mrgooch
Member
What size tile was used in this project?
Absgraham, thank you for the compliment!
As duneslider stated concrete cures in 28 days. But I would wait at least a full year before tiling, this will give the slab plenty of time to show its cracks.
I have a working garage. Will PEI 4 be tough enough?
I am well aware porcelain is harder than concrete. My search skills are probably lacking, I came up short on PEI4 vs 5. Some guides on tile sites suggest using 5 in industrial use and while my use isn't that hard, I don't want to have damage issues when my ******* drops a ****** off the bench. (I've never done this but in pessimistic.)Search this forum....it has been discussed extensively. But to answer your question, porcelain is harder than concrete and if installed properly, will give you a floor that will hold up to significant abuse. There's a video here of Jack beating his floor with a sledge hammer to the point the camera is bouncing off the floor with no breakage/chips/etc....and he used cheap ceramic tile. It's all in the install.....
Cheers.
Dakota- Your thread has convinced me to go with porcelain tile for my floor. I will use your thread as the "bible" when getting this project done. Seriously nice work.
Dakota
Killer floor and good to see you continue to show and prove over years it s durability to the doubters.
I have waited for years and I believe officially moved from epoxy to tile.
I have a relatively large garage. 1600 square feet. I want to choose a larger tile to limit the grout joints and fit scale wise.
Is there a reason you did not choose a larger tile 12 by 24 or 24 by 24? Am I safe and wise to do so?
Thanks again for sharing with all.
Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
Dakota , what grout ?
Mapei i assume, need user friendly !!
Gerry
ard,
You would need to do a moisture test first and foremost. Cut a 2ft x 2ft piece of clear plastic sheet and tape it down to the problem area on the slab. Wait 48hrs and see if any moisture comes to the surface. If so, tiling the area could be a problem.
Roll on waterproof membranes are effective when the water comes from the top. When moisture comes from the bottom this can break the adhesion bond that the membrane has to the concrete thus affecting the tiles.
You need to get the moisture problem under control and find the cause before you can tile.
Thanks-
I was afraid of that.
Problem, IMO, is that I could do this test- for the next 4 weeks- and pass fine. Then we get a 4 day storm, 7 inches of rain and there is some mositure. (Rain here is sporadic) The point, I guess, is that I know that I DID have an issue- hence I cannot rule out a return issue in the future. Im not sure how I get around this...
More research I guess....
