peteypops Posted September 27 Share Posted September 27 I'm fixing an acrylic shower tray to an upstairs bath room floor - moisture resistant chip board floor on posi-joists, all brand new. The surrounding floor tile will be decoupled, probably with DITRA. I currently have the standard tray-sized hole, filled with plywood plus mortar on top design. It occurs to me that this might be overkill, why would I not just run the decoupling mat everywhere and thinset the tray to the decoupling mat? Vertical displacement is not going to be an issue, so I believe i'm really only looking to protect against differential expansion, which is what decoupling mat is specifically for. Any thoughts on this? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Temp Posted September 27 Share Posted September 27 I used flexible tile adhesive. Seems OK. However some trays aren't very flat on the bottom or strong enough. The mortar base is intended to solve both issues. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peteypops Posted September 27 Author Share Posted September 27 I've used tile adhesive before to good effect, but as you say, that will depend on the tray itself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peteypops Posted September 27 Author Share Posted September 27 6 hours ago, peteypops said: I'm fixing an acrylic shower tray to an upstairs bath room floor - moisture resistant chip board floor on posi-joists, all brand new. The surrounding floor tile will be decoupled, probably with DITRA. I currently have the standard tray-sized hole, filled with plywood plus mortar on top design. It occurs to me that this might be overkill, why would I not just run the decoupling mat everywhere and thinset the tray to the decoupling mat? Vertical displacement is not going to be an issue, so I believe i'm really only looking to protect against differential expansion, which is what decoupling mat is specifically for. Any thoughts on this? Correction, it's a stone resin shower tray with an acrylic surface, so they call it acrylic. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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