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Thread: Bathroom Puddle flange
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24th May 2023, 01:34 PM #1
Bathroom Puddle flange
Morning all,
Looking for a definitive answer on installing a puddle flange.
I have seen a heap of videos on YouTube, and also read a heap of posts on Google in regards to puddle flanges and I get more and more confused each time. I had it in my head that a puddle flange is to be installed on top of a sloping screed in a bathroom and also waterproofed so that any water that may seep through the tiles etc can escape through the puddle flange. I have just recently started following a guy on YouTube that shares videos of tiling jobs and waterproofing, and he has told me that the puddle flange needs to be installed under the screed to the house substrate/slab. Does anyone know for sure if this info is correct? Watching gripset tips and tricks videos and he states it's either one or the other, and if the house slab has a puddle flange then the screed by code has to have one too.
Any info and opinions much appreciated.
Thanks
Geoff,
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24th May 2023, 07:05 PM #2
Depends on where your waterproof membrane is, if it is under the screed then yes the puddle flange needs to be under the screed.
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24th May 2023, 08:00 PM #3
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24th May 2023, 08:07 PM #4GOLD MEMBER
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24th May 2023, 09:36 PM #5
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24th May 2023, 11:24 PM #6GOLD MEMBER
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The usual process is the membrane goes under the screed so the the area is tanked , the puddle flange if required will be under the membrane
As Droog said part of the reason is so the tiler does not have to attend site twice but I think it is more common in Victoria
On first floor bathrooms we used to set up all our angles and membrane as per the code before the tile bed but had an arrangement with out tiler to membrane the screed also before gluing the floor tiles down for good measure and to stop the bed from getting waterlogged
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25th May 2023, 02:41 AM #7
Before the screed
The person who never made a mistake never made anything
Cheers
Ray
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25th May 2023, 09:03 AM #8GOLD MEMBER
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25th May 2023, 09:18 AM #9GOLD MEMBER
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25th May 2023, 11:23 AM #10
When I redid my bathroom, I waterproofed under, then put the screed in, waited a few weeks for the screed to cure properly, then waterproofed over the top as well.
Not everyone will have the luxury of being able to wait that long, but we just used the ensuite for the duration of the main bathroom reno. No kids at home .
When we reno’d the ensuite a few years previous, got a tiler in to do the job and I TA’d for him. He waterproofed under the screed, then tiled 2 days after the screed was laid, I am not keen on that method, as I reckon the screed is constantly wet now. It hasn’t caused any problems yet, as far as I know.Brad.
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25th May 2023, 12:09 PM #11GOLD MEMBER
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25th May 2023, 01:41 PM #12
Thanks for all of the replies guys, really seems like there is mixed views on how it should be done.
I thought the waterproof was done on top of the screed which caught any water seepage that would possibly get through the grout, the water could then run down as a secondary water catch. If the waterproof was on the house slab and waterproofed into the puddle flange beneath the screed and tile bed how would the water get away, as the house slab isn't slopped to allow water to seep into the puddle flange?
My current bathroom I have just started demolition and it was built in 1998, the shower section is the old style brick hob down the bottom, ask I started trying to lift the floor tiles it came off in sections because water must have been getting through for some time, underneath it was fibreglass, well the amount of water that was pooled up and had nowhere to go because the slab that was fibreglassed was not slopes to the drain, obviously as the drain pipe with the grate is higher than the fibreglass.
Screed is obviously put down and designed to run a fall for water towards the drain. If there's water getting through the tile bed which would then seep through the screed, where and how does the water get away?
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25th May 2023, 02:08 PM #13Senior Member
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Either drill 4x6mm holes in pipe just above or at the puddle flange,
or slot the pipe before the grate slips into place.
Before water proofing membranes and liquid sealers were introduced, copper trays were used with a flanged brass grate silver soldered to the tray.
This meant, as you have questioned, water would saturate the bed to a height of 6-8 mm but was considered at the time to be the best option.
Tilers would(and maybe still do) bed the tiles in a wet base/screed.
Last shower I did was 2003 and I did the base tiles this way.
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25th May 2023, 02:12 PM #14GOLD MEMBER
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It doesn't. The main thing is that it can't get through the barrier to damage the underlying building materials. Barrier on top of the screed is the way to go, and if you're doing it yourself you don't have to worry about the cost of having to get the tiler back twice to complete the job.
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25th May 2023, 02:49 PM #15GOLD MEMBER
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Puddle flange adaptors are deigned so the water can pass between the puddle flange and the adaptor:
Puddle Flange To Brass Waste Adaptor 100mm - NATFW677
Just make sure you don't fill the gap with tile glue.
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