Arron
15th May 2005, 09:58 PM
Hi Folks. The bathroom renno is progressing. Now I'm looking at the floor in the toilet. This is a 1963 house in Sydney, with original bathroom and toilet.
The floor is on a floating slab, with those tiny tiles. When I started on it I expected there to be a layer of sand and cement about 30mm thick beneath the tiles, sitting on top of the concrete. Ie concrete floor under mortar bed under tiles. It seems that is not so and it seems to be solid concrete directly under the tiles. I've bashed a hole in the floor and it just looks like concrete. The problem is that the old tiles are only about 4mm thick, so replacing these with bigger (modern) tiles and a layer of adhesive will raise the floor - making it too high in relation to the adjoining wooden hallway floor. Also, the floor is slightly dish-shaped, which is OK with the very small tiles but isnt going to work very well with 200x200mm tiles, and will need a thick adhesive bed to compensate.
Is my conclusion on how the floor is made likely to be correct - or am I just not seeing things right. If so, how is this type of floor normally retiled. Any suggestions on how to get a nice flat layer of tiles in without raising the floor and creating a little step, always to be tripped over.
I've included a photo showing floor with some the tiles removed.
thanks
Arron
The floor is on a floating slab, with those tiny tiles. When I started on it I expected there to be a layer of sand and cement about 30mm thick beneath the tiles, sitting on top of the concrete. Ie concrete floor under mortar bed under tiles. It seems that is not so and it seems to be solid concrete directly under the tiles. I've bashed a hole in the floor and it just looks like concrete. The problem is that the old tiles are only about 4mm thick, so replacing these with bigger (modern) tiles and a layer of adhesive will raise the floor - making it too high in relation to the adjoining wooden hallway floor. Also, the floor is slightly dish-shaped, which is OK with the very small tiles but isnt going to work very well with 200x200mm tiles, and will need a thick adhesive bed to compensate.
Is my conclusion on how the floor is made likely to be correct - or am I just not seeing things right. If so, how is this type of floor normally retiled. Any suggestions on how to get a nice flat layer of tiles in without raising the floor and creating a little step, always to be tripped over.
I've included a photo showing floor with some the tiles removed.
thanks
Arron