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HeyBub[_3_] December 18th 08 01:22 AM

Grout
 
Just out of idle curiosity, why grout for floor tile?



Red Green December 18th 08 01:56 AM

Grout
 
"HeyBub" wrote in
m:

Just out of idle curiosity, why grout for floor tile?




Pure guess. Wear resistance? In itself it's very hard. Sanded grout of
course has sand...which is hard. Also, bonding properties to tile.

All pure speculation.

SteveBell[_2_] December 18th 08 04:41 AM

Grout
 

Just out of idle curiosity, why grout for floor tile?


You have to fill the gaps between the tiles with something. What did
you have in mind besides grout?

--
Steve Bell
New Life Home Improvement
Arlington, TX USA

Big_Jake December 18th 08 02:01 PM

Grout
 
On Dec 17, 7:22*pm, "HeyBub" wrote:
Just out of idle curiosity, why grout for floor tile?


You could use caulk, but it would be time consuming, and probably
harder to clean. What alternatives are you thinking might be a better
idea?

JK

HeyBub[_3_] December 18th 08 02:04 PM

Grout
 
SteveBell wrote:
Just out of idle curiosity, why grout for floor tile?


You have to fill the gaps between the tiles with something. What did
you have in mind besides grout?


Good point. What got me going on this idea was the notion that one doesn't
grout self-sticking vinyl tile!

As an experiment, I laid nine ceramic tiles (3x3' area of 1-foot tiles) in a
doorway by gluing them to the concrete slab. I couldn't slip a piece of
paper in the crack between adjacent tiles!

Nevertheless, I applied an itty-bitty seam of caulk to the almost invisible
gap just to prevent dirt or water from infiltrating the space.

It's been that way for about a year now, and still looks and functions
swell. Admittedly, this doorway doesn't get much use and I'm about ready to
repeat the treatment for a more active entrance. So I thought I'd tap the
combined wisdom of the thousands here who've messed with floor tiles more
than I.



dadiOH[_3_] December 18th 08 09:23 PM

Grout
 
HeyBub wrote:
Just out of idle curiosity, why grout for floor tile?


To fill up the joints so dirt doesn't. What's that you say? Lay the tiles
"tight" so there is no joint? Good luck in doing that - even if the tile
has straight, 90 degree edges.

When I lived in Mexico my apartment had a floor laid like that (as did many
other residences). Actually, it wasn't tile in the normal sense, it was
what is called "mosaica". That is like terrazo made into uniformly sized
pieces and is laid like tile but "tight". Looks like hell. There were
always a fair number of offset pieces either horizontally or vertically.
The fix was to fill any gaps with white cement (the mosaica was made with
white cement). After filling it still looked like hell.

The grout joint also helps firm up the tile by helping to prevent rocking
should the tile not be totally supported on the bottom. Some of us also
find the pattern from the joints to be esthetically pleasing.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

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