Hi,
I live in an old Victorian House (build 1890's) and need help to fix an old quarry tile floor which has received a bad repair at some point by previous owners. I want to remove the broken mishmash of tiles including the triangular tiles and then extend the chequered pattern of the original floor up to the hallway marine ply subfloor using some reclaimed tiles I have acquired which are identical is size (6" SQUARE), colour and thickness etc.
QUESTIONS
1. How do I remove the tiles in question and whatever was used to fix them (looks like concrete) without disturbing the neighbouring tiles?
2. What should I use to cut the reclaimed tiles I want to fit, they will need to be trimmed slightly in particular those on the right? (I know the pattern is running slightly diagonal but this is how it was laid originally in the dining room, weird I know). I have an electric diamond wheel tile cutter, is that the best bet? I've never cut an old thick quarry tile like this before?
3. What should I use to bed the tiles back down with, I think there is a void of about 3 - 5 inches deep that needs to be filled under the tiles?
4. I assume I will need to grout, what spacing should I use and what grout should I use to replicate the look and colour of the original floor?
Hopefully that makes sense, in short I don't want it to be noticeable that the new tiles fitted stand out from the original floor in any way.
Thanks for any help and advice.
Cheers,
Richard.