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Discuss Large wall tile trowel. in the Tiling Tools | Tile Cutters, Trowels area at TilersForums.com.

D

Drifterjoe

Hi guys.

Advice on the best trowel to get 100% coverage?

Going to install a shower area with 600x300 porcelain tiles. I'm thinking as they are a heavy larger tile I should use the 10mm notched trowel, and back skim. The wall will be pretty flat as I'm reboarding.

Is this better or as good as using a dedicated solid bed trowel? I have a 6mm notched solid bed trowel that I'm thinking is too thin, and a 20x10 u-notch floor trowel that I'm thinking is too much??

Advice much appreciated.

Cheers Joe
 
S

SJPurdy

I'd be starting with 8mm notch and back skimming. Check that this gives a solid bed on the first tiles fitted and then assuming it does continue with the rest. Only if the tiles or wall are twisted/bowed will this fail to give good coverage/contact to the whole tile; in which case a larger notch might help.
 
O

Old Mod

The substrate and tile backing generally dictate trowel size when fitting.
Rough substrate and rough backed tile will require deeper notch etc than a smooth substrate and a smooth back tile.
There's no absolute fixed rule really. Just need to apply sufficient adhesive for the situation, without exceeding the adhesive manufacturers recommendation on maximum adhesive depth.
But yes, always back butter/skim tiles before fixing, it increases bond strength significantly and aids in achieving a full bed.
You can alway use one size trowel on the wall, and a smaller. Itch on the tile to achieve your full bed.
Experiment initially and see what works best without overloading with adhesive.
Too much can be as bad as too little sometimes.
 
O

Old Mod

I'd be starting with 8mm notch and back skimming. Check that this gives a solid bed on the first tiles fitted and then assuming it does continue with the rest. Only if the tiles or wall are twisted/bowed will this fail to give good coverage/contact to the whole tile; in which case a larger notch might help.
Hahaha you following me Steve?
 
F

Flintstone

I'd be supprised if an 8mm trowel gave anything like 100%
I would pick up the 6x12mm trowel first off and try that or a 10mm notch. The mix you have will also have a bearing, just thick enough that it's not slumping too much
 
M

MILLER669

I'd be supprised if an 8mm trowel gave anything like 100%
I would pick up the 6x12mm trowel first off and try that or a 10mm notch. The mix you have will also have a bearing, just thick enough that it's not slumping too much
Where can you buy a 6 x 12mm trowel? Been looking for one but can't find one anywhere!!
 

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