers. just this thread alone sees you, sir ramic , deanotile, ray tt and me wanting answers.gary the tiler has given masses of input based on his experience abroad from which we now recieve product.Too right lads, it has been a nightmare, i've been tiling over 22 years and the only thing that has come close was when they dropped porcelain tiles on us. Nothing cut them and then there was no adhesive around to stick them, how there weren't more failures god only knows.
I've been determined to find out as much as i can and find solutions as to be honest i like floor tiling and not wall tiling, it was looking like giving up trying to tiles these screeds, and i'm being serious here, i simply hadn't found any adhesive i trusted.#
It does look like Creative Impressions could be the light at the end of the tunnel. They have been mentioned before, but seem to have been under the radar a bit.
Just finishing my big stone floor on Anhydrite and will have to wait tuill the end of October before i get try it out.
Hang on a cotton picking…. Solihull is my patch I’M NOT HAPPY :ban::lol:The one i'm doing in Solihul is the same Sir.
The point where one room leads into another has been out on numerous places, you have to get all the cuts in first just to check how the levels are working.
As i said in my second post i saw tem pour Agilia Horizontal which is a cement based verison, it looked ace to me!
i drive my wife mad with just how much tiling
is under my skin. I just thought i would
through this in the mix, why is it that gypsum
and cement seem to work harmoniously
in the world of plastering?
Sand and cement render with a gypsum finish
It will most likely be due to strength gain due to moisture loss. Gypsum loses strength when it is wet or rather gains strength by losing moisture. It has free moisture loss from the underside of the adhesive. If it was stuck on the screed this loss of moisture wold be impeded by the fact that it is trapped between the screed and the tile. It would achieve enough strength to stick as the screed would pull the moisture but but as this would dissipate into the top part of the screed the moisture loss therefore strength gain may be slower. The chemical reaction or crystallisation of gypsum in anhydrite screed accounts for about 65% of its overall strength. The rest of its strength is due to friction between the gypsum crystals which increases with drying. i have to make the assumption that gypsum adhesive is similar. If that makes sense.As another very small test, while using Gypfix with porcelain tiles I spread the back of a tile and put it to one side. 6 days later the adhesive has stuck extremely well to the tile. This tile was not fixed to the screed so this makes me wonder why ?
Ok makes sense! Cheers dave clears that up! I don't claim to know loads about anhydride screeds. Have tiled quite a few. one of the first with builders spec not sanded ardex p51 primer tile fixed with cement based flexi, I was ignorant to the type of screed and didn't question it then. That was few years ago and doing fine! I've returned to it and it's good as new. Unlike the 30 m I had to reset that was fixed with gypsum base. Just leaves me a bit unsure