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M.Burns January 29th 04 04:49 PM

Removing old floor tile from concrete
 
What is the best way to remove some very old tile from a concrete floor?
Where tile had been wet or had something sitting on it, some tiles are
already loose and pop up. But on most of the floor tile is still firmly
attached with what appears to be a black adhesive. The hammer and chisel
routine just brings up 1 to 3 inch square chunks. Tile is the plyable stuff
...not ceramic. Also 12x12, not the 9x9 asbestos.
Any ideas for something faster?



Jim & Lil January 29th 04 06:38 PM

Removing old floor tile from concrete
 
Try using a paint stripping heat gun and a steel sidewalk ice scraper
(sharpened)....did that for my Mother's basement years ago and the heat made
a big difference. Hope that was of some help ..................
Jim


"M.Burns" wrote in message
news:WKaSb.2549$CJ1.468@lakeread01...
What is the best way to remove some very old tile from a concrete floor?
Where tile had been wet or had something sitting on it, some tiles are
already loose and pop up. But on most of the floor tile is still firmly
attached with what appears to be a black adhesive. The hammer and chisel
routine just brings up 1 to 3 inch square chunks. Tile is the plyable

stuff
..not ceramic. Also 12x12, not the 9x9 asbestos.
Any ideas for something faster?





jim January 29th 04 07:52 PM

Removing old floor tile from concrete
 
M.Burns wrote:

What is the best way to remove some very old tile from a concrete floor?
Where tile had been wet or had something sitting on it, some tiles are
already loose and pop up. But on most of the floor tile is still firmly
attached with what appears to be a black adhesive. The hammer and chisel
routine just brings up 1 to 3 inch square chunks. Tile is the plyable stuff
..not ceramic. Also 12x12, not the 9x9 asbestos.
Any ideas for something faster?

home depot has a floor scraper about 6 ft. long pole with a small, about
4 inch wide blade on the end.. dont know what they are called, and how
much, but they were in the paint dept.. i did a laundry room about 6 ft.
by 8 ft. washer/dryer/hot water heater i the room... like yours some of
the tile were already up.. i then used some razor blade knives, the
kind with the single edge to the front like a chisel. i also had a
masonary chisel which i could hit(about 4 in wide blade)... i had a
small area and no hurry so i just did a few each day until i got the
whole thing out, i then worked the concrete with a new blade in the
scraper each day to make sure nothing would interfer with the new
tile... kinda cold outside..... make sure you leave the new tiles in
the room where you are going to install them for a few days... Exp: if
you leave them in a cold area and put them down and the floor warms up
then the tiles will expand and then mess up your floor job... if its
summer and you leave them in a hot ass garage for a few days then put
them into your home which is cool you gonna have them shrink back to
their normal size and they will have spaces between the tiles......

Baron January 29th 04 11:39 PM

Removing old floor tile from concrete
 
Make a wood frame about six inches high and a little bigger than an
individual tile. Place the frame on a tile and fill it with dry ice. You
will hear a pop when the glue releases the tile. The glue has frozen solid
and losses its grip. Use a long handled scrapper to move the tile off the
floor. It will not really need scraping, just something to move it. You
might be able to remove a good deal of the adhesive with the scrapper before
it thaws out.

I've seen a flooring operator remove all tile, quite cleanly, from a 10'
X 10' area in less than thirty minutes without breaking a sweat. He got
most of the glue as well at the same time. It is also safer than using heat
which might generate fumes and, of course, there is no fire risk.

Good Luck.

"M.Burns" wrote in message
news:WKaSb.2549$CJ1.468@lakeread01...
What is the best way to remove some very old tile from a concrete floor?
Where tile had been wet or had something sitting on it, some tiles are
already loose and pop up. But on most of the floor tile is still firmly
attached with what appears to be a black adhesive. The hammer and chisel
routine just brings up 1 to 3 inch square chunks. Tile is the plyable

stuff
..not ceramic. Also 12x12, not the 9x9 asbestos.
Any ideas for something faster?





Yasashii Arbaito January 30th 04 04:48 PM

Removing old floor tile from concrete
 
"M.Burns" wrote in message news:WKaSb.2549$CJ1.468@lakeread01...
What is the best way to remove some very old tile from a concrete floor?
Where tile had been wet or had something sitting on it, some tiles are
already loose and pop up. But on most of the floor tile is still firmly
attached with what appears to be a black adhesive. The hammer and chisel
routine just brings up 1 to 3 inch square chunks. Tile is the plyable stuff
..not ceramic. Also 12x12, not the 9x9 asbestos.
Any ideas for something faster?


What you are looking for is an electric floor tile stripper. It basically
is a motorized version of the manual scrapers mentioned by others. Any
good tool rental place should have one. Warning: the prolonged vibration
can be a killer for your hands, so wear padded gloves if you're using one
for any length of time.

The stripper will only remove some of the adhesive. If you need to get the
rest off, there are solvents available for the purpose.

--
Y.

Yasashii Arbaito January 30th 04 04:48 PM

Removing old floor tile from concrete
 
"M.Burns" wrote in message news:WKaSb.2549$CJ1.468@lakeread01...
What is the best way to remove some very old tile from a concrete floor?
Where tile had been wet or had something sitting on it, some tiles are
already loose and pop up. But on most of the floor tile is still firmly
attached with what appears to be a black adhesive. The hammer and chisel
routine just brings up 1 to 3 inch square chunks. Tile is the plyable stuff
..not ceramic. Also 12x12, not the 9x9 asbestos.
Any ideas for something faster?


What you are looking for is an electric floor tile stripper. It basically
is a motorized version of the manual scrapers mentioned by others. Any
good tool rental place should have one. Warning: the prolonged vibration
can be a killer for your hands, so wear padded gloves if you're using one
for any length of time.

The stripper will only remove some of the adhesive. If you need to get the
rest off, there are solvents available for the purpose.

--
Y.


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