Al, have you thought about just staining and clear coating the the concrete floor after it's sanded? It looks bitchin' and almost zero maintenance.@Alwayslit
yea asked the tile guy to order the tile and put me on the schedule. I also asked him to be prepared to sand the floor, question was, do you want all that dust in your house? My reply, vacuum or scrape old glue? Lets go with the vacuum
Al, have you thought about just staining and clear coating the the concrete floor after it's sanded? It looks bitchin' and almost zero maintenance.
No grout to clean or break apart over time.
@Alwayslit
yea asked the tile guy to order the tile and put me on the schedule. I also asked him to be prepared to sand the floor, question was, do you want all that dust in your house? My reply, vacuum or scrape old glue? Lets go with the vacuum
I wouldn't sand the concrete. There is no way I would want that dust throughout the house. I don't think the scraping would be too bad and you'll get a better result after it sets with the new thin set.....imho
Concrete dust can definitely wreck lungs over the long term. I wouldn't want that stuff floating around in the house.I'd wear an n95 and I wouldn't vacuum. I'd mop up the dust to encapsulate and wipe down the walls really good before you paint.
Good idea, I'll shoot pics of the floor and show "my guy" let him make final decision. Is there a problem with thin set adhering to the adhesive?
I wouldn't sand the concrete. There is no way I would want that dust throughout the house. I don't think the scraping would be too bad and you'll get a better result after it sets with the new thin set.....imho
If you have the right equipment or the right people with the right equipment there's really no dust at all.Concrete dust can definitely wreck lungs over the long term. I wouldn't want that stuff floating around in the house.
When I worked in a hospital they would make the construction crews run huge air filters anytime they did renovations that involved sanding and drilling on concrete. Obviously, there were exceptions for stuff like hanging a cabinet, but sanding the floors or putting in a new doorway required taping the area off with plastic and setting up filtration.
My wife just informed me that we're out of hay, so that screws up my day big time!
If you have the right equipment or the right people with the right equipment there's really no dust at all.
I have used the same equipment this dude uses to do 2 concrete floors and it's safe and easy.
My last boss had two of these machines as we did quite a bit of concrete floors in certain rooms of the homes we were building.
Yep, it's sucks up the dust which is nice. No mask needed.It's encapsulating the dust. I assume that vacuums it up. Wow, 9 days on the floor that's painful.