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J

James carrier

Hi there I have just installed a reclaimed quarry tile path the customer then sealed it themselves with LTP mattstone.
We have since had two severe frosts which has resulted in the tiles flaking badly1

Any suggestions as to the cause??

The path has been down around five months and looked perfect up to this point!
 
B

Bill

Frost damage more than likely - as they were reclaimed, you probably have no idea how good they were.

A hazard of fixing external quarries.
 

Dhtiling

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I wonder if the sealer may have gotten into the pours of the tile and froze. That would make the breaking or shearing of the tile understandable. Is it a water or solvent based sealer? It is not available where I am so I don't know.
 
J

James carrier

Hi there it is a solvent based sealer ( white spirit and benzene) it was sealed about three months prior to the frosts!!
 

Dhtiling

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I ask because quarry is very porous and if it was sealed long ago, though 3 months is not long, unglazed will allow natural moisture in. I don't mean glazed like porcelin or ceramic, some quarry has quite a shine to it, it is more dense on the surface. Solvent based sealers get further down into the tile because it does not have the same surface tension a water based sealer has. So there still may be open pous near the surface. Has to be frozen water flaking it. Any pictures? Guessing is hard.
 

Lithofin BOB

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As above , also underlying moisture can migrate from below and saturate the the tile which then expands the water mol at frosting , long term salts can also expand in the surface or in the body of the tile and cause spalling ( delamination)at the face . Might be worth releasing the impregnator on several tiles and monitor these against the others , if these are not getting worse ,strip the rest and the floor can breath fully and moisture can release . Most impregnators are breathable but only to a degree. This may be just the location of the tiles, it's not the impregnator
Do you have any photos to look at the way the tiles are breaking away?
 
J

James carrier

As above , also underlying moisture can migrate from below and saturate the the tile which then expands the water mol at frosting , long term salts can also expand in the surface or in the body of the tile and cause spalling ( delamination)at the face . Might be worth releasing the impregnator on several tiles and monitor these against the others , if these are not getting worse ,strip the rest and the floor can breath fully and moisture can release . Most impregnators are breathable but only to a degree. This may be just the location of the tiles, it's not the impregnator
Do you have any photos to look at the way the tiles are breaking away?

20160122_154739.jpg
 

Lithofin BOB

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Not what I was expecting to see , looks more like compresion of the tile. Looks fairly brittle ,so could expand and delaminate from a severe frost. Can you give a picture of full path or larger section
 

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