Tiling to a part concrete / part timber floor
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- Mr. Grumpy
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Tiling to a part concrete / part timber floor
Hi guys,
I am due to tile my kitchen floor and bathroom floor. I was going to use 12mm aquapanel screwed to the timber floor boards as suggested in the sticky above. Now a lot of the timber boards are rotten away. I am not sure if its wet rot or dry rot, am trying to upload a photo but i am having a problem with the web site.
1. Anyway, any kind of timber you recommend to use for replacing the floor boards?
2. Also, part of the kitchen has an old concrete hearth whereby the existing floorboards join up to it. Now the floors boards are not level with the hearth , Can use something like fibreboard to level it up? To make it worse the hearth is not even level, slightly lumpy
3. I understand that I would screw aquapanel to the new floorboards as recommended ion the sticky, but what about the hearth, would I drill holes in the concrete and just use plugs and screws
Cheers
I am due to tile my kitchen floor and bathroom floor. I was going to use 12mm aquapanel screwed to the timber floor boards as suggested in the sticky above. Now a lot of the timber boards are rotten away. I am not sure if its wet rot or dry rot, am trying to upload a photo but i am having a problem with the web site.
1. Anyway, any kind of timber you recommend to use for replacing the floor boards?
2. Also, part of the kitchen has an old concrete hearth whereby the existing floorboards join up to it. Now the floors boards are not level with the hearth , Can use something like fibreboard to level it up? To make it worse the hearth is not even level, slightly lumpy
3. I understand that I would screw aquapanel to the new floorboards as recommended ion the sticky, but what about the hearth, would I drill holes in the concrete and just use plugs and screws
Cheers
- ultimatehandyman
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If the exisiting floorboards are rotten then why not rip up all the floorboards and use WBP ply, either 12mm or 25mm, depending on what tiles you are fitting, more info here-
http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/tilin ... floors.htm
Make sure you treat the joists first using some good timber treatment, such as cuprinol 5 star wood treatment.
To level up the hearth you can use WBP plywood as well, you can glue it down with grab adhesive and screw it as well using wall plugs and screws
http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/F&F_WALL_PLUGS.htm
http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/tilin ... floors.htm
Make sure you treat the joists first using some good timber treatment, such as cuprinol 5 star wood treatment.
To level up the hearth you can use WBP plywood as well, you can glue it down with grab adhesive and screw it as well using wall plugs and screws
http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/F&F_WALL_PLUGS.htm
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- Mr. Grumpy
- Posts: 3193
- Joined: Tue Nov 18, 2008 3:41 pm
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- Been thanked: 109 times
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- Mr. Grumpy
- Posts: 3193
- Joined: Tue Nov 18, 2008 3:41 pm
- Has thanked: 25 times
- Been thanked: 109 times
- ultimatehandyman
- Site Admin
- Posts: 24425
- Joined: Sat Jul 16, 2005 7:06 pm
- Location: Darwen, Lancashire
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Try these-
how-to-resize-pictures-easily-t9127.html
how-to-attach-pictures-to-posts-t9117.html
What tiles are you using for the floor?
how-to-resize-pictures-easily-t9127.html
how-to-attach-pictures-to-posts-t9117.html
What tiles are you using for the floor?
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- Mr. Grumpy
- Posts: 3193
- Joined: Tue Nov 18, 2008 3:41 pm
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- ultimatehandyman
- Site Admin
- Posts: 24425
- Joined: Sat Jul 16, 2005 7:06 pm
- Location: Darwen, Lancashire
- Has thanked: 1012 times
- Been thanked: 918 times
If you are using ceramic or porcelain then the floor does not need to be as sturdy as it does with natural stone productsNewbieJohn wrote:great tool! Will put a new post in the damp sections about my water under the floor.
As for the tiles, I was just going to buy standard titles from B&Q so I suppose its ceramic or porcelain tiles