Great_scot_selfbuild Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago I'm getting quotes for both sand & cement and liquid screed floor layer over our UFH. The depth was going to be 75mm, but it turns out my principal designer failed to take into account that the screed needs a layer of self-levelling compound on top before we lay our LVT, so I've been advised by multiple screed companies to allow for at least 5mm as I can always add SL Compound. Therefore, working back from the FFL and 5mm LVT, with 150mm PIR, we'll be needing 70mm of screed. The initial costs I've had back aren't as different as I expected: Area = 130sqm If cost wasn't a deciding factor, what would you choose and why?
Mr Punter Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago I like traditional sand cement screed. 75mm is quite thick for liquid screed. If you go liquid, use Cemfloor as there is no laitance removal needed. I have used Sigma Screed in the past and they were very good.
Nickfromwales Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Use my mate for the dry screed and you can pretty much paint it green and play snooker on it. You won’t need a full bed of SLC, your LVT installers will just use feathering compound wherever necessary (LINK) so less time and complexity and then it’s easier to manage trades. You should only need to do a full layer of SLC if you’re putting LVT down over a concrete slab. A good screeder will give you the result you want, save you time, and money.
Great_scot_selfbuild Posted 4 hours ago Author Posted 4 hours ago 2 hours ago, Mr Punter said: I like traditional sand cement screed. Any particular reason? 1 hour ago, Nickfromwales said: your LVT installer That’ll be us 2 hours ago, Mr Punter said: use Cemfloor as there is no laitance removal needed. The quote I have is from a recommended cemfloor installer - whilst he said theees no laitance, it does still need keying-in, which is what his £1105 is quoting for. 1 hour ago, Nickfromwales said: Use my mate for the dry screed Estimate was iro £4k before laitance removal.
Nickfromwales Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 6 minutes ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: Estimate was iro £4k before laitance removal There is no laitance with a dry screed? 7 minutes ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: Any particular reason? More accuracy, better finish, no follow up to get it ready, generally just better outcome. Also, it’s not a liquid, so less prep as it doesn’t want to find a gap and disappear down / into it. 8 minutes ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: That’ll be us Then make life easy! 9 minutes ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: whilst he said there’s no laitance, it does still need keying-in, which is what his £1105 is quoting for. Not sure what that’s all about. Last few cemfloor installs I’ve been on just needed sealing / priming etc.
Nickfromwales Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 3 hours ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: I've been advised by multiple screed companies to allow for at least 5mm as I can always add SL Compound This only matters at openings, and with a dry screed you can put a line of masking tape and draw a line across it and tell them to screed to that line. And they will. Then just feather the few places where it needs it, nothings ever perfect, and off to go.
saveasteading Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 1 hour ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: does still need keying-in, which is what his £1105 is quoting for. I'm confused by that. Any latency in dry screed is deliberately made on the surface for a smooth finish and should be minor. I can't see why you would have to do much to it. The main concern would be tamping ripples no worse than on a poured screed.
Nickfromwales Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 41 minutes ago, saveasteading said: The main concern would be tamping ripples There’s near zero ‘ripples’ if you lay a dry screed properly, it’s trowelled by hand to float it almost completely flat.
saveasteading Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 28 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said: If you lay a dry screed properly If. I believe it is a skill that is fairly rare.
Great_scot_selfbuild Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, saveasteading said: I'm confused by that. Any latency in dry screed is deliberately made on the surface for a smooth finish and should be minor. I can't see why you would have to do much to it. The main concern would be tamping ripples no worse than on a poured screed. The reference to keying in was on a Cemflood liquid screed. The dry screed quote states that they provide the pump - I hadn’t realised that a dry screed would be pumped. Is this normal? (As you can tell, I’ve never seen it done and the only very small amounts of dry mix used so far have just been mixed in the mixer and then used straight away.
Great_scot_selfbuild Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 13 minutes ago, saveasteading said: If. I believe it is a skill that is fairly rare. This is my concern - by the time I find out they aren’t very good it will be too late. Hence I’m asking for references (some of them have little/no online reviews).
Nickfromwales Posted 58 minutes ago Posted 58 minutes ago 40 minutes ago, saveasteading said: If. I believe it is a skill that is fairly rare. My mate (details have been shared with the op btw) did @Russell griffiths place, and I’ve used him for 25 years. When I say you can paint it green and play snooker on it, I’m not joking.
Nickfromwales Posted 56 minutes ago Posted 56 minutes ago 27 minutes ago, Great_scot_selfbuild said: I’m asking for references I’ve given you contact details for one of the best screeders you’ll ever meet. Family run business, with dad having passed the baton to his sons. One of their previous projects was an £80m 8-storey mega house for a wealthy chap in London.
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