A
is transit wax easily removed? What's wrong with the ply?As above, looks like transit wax. The plywood below is more of a concern..
Thanks for the info. My tiler has now viewed the tiles and Isn't confident the tiles will clean up. He's happy enough with the plywood though as it's in a sitting area with no water ingress likely. Will now speak to the supplier for support. Thanks again.Some transit waxes are a little stubborn to remove.
The most non invasive way of removing transit wax is to get a handful of grout powder and rub it across the face of the tile with a little elbow grease, then reassess.
I don’t normally have to get any more agggressive than that.
If I have to use a product, it would normally be Lithofin’s Wexa or Ceramic Clean, I’ve found both to be successful.
Wexa would be my first choice tho.
Plywood, if that’s the floor to be tiled, is a bad choice of substrate for many reasons.
Least of all, plywood today is if a very low quality and prone to swelling, warping and delaminating.
If you have no height restrictions, you’d do well to overboard it with a material designed to have tiles fixed to it.
Something like Hardiebacker or a tilebacker board such as Deltaboard if it’s a wet area.
This will give you a more stable substrate.
Tilemaster Delta Boards Thermal Construction Boards 1200mm x 600mm (Sizes 6-20mm Thickness) (INDIVIDUAL) - https://www.protilertools.co.uk/product/tilemaster-delta-boards-thermal-construction-boards-1200mm-x-600mm--sizes-6-20mm-thickness---individual-