B
Billski
If it comes to it I think I'll have to take them up a row at a time and re fix them down in the exact position using a mosaic trowel with a decent adhesive. There's about £400 worth of tiles wasted otherwise.
Third!Second that!!!
Afternoon, (Brand Blocked Temporarily until they unblock us on facebook) recommendation on Ply for all the Ultra adhesives.
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Afternoon, (Brand Blocked Temporarily until they unblock us on facebook) recommendation on Ply for all the Ultra adhesives.
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Had this discussion a while . I prime everything . Was told by people on here that I should not prime ply with bal fast flex. I checked their spec sheet and they were right . So I contacted bal and asked them about it and they said it wouldn't be a problem if I primed it . I expect the same answer may be got from weberI was always told not to prime ply unless it's dusty. Beginning to which I'd primed it now but if the instructions say not then I'd be going against the mi's, so they'd get me on that.
Not sure but I believe it's glued and screwed at 150 centresIs that right?!
I think @paul.c checked its 300mm mate. Plus he's managing to stick to the wood with other adhesives. So begs the question why not the weber set trade.Not sure but I believe it's glued and screwed at 150 centres
always production date 😉Am I right in saying the date on the bag is the date of manufacture and not expiry? I think we've done this before and somebody checked for us.
Interesting . Also where he has stuck down tiles with different adhesive is this where tiling has already failed therefore removing release agent .Was the area of the tiled floor that is still stuck down trafficed much before it was tiled?
The reason I ask is that a few years ago I was on an Ardex/BAL course and this topic came up. They said that one of the major issues with certian Plywood boards was that they are coming from really hot climates and at first the plywood was arriving in the UK having spent weeks or so in very hot temperatures while in transit. This caused the glues that bond the plywood togeather to melt out of the ply to the board below while they where in the hot climates and when the bales of plywood were taken of the boats in the cooler UK they ended up as one large block of useless plywood all stuck togeater as one.
To counter this the manufacturers in these countries treated all the boards with a releasing agent that prevented the boeards from sticking togeather during transport. These releasing agents are invisible so they reccommended that before tiling any ply the board must be thourouly sanded to remove the releasing agent which in turn would allow the adhesive to key properly. I'm wondering if the area that the tiles are still down on had enough wear to remove the releasing aget before it was tiled?
Like for likeAnd no the tiles that stuck went onto untouched ply, so can't of removed the agent beforehand.
Your ditra wouldn't have stuck with that S1.I like using ply for structure but never fix direct to it . I always use ditra or similar but I have to wonder in this situation if it still would of failed
I am beginning to wonder .Your ditra wouldn't have stuck with that S1.
By the sounds of it.
I think this is one of those threads where we work a lot on the reason behind the failure and not so much on the fix.
Unless weber are going to say the ply needs replacing (so at your cost not theirs) the fix is all the same and you've suggested it already.
Just needs tiling with an adhesive that's sticking. Do some test with off cuts and get on with it leaving a small area for weber to check and probably wriggle out of it because of fixer error or whatever.
Unless they confirm that batch of adhesive wasn't right, it's going fall on your head IMO. Sounds a bit harsh wasn't meant to come across like that.
Point I'm making is just retile it quick and move on. Don't use that adhesive again and look in to the ply you buy in future.
Just my 2p after reading it all again.
Sand and vacuum the floor first 😉Yes I know the best way to sort it would be to take them all up and start again. But at my expence through no fault of my own! I'll try a few rows with a 3 or 4 mm mosaic trowel using the old tiles first as that's the cheapest option for now.
Shutterers defenitly don't use hardwood plywood. That darkness indicates 'Redwood'Just a thought, the photo that shows the plywood, as has been said looks quite dark, I don't suppose it could be more of a concrete shuttering ply with releasing agent impregnated in it
And maybe the Weber adhesive just couldn't cope, whereas another manufacture may well just have been a bit better?
As said just a thought
Dave