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kilty55

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hi peeps,,got a rip out job coming up where 2 tiled floors need to be lifted 1st and re plyed..lifted a floor recently that someone else had botched and it was only down for 2 weeks so it came up easy,,the 2 floors total 18 sq metres how long realisticly do you think it will take to lift these tiles with a bolster,,dont want to underestimate the job too much as i know tiles laid for years can be a right bugger to lift.cheers for any advice:thumbsup::thumbsup:
 
S

sWe

Bolster and a hammer? Depends on how large the tiles are, how well they're stuck, and if you need to recover them. You'd save alot of time by renting a small SDS-plus roto-stop hammer drill with a tile bolster attachment.

It's hard to say with any accuracy as I haven't seen the job myself, but I'd probably allocate between half a day and a day for doing it with a hammer and a bolster, and somewhere around 2-3 hours for doing it with a machine.
Smallish tiles take longer to lift, especially with a hammer and bolster. Large tiles are fairly quick. Recovering small tiles isn't that hard, but largish ones can be tricky, if at all possible.
 
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B

brummie tiler

Its one of those things that is very hard to put a specific time limit on, as you really dont know how well they are down until you start. Ive done some rip outs that have literally taken 10 minutes -give the walls a tap with your hammer and the tiles fall off in sheets ,then other times your there all day hacking away at em!
 
D

DHTiling

Some times they just pop up no probs...then other times they are well stuck...until you set about them then you won't know........

good luck and don't forget your safety gear...........:thumbsup:
 
S

sWe

Good catch there Dave. Facemask, goggles, gloves, and ear protection is a must. Wear fully covering clothes as well; splinters can pierce you to the bone.
 
D

DHTiling

Good catch there Dave. Facemask, goggles, gloves, and ear protection is a must. Wear fully covering clothes as well; splinters can pierce you to the bone.


An apprentice comes in handy as well........:lol:..

so i have found out since starting my son on the tools.........:grin:
 

kilty55

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customer has requested ply,,however now you mention it ive not worked with hardiebacker so i would like the chance to use it ,,what kinda price does it compare to ply,,im assuming its less time consuming than cutting ply etc?:thumbsup::huh2::stupid:
 

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