How do I trowel a "flat bed" for floor tiles?

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:confused: Hi

I was looking at some Wickes floor tiles and it states they need to be bedded
in on a flat bed.

I need to raise my floor up a bit - so a 10mm deep bed of powdered adhesive mix
would be handy, but how do you apply a deep bed?

Normally you'd use a notched trowel to get the right depth, but I cannot see how you
can trowel in consistently at the right depth (or do you have to keep adjusting with level)?

Any help appreciated.

Thanks. Stephen
 
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I was looking at some Wickes floor tiles and it states they need to be bedded
in on a flat bed.
A “flat bed” adhesive base is achieved by using the correct solid bed notched trowel not by physically troweling the adhesive base flat.

I need to raise my floor up a bit - so a 10mm deep bed of powdered adhesive mix
would be handy, but how do you apply a deep bed?
Doing it like that will most likely end in disaster & it will be almost impossible to keep the tile surface flat & looking good. Adhesive bed thickness is usually around 3-6mm, it can be built up locally but even the best cement powder adhesives should only be used up to 12mm & only locally as stated. You first need to raise the floor to the desired level using a self levelling screed or a proprietary quickset render; do not use a conventional sand/cement render to screed, it will fail at that thickness.
 

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