by Burnsy »
Tue Jan 08, 2008 10:04 pm
Never PVA the substrate behind tiles, always make sure that it is PROFESSIONAL TILERS PRIMER.
When you treat a surface with PVA it partly soaks in and partly sits on the surface of the substrate much in the same way as wallpaper paste.
If PVA gets wet it becomes slightly live again, it doesn't completely return to it's liquid state but it becomes sticky.
When you spread tile adhesive onto the wall, the water in the adhesive makes the PVA live and stops the adhesive from penetrating the substrate and providing a mechanical grip. Basically your tiles, grout and adhesive are being held to the wall by a thin layer of PVA.
Most tile adhesive works by crystallising when it sets (some are slightly different such as epoxy based ones) but generally they all work the same way. Once the adhesive starts to set crystals from and expand into any imperfections in the substrate surface (at a microscopic level) to create a grip. PVA stops this process by creating a barrier between the substrate and the tile adhesive.
Ok so what's the difference between this a primer, well basically the tile manufacturers primers soak right in to the substrate and stop the sponge like "draw "effect but they don't coat the surface in any way, they are an impregnator as opposed to a barrier. They also stop a chemical reaction occurring between the cement based adhesive and a plaster substrate, a known problem know as "Ettringite failure"
So only use PVA before tiling if the adhesive manufacturer specifies it in the instructions."
If you are tiling onto plaster board with a ready mixed adhesive there is no need to primer or pva. If you are using a cement based adhesive, then use a Primer as this will also help stop the adhesive recating with the gypsum in the plaster
Cheers
Last edited by
Burnsy on Tue Jan 15, 2008 10:07 am, edited 1 time in total.