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Previously on "Anyone ever done a floor screed before?"
Just be warned self-levelling latex is as much of a misnomer as Plug N Play, most of the time its fine but every so often it all goes horrendously wrong..
Things to consider:
How uneven is the floor (some products won’t work over great differences)
What is the current floor make up (some products don’t sit well on some substrates)
What flooring are you putting on top (see above)
How thick is the latex & proposed flooring (make it all too thick & you won’t be able to open doors)
Do you have skirting & is it going to be removed when the floor is laid, if so you need to remove when doing the screed or you will have a big gap
If taking to the wall remember to leave a small (3-5mm) gap for floor / wall expansion joint
Check the product: some screeds need a certain heat to cure, some emit fumes, and some have humidity issues
Are you able to not use the room during the curing period.
I would suggest that you get the people laying the new floor to do the screed.
Think liabilities if your screed is not level & a parquet floor will show it up; the floor layers can then say the substrate violates the warranty conditions.
Just be warned self-levelling latex is as much of a misnomer as Plug N Play, most of the time its fine but every so often it all goes horrendously wrong..
Things to consider:
How uneven is the floor (some products won’t work over great differences)
What is the current floor make up (some products don’t sit well on some substrates)
What flooring are you putting on top (see above)
How thick is the latex & proposed flooring (make it all too thick & you won’t be able to open doors)
Do you have skirting & is it going to be removed when the floor is laid, if so you need to remove when doing the screed or you will have a big gap
If taking to the wall remember to leave a small (3-5mm) gap for floor / wall expansion joint
Check the product: some screeds need a certain heat to cure, some emit fumes, and some have humidity issues
Are you able to not use the room during the curing period.
I would suggest that you get the people laying the new floor to do the screed.
Think liabilities if your screed is not level & a parquet floor will show it up; the floor layers can then say the substrate violates the warranty conditions.
It also might be handy to pick up a 2m 2by4 and a handle... fit the handle in the middle (for balance) and "tap tap tap" the screed to remove air bubbles and help it flow
Assuming it is just a matter of getting a level onto an existing screed:-
Buy some self levelling compound and pour it in one corner, it should be the correct constituency to flow and find it's own level thereby even out the floor
Last edited by Troll; 20 September 2014, 22:35.
Reason: skoolboy error
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