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#1 |
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Hello. I live in Florida. The majority down here think tiling a garage floor in Ceramic or Porcelain is a big NO NO. They say it will not work. It will crack and become a mess. I know that in the DR they tile everything. They do a great job with garages and outdoor spaces using what appears to be ceramic or porcelain. I have seen floors here in FL done in epoxy paints and 2 part epoxy covers and I have seen plenty of problems. I want to avoid that. I think tile is cleaner and will probably be just fine.
Does anyone know if in DR they use ceramic or porcelain or does it matter? Anything special about doing a tile job in a garage down there? I found this ceramic I like a lot but I understand porcelain is more durable. Trying to figure out if the ceramic would be fine. Of course I will be driving a car onto it. Thanks for help. |
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#2 |
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The tile has nothing to do with cracking or movement in any way, it is what you put the tile on that makes the difference. If the foundation/substructure is crap the job will be crap. Laying onto concrete is pretty simple. If your garage floor is concrete then you can lay directly on to of this, no technical consideration is needed. If you were to relay the whole floor then tile it might be worth thinking of a few things, but if it is a garage floor, it will be pretty solid and stable. Just get the materials and go to work.
You are correct about the tiles, and typically ceramic are more slippy, infact some are outright lethal when wet, but there are ceramic flor tiles. it's worth getting a floor tile specific for bathrooms or kitchens. You want a 90% coverage float for the floor tiles, meaning 90% of the tile has contact with the adhesive. |
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#3 |
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I've always seen ceramic here, if I'm not mistaken. If you get a good tiler that makes sure the space between the base floor and the tile is full, I don't see a problem with cracks.
They crack when the tiles have lots of air pockets. You should be able to bounce a golf ball on the floor or tap it with a broom stick and not hear a hollow sound any where. If you get a lot of hollow sounds, you'll probably have a cracking problem in the future. |
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#4 |
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Snuffy
First feliz dia del Padre! Glad to hear from you. With regard to the floor tile, ceramic and porcelain are used here, but ceramic is more common. As long as you have a slab on grade construction you will be ok for the first floor. With regard to the use of clay tile I have seen it in Florida. I expect the problem with the clay tiles is that the roofs any more are made of 1/2" particle board and are very flexible and thus would not provide a good base. I sometimes don't have to wonder why whenever a hurricane comes to Florida many homes are blown away. On the contrary, the homes here in the DR that have tile roof are poured in place and reinforced and are very rigid. You could call the roof tile manufacturer and ask them but my own opinion is that you would need 3/4" plywood, not particle board, as a base. Of course I'm no expert in this area and am basing this on walking on different types of roofs. Don't be a stranger and look me up on Facebook |
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#6 |
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well put tile lies on a "bed" of cement and there are no empty spaces underneath, like JDJones explained. costs more to put because of the quantity of cement but will last a long time. there are plenty of outdoorsy tiles: surface is a bit rough so they do not get slippery when wet. dominicans also use "cement tiles", not sure about the proper name. those are reddish or spotted small square tiles, very thick and heavy. but they will last ages with not a single crack.
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#7 |
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If worried about the concrete below cracking use a crack isolation membrane first or a superflex mortar to set the tiles like this one (I've used it many times and no cracking) Super Flex If worried about wear and tear on the tile use a porcelain tile as it is indeed usually stronger and a solid color throughout if chips and such occur.
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#8 |
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#9 |
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Thank you all for the quick input. Yes, pretty much as I expected. The garage is nice and flat with a slight grade. It has to be etched because it has to smooth a surface. I did a test etch and it worked fine. Think I will buy a porcelain for several reasons pointed out above. More money but I want to do it right. Again, I appreciate the information.
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#11 |
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#13 |
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#14 |
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You are saying I don't need to etch it?
Yes! Smooth is good. Will give you consistent coverage when you load the floor with adhesive. You buy tiling floats (trowels) with grooves in one side which load the surface between 30% and 90%. For the floor, you want either 80 or 90% float. If you try to lay a tile of a flat 100% bed it will pop off as soon as it takes a huge pressure, a 100% bed leaves nowhere or air to escape when sitting the tile and so often forms an air pocket. What people are saying is kind of correct, but in practice wrong. You need these grooves so when sat, and slid into position, maybe 10mm it covers nd drags the adhesive to get pretty much 100% covering and the air escapes. It is not difficult, but it is worth getting the method right, make life easy for yourself. I wouldn't worry about flex or latex in your adhesive for a garage floor, messing around with membranes and expensive adhesives on a garage floor is way overkill. If you thought your garage structure was bad then you wouldn't be aying on it. Tiles, grout, trowel, sponge, buckets, adhesive and spacers, get to work and good luck. |
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#15 |
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I am by no means trying to get in a contest with you givadog. I enjoy your wise advise on here and obviously you have very good knowledge of setting tile
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#16 |
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I am by no means trying to get in a contest with you givadog. Anyway, we are 6of1 and half a dozen of t'other, so he should do well if he follows the advice offered. Mind you, I'll bet my hat he screws the setting out up, that is where the real skill comes in. |
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#17 |
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There is no contest in offering advice my friend. The guy is asking what he needs to do to make a good job, not what he 'could' do, then the overkill alarms ring loud with all the new products and methods pushed into a trade that really is not difficult, nor needs to be expensive. 70% of new products pushed into the tiling market over the last 15 years are absolutely pointless money spinners. Just because products exist is not reason enough to use them. The only quality products that have been introduced over the last 30 years are the quality of latex adhesives, which aren't required on concrete slabs, won't do any harm, but not required so why pay for them |
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#18 |
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No, absolutely not. You want to load the floor, about as far as you can comfortably reach with the float. Once you have that area nice and uniform, then set the tiles into the adhesive on the floor. If you load the tile you will not get it right, t s bad practice, dot and dab, usually meaning a dot on each corner and a dab in the centre. This is no good fr a floor job, forget that method, it is amateur BS.
do as I said, then you can tile big areas easily. It the tile on the adhesive about 10mm from where you want it to be, then slide it on the adhesive, into position, the adhesive naturally mixes into 100% coverage as the grooves in the float will typically be 10mm. once your off you can get a good speed up. |
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#19 |
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For setting out, the most important thing is to make sure you don't end up with any difficult cuts, or tiny slithers to take off and your cutter will struggle on anything less than 15-20mm. Take into account pipes coming up for radiators or boilers etc. you'll want to try to get them so you just have to nick off the corner rather than drilling the centre of a tile, if possible, but not always the case. Just spend a good few hours working it out, get a long straight edge and mark up in chalk on the floor, use different colours fr different possabilities, then decide which works best and start from any of your main feature points.
Really, laying tiles is easy, marking properly is what takes the brain power. You'll see what I mean when you come across things when doing it and you'll think 'oh, if I'd just done that instead.........'. Enjoy. |
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#20 |
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When the idiots laid the tile at "La Plaza de laSalud", they put 5 dabs of mortar on each tile,one on each corner,and one in the middle.When we rolled in the equipment,most cracked as the wheels rolled over them!
I put down sheets of plywood to distribute the weight.Worked great. However,many tiles have continued to break,some from foot trafic. As far as using plywood,or "CHIPboard" as a subfloor,I can't believe anyone who knows anything,about the DR would allow that! The termites are waiting for their "Dinner".Not to mention the water disolving the glue! CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC |
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