Large tiles on plasterboard
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Large tiles on plasterboard
I am installing large ceramic tiles: 300x600 x11mm thick on 12.5mm plasterboard on a stud wall. The wall only has standard spacing for the studs and ideally should have more noggings to support the plasterboard. If I push the plasterboard on the areas where there is no wood behind, it moves a little.
Is using flexible adhesive and grouting the solution to avoid problems with the tiles coming off? If so, any products people can recommend? I guess the plasteboard is not going to come off with sufficient screws fixing it.
Is using flexible adhesive and grouting the solution to avoid problems with the tiles coming off? If so, any products people can recommend? I guess the plasteboard is not going to come off with sufficient screws fixing it.
- ultimatehandyman
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- ultimatehandyman
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600 is a little wide, although you can get away with that distance.
I'd put some extra dry wall screws in the plasterboard to try and stiffen it up a little.
If you think that there is still too much give in it then you should remove the plasterboard and fit some noggins to be on the safe side, then replace the plasterboard. If it is being tiled over it does not matter about any additional cuts in the plasterboard.
I'd put some extra dry wall screws in the plasterboard to try and stiffen it up a little.
If you think that there is still too much give in it then you should remove the plasterboard and fit some noggins to be on the safe side, then replace the plasterboard. If it is being tiled over it does not matter about any additional cuts in the plasterboard.
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I had a "crazy" idea which I have never seen used in stud walls: Inject PU foam between the plasterboard leaves like they do in masonry cavity walls, through a small hole in the plasterboard between studs and noggings. As the foam sticks to the two sheets of plasterboard, it would make a very strong sandwich construction and give you insulation at the same time. Trouble is the cavity already has wool insulation...
The studs are closer near the wall ends, like doorways. The pitch of 600 mm is obviously there because it gives the pitch of 1200mm to fix the plasterboard leaves. There are extra noggings where the basin, bath and wall taps are located so that the stress is on the stud walls, not the plasterboard.
The thing is I am not worried about the plasterboard moving "a little", it is what I read in other postings about tiles coming off that worries me.
The studs are closer near the wall ends, like doorways. The pitch of 600 mm is obviously there because it gives the pitch of 1200mm to fix the plasterboard leaves. There are extra noggings where the basin, bath and wall taps are located so that the stress is on the stud walls, not the plasterboard.
The thing is I am not worried about the plasterboard moving "a little", it is what I read in other postings about tiles coming off that worries me.
- ultimatehandyman
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