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Let's talk tile.

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  • Let's talk tile.

    The house we're closing on has 10"x10" terracotta tiles in the garage. I don't know why you'd tile a garage but the previous owners did. Tiles are already starting to crack in the garage and will probably continue to crack so it's my plan to remove them before moving in.

    Now, how hard is it to remove tile? What's the best way to remove tiles?
    Originally posted by Jester
    Every time you see the fucking guy....show him your fucking dick.. Just whip out your hawg and wiggle it in his direction, put it away, call him a fuckin meatgazer, shoot him the bird and go inside.
    He will spend the rest of the day wondering if he is gay.
    Originally posted by Denny
    What the fuck ever, you fucking fragile faggot.
    FORGTN SOLD1ER - xbox gamer

  • #2
    Rotary hammer

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    • #3
      Rotary hammer. You can rent one from Rental Stop or Home Depot and the rates are very reasonable. Invest in good eye, ear, hand and dust protection as well.

      Comment


      • #4
        Face shield for sure.
        2006 Civic SI
        2009 Pilot
        1988 GT
        CRF50

        Widebody whore.

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        • #5
          The tile is the easy part! The hard part will be the thinset underneath! Getting a smooth surface will take a good deal of time, and most likely require a grinder. We removed all of the tile in our house with a manual tile scraper. It went pretty quick, though I think the install was poorly done.

          How old is the house? It is a safe bet that those cracks are a result of cracks in the slab underneath it and the house moving.
          Originally posted by Leah
          Best balls I've had in my mouth in a while.

          Comment


          • #6
            That tile should break fairly easy. My thought is what are they hiding under the tile.

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            • #7
              Home depot rents a walk behind tile scraper... spend the extra $20 on rental and save yourself many hours of anger

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              • #8
                Make it part of the deal. Make them remove and smooth before closing or get cash off the deal to pay a pro to do it.

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                • #9
                  The bad thing about having to grind off the thin set, it will leave the concrete smooth. Slippery when wet.

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                  • #10
                    Go to Home Depot and rent this...it's the easiest way to demo tile and smooth out thin-set without destroying your back.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by lincolnboy View Post
                      The bad thing about having to grind off the thin set, it will leave the concrete smooth. Slippery when wet.
                      Garage floors are poured with a smooth finish
                      Originally posted by Leah
                      Best balls I've had in my mouth in a while.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Tyrone Biggums View Post
                        Rotary hammer. You can rent one from Rental Stop or Home Depot and the rates are very reasonable. Invest in good eye, ear, hand and dust protection as well.
                        Good info, I didn't think about dust protection. My plan was to leave the garage door open and get a couple box fans or something to push any dust out. Think that will work?

                        Originally posted by black2002ls View Post
                        The tile is the easy part! The hard part will be the thinset underneath! Getting a smooth surface will take a good deal of time, and most likely require a grinder. We removed all of the tile in our house with a manual tile scraper. It went pretty quick, though I think the install was poorly done.

                        I had no doubts about having to rent a cement sander to sand down any left over grout pieces.

                        How old is the house? It is a safe bet that those cracks are a result of cracks in the slab underneath it and the house moving.
                        The house was built in 1980 and the house did have some foundation repairs in mid 2014 so I'm sure some of the cracks are from shifting. I also know that tile won't hold up to several thousand pound cars on it forever.

                        Originally posted by lincolnboy View Post
                        That tile should break fairly easy. My thought is what are they hiding under the tile.
                        Just concrete.

                        Originally posted by dcs13 View Post
                        Make it part of the deal. Make them remove and smooth before closing or get cash off the deal to pay a pro to do it.
                        So we weren't the highest offer but they decided to accept our offer because of a handwritten letter my girlfriend wrote to the seller telling them how much we wanted the house. We don't want to risk the final negotiations at closing with this as we have a couple other things we're going to negotiate at closing.

                        Originally posted by lincolnboy View Post
                        The bad thing about having to grind off the thin set, it will leave the concrete smooth. Slippery when wet.
                        My plan is to get rid of this tile, smooth out the cement, and put some sort of floor coating down, so it won't be bare cement.
                        Originally posted by Jester
                        Every time you see the fucking guy....show him your fucking dick.. Just whip out your hawg and wiggle it in his direction, put it away, call him a fuckin meatgazer, shoot him the bird and go inside.
                        He will spend the rest of the day wondering if he is gay.
                        Originally posted by Denny
                        What the fuck ever, you fucking fragile faggot.
                        FORGTN SOLD1ER - xbox gamer

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Is the furnace/air handler in the garage? Mine is in a garage closet. If it is, make sure you seal that closet up on the garage side. That will help rdduce the amount of dust that gets drawn into the hvac system!
                          Originally posted by Leah
                          Best balls I've had in my mouth in a while.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by black2002ls View Post
                            Is the furnace/air handler in the garage? Mine is in a garage closet. If it is, make sure you seal that closet up on the garage side. That will help rdduce the amount of dust that gets drawn into the hvac system!
                            Fortunately it's not.
                            Originally posted by Jester
                            Every time you see the fucking guy....show him your fucking dick.. Just whip out your hawg and wiggle it in his direction, put it away, call him a fuckin meatgazer, shoot him the bird and go inside.
                            He will spend the rest of the day wondering if he is gay.
                            Originally posted by Denny
                            What the fuck ever, you fucking fragile faggot.
                            FORGTN SOLD1ER - xbox gamer

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Thats good. I did some painting in the garage while we were remodeling. The smell ended up all in the house.
                              Originally posted by Leah
                              Best balls I've had in my mouth in a while.

                              Comment

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