gyvlon floor and I am the bad boy!

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I have just reread your post in response to deanotile, ajax and i am getting more and more aggrieved by what i hear.
in fairness , i also think that you have had skinfull of complaints about what you perceive to be the future and are feel your product is just being dismissed as being no good because we islanders who have always done our own thing , think we know better and are averse to change.
just for our info, can you tell me when suitable gypsum adhesives became readily available in this country.
i did my first job on anhydrite i think approx 7-8 years ago.
what sort of advice was i given by screed company. Abosuletly zero except to say it needs a normal primer.
Did another none year
 
As above, these screeds are a becoming a nightmare.
Drying is a major problem to the customer and the tiler, you just can't book these jobs in.
Builders giving the customer the wrong info.
No one sands at the right time, or just don't sand at all.
Adhesive costs more.
Testing methods, who pays for my 3rd 40 mile round trip to test a floor that was 'concrete and dry', with methods that are impractical for a self employed bloke to carry out, there are only so many hours in the day.wWe also now don't trust these methods.. Incidently neither do the American or Australian surveyers i talk to, they say moisture probes in the floor.
So thats a worry as well.
I can totally see Deanos point, we are doing a job we know well, then to have it all change without being told, which DID happen and have floors go wrong, and lay floors with methods we don't trust is not a great way to work at all.
🙁
 
did one another a year later and thank goodness never had a come back.
it might be a little bit cheeky to suggest, but i believe ardex who are german based i think, have known about these anhydrite screeds for many years , but have not deigned to supply in this country until a good market for product established.
two different industries. screed companies thinking ahead and adhesive manufacturers not following suit to back up a new product on foreign fields.
no point in wasting their money bringing in new technology to a country who is still wallowing in the mud of previous success, is there!!
but if we are given a chance to harness new technology with back up from all sides, well be there.
we hardly want to give good jobs away
 
And to add, all this is on a forum for tilers who know their stuff!
Think about all the the tilers who aren't aware of the probelms, DIYers etc. No one wants problems.
The tile and adhesive suppliers aren't much better, i use a huge distributor and they look at me like i'm stupid when i mention what their policy on advising customers are for these floors.
I've gone on the record and asked some really dumb questions, just because i want to know everything about these screeds, but the more i know, and having used gysum based based adhesives, i find it hard having any confidence in these floors.
 
I have just reread your post in response to deanotile, ajax and i am getting more and more aggrieved by what i hear.
in fairness , i also think that you have had skinfull of complaints about what you perceive to be the future and are feel your product is just being dismissed as being no good because we islanders who have always done our own thing , think we know better and are averse to change.
just for our info, can you tell me when suitable gypsum adhesives became readily available in this country.
i did my first job on anhydrite i think approx 7-8 years ago.
what sort of advice was i given by screed company. Abosuletly zero except to say it needs a normal primer.
Did another none year

The first gypsum based adhesive became available aout ten years ago in the uk from a small company called dexters industrial who were a paint and epoxy company. They unfortunately went bust but not before creative impressions began making their own adhesive which would be about seven years ago. Not sure if it was kerakoll or weber who were next but that was about five years or so ago although weber took theirs out of the market. Not really sure why. Next came gypfix about two years ago followed by nicobond and norcross last year. One of the problems has been route to market. Not many of these companies have national distribution outlets so it is often a case of ordering direct from the manufacturer. Second Biggest issue we have is that the major manufacturers e.g. Mapei have gypsum adhesives available in Europe but because there is no British standard to cover gypsum adhesives they are reluctant to bring them into the UK. There is also a cost issue as they are generally more expensive with a few exceptions.

In terms of advice by the screed companies I agree that the information was very poor ten years ago. I started with lafarge about ten years ago and got involved with anhydrite pretty quickly. I soon recognised that there was a real problem with both knowledge of follow on trades and subsequently the advice that could be given. It was perceived and probably still is to a certain extent that the screed company should offer advice on the screed and the adhesive supplier should offer advice on the adhesive which is right and proper. Trouble is there is little room for error when using adhesive systems which are not chemically compatible with anhydrite. The key is preparation and priming but unfortunately in many of the issues I have been involved with these are areas that have been carried out poorly. That is one of the reasons I post on here to try and help educate the masses so to speak. Anhydrite screeds are here to stay. The have been around for decades already. It always surprises me whe people this they are new. They are not. In actual fact the have been around for longer than some adhesive systems.
 
did one another a year later and thank goodness never had a come back.
it might be a little bit cheeky to suggest, but i believe ardex who are german based i think, have known about these anhydrite screeds for many years , but have not deigned to supply in this country until a good market for product established.
two different industries. screed companies thinking ahead and adhesive manufacturers not following suit to back up a new product on foreign fields.
no point in wasting their money bringing in new technology to a country who is still wallowing in the mud of previous success, is there!!
but if we are given a chance to harness new technology with back up from all sides, well be there.
we hardly want to give good jobs away

Here here. Calcium sulphate screeds we first used in large quantities in east Germany just after the second world war. Perhaps that is why Germany are so far ahead.
 
And to add, all this is on a forum for tilers who know their stuff!
Think about all the the tilers who aren't aware of the probelms, DIYers etc. No one wants problems.
The tile and adhesive suppliers aren't much better, i use a huge distributor and they look at me like i'm stupid when i mention what their policy on advising customers are for these floors.
I've gone on the record and asked some really dumb questions, just because i want to know everything about these screeds, but the more i know, and having used gysum based based adhesives, i find it hard having any confidence in these floors.

yes you are quite right, what about all the others who are not as well versed in what we are supposed to do with these screeds. those tilers who have laid on to anhydrite that is not dry as should be only because they have not been told what the score is.
you could say well it is a duty of care that a tiler has, to not lay on to substrate, about which he is not fully au fait with.
but if he is told by builder that it is dry and builder has not been told by screeder that he needs to advise the tiler that he need to apply special primer etcc , why should this tiler think anything is amiss in what he does.
 
alan , as an aside before you take up your new job take a look at jupiter underfloor heating systems!!
for me i see them as the future .
i know its not screed but a system that incorporates clinker tiles glued together sitting on top of a wet system , effectively a floating floor.
no expansion joints.
quick response warm up . tiles dont retain heat they let heat through to tiles/stone above.
be interested to know what you think of this with your experience in flooring.
yet again another innovation from deutschland!!
 
I can speak with experience from laying on these screeds in Germany and I put the blame on failures squarely at the feet of the screed suppliers and installers ,what Alan hasnt mentioned is that it is the responsibilty of the screed supplier/installer to sand the floor and cut the expansion joints in after it has cured these screeds are sold and installed with no follow on after sales service from the supplier,when a tiler arrives on site it is almost impossible to tell if the floor has been laytexed or if it is a flow screed if it hasnt been sanded,also the building sites in europe are managed very differently to uk sites the screeds are installed into air tight buildings with double glazing installed and a screed would never be installed into a building which was open to the elements unlike here in the uk wher we have a much damper climate and more draughty sites , anhydrite does have its limitations with in the building industry and the screed suppliers need to take on board that this is the UK and we do work different to France ,Germany and Italy but I can also tell you that I never saw a anhydrite screed installed in what was classed as a wet area or food prep area where this was always a sand and cement screed and it was just used in domestic and residential usage
 
So let me get this straight in my head. I go out and get my self a fancydan hydro meter and the manufacturers instructions tell me ABC but I am now told to ignore that and do XYZ. But now if anything goes wrong it is me that is in the wrong as I have not worked to the manufacturers instructions.

I am with Neil I will be drafting a declaimer and stating it is up to the client to tell me when the floor is fit to install the tiles and it is there responsibility to source the correct adhesive and method of installation.
 

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