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tercestisi

Leveling Uneven Floor and Procelein Tiling

tercestisi
17 years ago

We are doing a quite bit of remodeling in our house.

One area is to remove some vinyl flooring in our kitchen, remove the hardwood (and reuse it in other parts of the house), and possibly redo the subfloor and then tile.

The floor is basically a parabola... 1" deflection in one spot and only 1/4" in another. The room bows down to one corner.

We don't really have the funds to raise the house and sistering the joists may be a solution but we don't have the experience to do that and really don't have the funds to hire someone right now. We have (HAVE) to start the work on the 15th of this month as this is when we will be redoing all the hardwood in the house. Seeing as we can't do it 100% correctly can we do it somewhere between 70-90% correctly?

My ideas are (and please comment on whats best and what's even feasible):

1) Shim the low spots between the joists and subfloor with actual shims or custom made Xx2's.

2) Use self-leveling compound to level this sunken corner and feather it out to the existing floor.

3) Give up tiling and go for vinyl or linoleum.

If we choose to go route (2) should we remove the existing subfloor and put in a 1-1/4" double layered exterior grade ply or can we put 1/2" ply over the existing subfloor (is this possible because of the concaveness of the floor). Looking from underneath via a drop-out ceiling the subfloor looks to be a combination of 1/2 5x1 planks and 1/2 3-1/4" tounge and groove (hardwood?). We'll be ripping out the existing vinyl flooring this Thursday so I'll know more then.

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