There's pages and pages of threads on the tilers forum (of which I'm a member) that explains how PVA becomes 'reactivated' when in contact with wet adhesive and leads to tiles debonding.
Its seems though a lot of builders and plumbers are still using PVA, when a tiler here's of someone using it, they react the same as plumbers would if we saw a diyer fitting a Speedfit gas pipe or something like that.
There's a hell of a lot more to tiling than you may think, the main no no's are don't use tubbed adhesive, don't tile on plywood, don't tile on chipboard, dont use PVA and dont dot and dab adhesive (5 blobs).
Also when using 6mm Hardiebacker on floors, the boards must be fixed onto flexible powered adhesive, screwed and the joins taped before tiling. The adhesive is to fill any voids. Its an expensive way to do it as rapid set is not cheap but its piece of mind, you cant use driwall adhesive either as its not flexible and will void the gaurantee on the cement boards
I joined the tilers forum when I had a tiled floor fail and I was stressed big time as the customer was a nasty piece of work, the floor tiles were cracking over the joins in the 12mm plywood which I had laid over the floorboards. The guys on the tiler forum told me never to tile on 12mm ply and that the British Standard is 15mm, But who sells 15mm ply? No one so go up to 18mm.
I was advised to use 12mm back when I started and would have carried on using it had I not had any problems.
When I tile a floor now I rip up the floorboards and add noggins to make a grid layout on the floor, then glue and screw 18mm WBP ply onto joists after priming the edges, underside and face (to stop it absorbing moisture underneath), then 6mm Hardiebacker and then tiles.
Only then can I sleep easy knowing I won't get that dreaded call.
Its seems though a lot of builders and plumbers are still using PVA, when a tiler here's of someone using it, they react the same as plumbers would if we saw a diyer fitting a Speedfit gas pipe or something like that.
There's a hell of a lot more to tiling than you may think, the main no no's are don't use tubbed adhesive, don't tile on plywood, don't tile on chipboard, dont use PVA and dont dot and dab adhesive (5 blobs).
Also when using 6mm Hardiebacker on floors, the boards must be fixed onto flexible powered adhesive, screwed and the joins taped before tiling. The adhesive is to fill any voids. Its an expensive way to do it as rapid set is not cheap but its piece of mind, you cant use driwall adhesive either as its not flexible and will void the gaurantee on the cement boards
I joined the tilers forum when I had a tiled floor fail and I was stressed big time as the customer was a nasty piece of work, the floor tiles were cracking over the joins in the 12mm plywood which I had laid over the floorboards. The guys on the tiler forum told me never to tile on 12mm ply and that the British Standard is 15mm, But who sells 15mm ply? No one so go up to 18mm.
I was advised to use 12mm back when I started and would have carried on using it had I not had any problems.
When I tile a floor now I rip up the floorboards and add noggins to make a grid layout on the floor, then glue and screw 18mm WBP ply onto joists after priming the edges, underside and face (to stop it absorbing moisture underneath), then 6mm Hardiebacker and then tiles.
Only then can I sleep easy knowing I won't get that dreaded call.