Laying Travertine tiles

P

pearl1

Hi

After some tips/advice on laying travertine tiles. They will be going onto a concrete floor which has under floor heating installed. Am I right in saying the tiles have to be sealed before laying them and again twice after grouting?? Do I have to use a specific adhesive and grout as the floor will be contracting from the ufh?? Any info appreciated
 
Sponsored Links
They will be going onto a concrete floor which has under floor heating installed.
You don't say if it's a wet or wire system? Just tile over if wet. If it's a wire system you'd be wise to lay an SLC over it to protect from tiling & to give you any chance of repair if it ever goes wrong; it also provides a flat tile base which is important if the tiles are large format. You should also consider laying the element over insulated tile backer board rather than directly onto the concrete screed, it helps direct heat upwards through the tiles rather than it being absorbed by the screed & reduces warm up time.

Am I right in saying the tiles have to be sealed before laying them and again twice after grouting?
Yes, seal once before laying, clean & seal again before grouting & then seal twice more after grouting.

Do I have to use a specific adhesive and grout as the floor will be contracting from the ufh?
Assuming your doing the tiling; you must be careful with adhesive & grout application to avoid staining, don’t slap it around! Use a quality trade flexible cement powder adhesive & grout, cheap own brand & DIY materials are mostly crap. Because of the risk of bleed through staining use a Flexy Rapidset adhesive to reduce risk but it has a short pot life so don’t mix any more than you can use in around 35 minutes & clean your bucket & tools thoroughly between mixes. Use white adhesive rather than the standard grey for light coloured travertine, again to reduce risk of staining. Same applies to grout; don’t be tempted to use a dark contrasting colour. No less than 4mm on tile spacing & if large format 5mm; you will need a decent diamond wheel wet tile cutter.
 
Sponsored Links
4 & 5mm joints on large format tiles on a high spec floor????

Not something I would recommend nor would my clients accept. 2-3mm on floor is fine.
 
4 & 5mm joints on large format tiles on a high spec floor???? Not something I would recommend nor would my clients accept. 2-3mm on floor is fine.
B.S. 5385 part 3 recommends a minimum of 3mm for floor tile grout joints. Given that the OP has UFH, it's also prudent to allow 1½ x normal grout width. I would not advise less than 4mm over a wet heated screed & without knowing the tile size & floor area would err on the safe side; large floor areas also need expansion joints. Grout width is a matter of personal preference but I wouldn’t jeopardise an installation simply because a client desires narrow grout lines!

It's wet ufh not electric
The UFH system should be commissioned BEFORE tiling, ramping the temperature up by 5 degrees/day to maximum. The heating should be turned off 48 hours before & not turned on for 24 hours after tiling; ramp the temperature up no more than 5 degrees/day. It would be prudent to use an uncoupling (Ditra) membrane with a wet piped system.
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Back
Top