Search the forum,

Discuss Dot & Dab travertine? in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

S

spanky

If you could tell me a "governing" body that actually cares, or can actually do anything then I'm all ears.

I've spent most of today talking to the Tile Federation, Trading Standards, Local Building Control, CAB etc.

They all like to talk, none want to do anything accept tell me to sue them after I send them a letter telling them x y & z.

It seems in this world that tile has to fall off and kill one of my kids before any action is taken.

I am awaiting a chartered Surveyor to come on Monday to tell me the bare honest truth if I can claim any monies already paid and the cost of the tiles back from the contractor.

Who I might add is still sticking to the "It'll be allright" methodology.

Sad really
 
C

CLAYS TILES

If you could tell me a "governing" body that actually cares, or can actually do anything then I'm all ears.

I've spent most of today talking to the Tile Federation, Trading Standards, Local Building Control, CAB etc.

They all like to talk, none want to do anything accept tell me to sue them after I send them a letter telling them x y & z.

It seems in this world that tile has to fall off and kill one of my kids before any action is taken.

I am awaiting a chartered Surveyor to come on Monday to tell me the bare honest truth if I can claim any monies already paid and the cost of the tiles back from the contractor.

Who I might add is still sticking to the "It'll be allright" methodology.

Sad really
good luck for monday!:thumbsup:
 
S

Spud

i have just spent 15 minutes reading the posts about this subject and i have to agree with grumpy on this ,if done correctly dot and dabbing tiles is a good method of fixing tiles but i stress most clearly you must know what you are doing .bs 5385 covers the installation of floor and wall tiles and specifies best practice for the installation of the tiles and the reason why adhesive manufactures dont recommend dot and dabbing is most adhesives arent recommended to be used more than 12mm thick. lets be clear adhesive has only been around for 30-40 years before that every tile was fitted using sand and cement mortar beds if any one has ever tried to remove a tile fitted this way you will know that its the best way of fitting tiles due to the 100% coverage and the unbeleivble bond strength of the mortar no additives just opc and sand .if done correctly and you achieve 100% coverage dot and dabbing and you slide you tiles to open the adhesive and dont bed out more than 11mm you will achieve the same results from the adhesive as combing it on with a serrated trowel more importantly i would be more concerned on how the adhesive was mixed than how it was applied ,adhesive must be mechanically mixed with a drill and whisk, the walls must be sound and free of friable material and the adhesive must be applied to the wall with a trowel .the problem is the tiler you have just put a few dots on has not got the coverage required and didnt trowel it on to the wall and you have an un safe installation this wont help clearing up this post ,i just thought that grumpy has been unfairly treated and good luck to him for having experience and not just reading technical books and spouting bs, british standards that is lol
 
D

DHTiling

Back buttering tiles gary and getting a good coverage is all fine but dot and dabbing isnt that is it....dot and dab is spot fixing and that is totally different to back buttering and getting a solid fix........i have fixed in sand and cement and always solid bed fixed as you say and it is a very solid fix.....but spot fixing as this tiler has is not the best method you must agree......
 
S

Spud

Back buttering tiles gary and getting a good coverage is all fine but dot and dabbing isnt that is it....dot and dab is spot fixing and that is totally different to back buttering and getting a solid fix........i have fixed in sand and cement and always solid bed fixed as you say and it is a very solid fix.....but spot fixing as this tiler has is not the best method you must agree......
completely agree but grumpy got a really hard time about this and the word cowboy was used when you work with large format stone this is extensively spot fixed and dot and dabbed as the pictures from lisbon show where copper wire pins were used ,copper wire pins arent used here these days we use stainless wire up to first storey height and proper fixings above that i think spankys travertine in his original post were poorly fixed however if he had shown a tile with 95-100% coverage i would have a think differenly the bottom line is he has got himself a lazy fixer who hasnt moved with the times opinion
 

Dan

Admin
Staff member
Reaction score
5,039
Points
1,318
Location
Staffordshire, UK
i have just spent 15 minutes reading the posts about this subject and i have to agree with grumpy on this ,if done correctly dot and dabbing tiles is a good method of fixing tiles but i stress most clearly you must know what you are doing .bs 5385 covers the installation of floor and wall tiles and specifies best practice for the installation of the tiles and the reason why adhesive manufactures dont recommend dot and dabbing is most adhesives arent recommended to be used more than 12mm thick. lets be clear adhesive has only been around for 30-40 years before that every tile was fitted using sand and cement mortar beds if any one has ever tried to remove a tile fitted this way you will know that its the best way of fitting tiles due to the 100% coverage and the unbeleivble bond strength of the mortar no additives just opc and sand .if done correctly and you achieve 100% coverage dot and dabbing and you slide you tiles to open the adhesive and dont bed out more than 11mm you will achieve the same results from the adhesive as combing it on with a serrated trowel more importantly i would be more concerned on how the adhesive was mixed than how it was applied ,adhesive must be mechanically mixed with a drill and whisk, the walls must be sound and free of friable material and the adhesive must be applied to the wall with a trowel .the problem is the tiler you have just put a few dots on has not got the coverage required and didnt trowel it on to the wall and you have an un safe installation this wont help clearing up this post ,i just thought that grumpy has been unfairly treated and good luck to him for having experience and not just reading technical books and spouting bs, british standards that is lol

Ooooo

We just want to know if it's a good job. Is (was) it?
 
B

brian c

sometimes you cant change the minds of some older tilers,but hey he is entitled to his opinion but i dont agree with it either and i would never spot fix a tile of this weight on walls in that mess,the walls should have been sorted out at the beginning of the job imo.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Reply to Dot & Dab travertine? in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com

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
756
Hello, I'm just a home owner who doesn't have much experience with tiling but I'm looking for...
Replies
12
Views
2K
Further to my other post re our hollow tiles issue It looks like our tiler has dot and dabbed...
Replies
6
Views
2K
Hi All - I am searching for Todagres Aral Beige Pulido tile (large format - 32"x32"/ 120cm x...
Replies
1
Views
933
Landsteph
L
Hi all, I've laid some Arditex NA over the kitchen floor area (not under cabinets. The area is...
Replies
3
Views
1K
Posting a tiling question to the forum? Post in Tilers' Talk if you are unsure which forum to post in. We'll move it if there's a more suitable forum.
Please visit our sponsor websites, they keep the forum free to use!

Advertisement

New Tiling Questions

Replies you've not seen

Top