As a petit single female homeowner I really appreciate a workable Solutions such as these! The idea of taking up the grout and resetting 16 inch tiles is not my idea of a good time. I found this to be a very doable and workable solution! I subscribed because you provide realistic solutions that fit my world!
Thanks yes it was. If this did not work I would be looking at removing tiles which would have been a bigger project and could have resulted in more neighboring loose tiles.
I did same as you, scraped out the grout first. Instead of fix a floor I just used a liquid cement crack filler. I was considering using elmers glue as well but never tried.. might work as well. I used the "stone mason" brand crack filler and I did so because I remember when filling cracks the stuff settles and you have to fill the crack many times before its ready. So I did the same thing and filled the void about 10x full before it was done. Now that it dried it is solid in that area.. will do on several other areas where there is a huge void.
@@flannelguydiy6458 We would absolutely love that! Feel free to send us an email at contact@dripless.com or reach out to us on social media and we can figure something out!
Thanks for this video. I had a similar tile floor installed with very thin grout lines and was not sure how to get the product down into it. I will give this a shot now.
Did it work out for you? My grout lines are very thin and I have about 6 tiles to glue. I tried this product without knowing how to work it in and it was a mess. I think I’ll get this caulk gun and use my razor to jiggle it down in there.
Tried this technique and it worked very well... it was well worth the effort of using a hand-held grout saw to get down into the grout and then gently using a chisel to push grout which was cracked or crumbling out of the grooves. I didn't pound anything to get it out. I did drill a few fairly small 1/16" holes along the bottom edge at an angle under the tile I thought I might open one of the thinset channels under the tile I filled the gap between tiles about 3/4 full of the Fix a Floor liquid and within about 3 hours it had all settled under the tile. Very little was left on top of the thinset exposed in between the tile where I'd removed the grout.
Works better if you drill. Get a smaller drill bit that is slightly larger than the smallest cut mark of the tip. Drilling allows you to fit the soft plastic tip in the hole with a tight seal and force the material similar to how they raise settled concrete with a pump. When I done this, I was able to pump a lot of glue in. So, surely travelled to places where there was no thinset.
Agreed and I think I mentioned that in the video. These tiles were so close together there was no way to drill between them without damaging the tiles.
@@flannelguydiy6458 You did. Even at that, any bit, even if it was 2mm and you simply pierced the tip of the glue, held force to create a seal (even if the tip didn't fit), I think you could had delivered more material to the middle where you were lacking thinset. All that depending if there was a pathway for it to be delivered. Anyhow, I'm glad it worked for you.
thank you for posting this. I have the exact same problem, brand new floor and a half dozen plank tiles are lose. For me some of the grout is already missing
I have used this product before with success. I had larger grout lines that I felt comfortable drilling. Your application was more difficult. Great Work.
have used this product extensively..it works, but if your tiles were not done correctly, including the subfloor.. you will continue have problems..Flannel guy, have you ever drilled through a floor tile, for a hollow space in the middle..any ideas on how to drill through stone tiles..?
Hmmm. From the video, I couldn’t really see any glue going in at all. I have a similar situation where I was about to regrout several large porcelain floor tiles but didn’t see how the glue could seep in without pressure. So even though it was not visually clear, you did see the glue go in? Thanks!
Yes the glue went in. That tile is still holding firm. I mentioned earlier in the video that the preferred method is to inject the glue but the grout lines between these tiles was too narrow to drill between them.
Great product I used it for tiles of 80x80cm . you have to work slowly with patience. In the clip it takes 8 minutes but it takes 1 hour for great result I will be happy if the product will be in ISRAEL המוצר מצויין לא צריך להביא רצף שיזור אותך במחיר כל אחד יכול לעשות את זה, מתאים יופי לקרמיקה בכל גודל
This is a great repair. I have never tried this product (and hope I will never have to) but great tip to know! I just added you to my suggested channel list by gong to customize channel and and clicking on the pencil icon near your featured channels list. It's a great way to cross-promote, share extra DIY info with your viewers and make Google happy by creating large tentacles throughout UA-cam. Great channel! Renee
The syringe they provided would not fit in a smaller hole. What you did not see on camera is that I tried to use the bit and I could see it starting to chew up a small piece of the tile. I could not chance damaging one.
If the space between tiles is very small, can I use a syringe? I am afraid of drilling because I have heated floor and I'm not sure where the pipes are located. Thank you!
Hey thanks for this Ive fixed 3 total plank tiles with this method. Anyone seeing this, this can be avoided big time if the installer uses large format tile thinset, way more expensive but doesn't leave voids behind as it cures and shrinks.
Nice job. Do you think laying a multi tool on top of it while it is turned on and just laying it there would vibrate the glue down a little more? Just a thought.
Glad you didn't take offence to my comment. I just subscribed and already making suggestions. I was actually just kinda thinking out loud. Your job did the trick for sure. I had used my multi-tool to force some concrete down a crack once (with the blade still on it) and that's what made me think of it. Plus, sometimes I'm a little lazy and if I can get a power tool to do the work, I'm all for that. Love your vids. I can learn a lot about cooking from you too, and my girl says that I could use a little help with my cooking, so we both thank you.
No offense at all. Nothing in these videos is perfect at all. After I recorded the video, I found a spot where I was able to use that injection needle and it worked really well. Thanks as always for watching Patrick.
@@patrickbrandon549 I think it's a great idea! Anything that's going to help create movement on a flat surface is worthy of consideration! But I think about the comment section is that you can learn a lot from each other some of that good some of it well not so much!💝
I have used this stuff in a number of places and it's rare that it ever works the way it shows in their videos (drill a hole on one side of the tile and a hole on the other side of the tile... stuff flows through from one hole to the other - my suspicion is that for the marketing video, they lifted the tile, cleaned out pathways for flow and then regrounted before starting the video... just my guess). that said, I was able to pump enough in that I felt it was more secure than it was before and I called it good. I'm not an experienced tile repair person by any stretch-- is it totally inadvisable to lift the tile and use this stuff? does something always crumble off or shift slightly under the tile and block a clean reset? I saw bassman's question and for sure if you need a hammer to get it out and you have not one more tile then you're not going to go that route but the tiles I've used this stuff with would lift at least a little by gripping with your finger nails and lifting slightly.... thought about using a small flatblade screwdriver on one, prying it a bit and shooting the stuff under there with just the smallest gap I could manage... chickened out as I was concerned some of thinset would crumble and the tile would not go all the way back down. was the grout line too tight for a grout cutter?
the challenge I've found (as an inexperienced, DIYer) is to figure out which way they set the grooves in the thinset. when you have square tiles, some tile setters seem to do the thinset in different directions ... or the grooves weren't done deep enough to have any gap under the tile and so very little flows in. In this case, I just drilled as many holes as I could around the tile and pumped in what I could never quite knowing if I'd reached the interior of the tile -- none of the holes really seemed to take in a lot of the liquid. in any case, the most challenging case of this I've run into so far seems to be holding after the better part of a year in a high traffic area so I guess enough got into the edges to hold it. I hadn't tried the full on cutting of the grout and letting the stuff seep in.
I doubt the glue is an ant repellent. Sounds like you have space under he tiles where the ants can live. I am going to be releasing a video on how to kill ants over the next few weeks.
The best thing to do is to remove that loosen tiles gently and apply a paste for best result. I did in the house of my sis. I will buy this Fix a floor.
I can bet it's a good product, the thing is if you have much more than one tile one can end up with a lot of floating in an entire room. I am almost certain that if the product is evenly applied to the back of the tile and the surface of the replaced tile can maintain the elevation throughput the entire area it Will be an excellent job.
I was just going down my comments page and saw your's from two months ago where you said you subbed. Sorry it took me so long to come check out your channel. :) Subbed
one of my bath tile is loose and planning to follow the same procedure as in video. Not sure if i can drill between grout and damage rest of the tiles.
Imagine lifting the cloth in the morning to find dried solid excess glue that was pushed through the cracks to the surface with the weight of the cinder blocks. 😱
No it would not because liquid nails is NOT liquid. You need to be able to inject the stuff between the tiles and that will never work with liquid nails. However, if the whole tile came off, then you could put liquid nails on it and then stick it to the subfloor.
Is this still the best way to fix loose tile? Could someone do a video on how to drill the holes and how deep to drill? It almost seems like drilling 4 holes around a tile the glue wouldn't travel around like in the commercial lol
that really depends and will differ for each situation. In the video, you saw the syringe that I did not use for this video. Each 10 ounce tube will fill that syringe 5 times. The stuff works great and right now am working on a squeaky floor video and I will also use this stuff for hardwoods.
Thanks for watching everyone and if you found this video helpful I would appreciate you subscribing and following me as I take you though many more helpful and fun videos in the future. You can buy Fix A Floor here.. amzn.to/2vgwoFf
Hmm, didnt you have extra tiles? With the grout out you could have just removed the tile. A multi tool with a carbide rasp would get all the thinset out and even if the tile didnt come up clean a few hits with a hammer you could have got it out. My guess is they came loose in the first place from using a tile leveling system and not enough thinset
That's not going to work. What you are aiming to do is have limited input points the injector is sealing against so as to force the glue to find routes right under the tile. When done properly the glue will emerge from a separate hole.
I thought the point of this product was to 'find' the cavity through the drill holes, rather than pretty much regrout it with a very expensive filler product?
I see you ended up chipping the tile next to it with the knife. I also noticed that after the 24 hours of dry time when you put the towel down, you attempted to touch up the chip with wrong color of touch up so we wouldn't notice it. You should have drilled it, less chance of chipping if using correct size but. That material needs the small hole and higher pressure to get the glue under the tile. You would have gotten safer, better ending results by drilling it.
This is the absolute worst tile repair. All you did was glue the tile on the edges instead of fixing the actual problem of the thinset not adhering to the back of the tile.
Nope, you are working more and using too much product just because of you are very insecure. Only driling a small hole is needed at the sides of the tile AS THE INSTRUCTIONS SAYS. You need to work a great deal with your self esteem and your self confidence man!!
As a petit single female homeowner I really appreciate a workable Solutions such as these! The idea of taking up the grout and resetting 16 inch tiles is not my idea of a good time. I found this to be a very doable and workable solution! I subscribed because you provide realistic solutions that fit my world!
thank you for watching!
Petite you say …
Single you say...
Homeowner you say …
A quick, clean and easy solution to one of those otherwise difficult and messy jobs. Good work!
Thanks yes it was. If this did not work I would be looking at removing tiles which would have been a bigger project and could have resulted in more neighboring loose tiles.
Yeah mission creep is always a hazard to avoid with jobs like this!
Thank you it’s sad to say your the only person who tells us what they use to fix the floor
I did same as you, scraped out the grout first. Instead of fix a floor I just used a liquid cement crack filler. I was considering using elmers glue as well but never tried.. might work as well. I used the "stone mason" brand crack filler and I did so because I remember when filling cracks the stuff settles and you have to fill the crack many times before its ready. So I did the same thing and filled the void about 10x full before it was done. Now that it dried it is solid in that area.. will do on several other areas where there is a huge void.
We love to see our guns being put to good use! Keep up the good work!
Let me know if you would like to collaborate on a calking gun review, comparison, etc
@@flannelguydiy6458 We would absolutely love that! Feel free to send us an email at contact@dripless.com or reach out to us on social media and we can figure something out!
Awesome! Thanks for this! We just moved into a house with gray tile exactly like this and no extras! Can’t wait to fix those two dang loose tiles.
Thanks for this video. I had a similar tile floor installed with very thin grout lines and was not sure how to get the product down into it. I will give this a shot now.
okay good luck thank you
Did it work out for you? My grout lines are very thin and I have about 6 tiles to glue. I tried this product without knowing how to work it in and it was a mess. I think I’ll get this caulk gun and use my razor to jiggle it down in there.
Tried this technique and it worked very well... it was well worth the effort of using a hand-held grout saw to get down into the grout and then gently using a chisel to push grout which was cracked or crumbling out of the grooves. I didn't pound anything to get it out.
I did drill a few fairly small 1/16" holes along the bottom edge at an angle under the tile I thought I might open one of the thinset channels under the tile
I filled the gap between tiles about 3/4 full of the Fix a Floor liquid and within about 3 hours it had all settled under the tile. Very little was left on top of the thinset exposed in between the tile where I'd removed the grout.
Works better if you drill. Get a smaller drill bit that is slightly larger than the smallest cut mark of the tip. Drilling allows you to fit the soft plastic tip in the hole with a tight seal and force the material similar to how they raise settled concrete with a pump. When I done this, I was able to pump a lot of glue in. So, surely travelled to places where there was no thinset.
Agreed and I think I mentioned that in the video. These tiles were so close together there was no way to drill between them without damaging the tiles.
@@flannelguydiy6458 You did. Even at that, any bit, even if it was 2mm and you simply pierced the tip of the glue, held force to create a seal (even if the tip didn't fit), I think you could had delivered more material to the middle where you were lacking thinset. All that depending if there was a pathway for it to be delivered. Anyhow, I'm glad it worked for you.
I was really hoping to not break or remove the entire tile to fix this. Awesome tutorial, thank you.
That is the best is to remove the tiles and apply paste for best result
thank you for posting this. I have the exact same problem, brand new floor and a half dozen plank tiles are lose. For me some of the grout is already missing
I have used this product before with success. I had larger grout lines that I felt comfortable drilling. Your application was more difficult. Great Work.
Yes drilling is best for sure. Thanks for watching
have used this product extensively..it works, but if your tiles were not done correctly, including the subfloor.. you will continue have problems..Flannel guy, have you ever drilled through a floor tile, for a hollow space in the middle..any ideas on how to drill through stone tiles..?
Thanks this was very helpful and hit all the issues I am facing.
Hmmm. From the video, I couldn’t really see any glue going in at all. I have a similar situation where I was about to regrout several large porcelain floor tiles but didn’t see how the glue could seep in without pressure. So even though it was not visually clear, you did see the glue go in? Thanks!
Yes the glue went in. That tile is still holding firm. I mentioned earlier in the video that the preferred method is to inject the glue but the grout lines between these tiles was too narrow to drill between them.
Great product I used it for tiles of 80x80cm . you have to work slowly with patience. In the clip it takes 8 minutes but it takes 1 hour for great result
I will be happy if the product will be in ISRAEL המוצר מצויין לא צריך להביא רצף שיזור אותך במחיר כל אחד יכול לעשות את זה, מתאים יופי לקרמיקה בכל גודל
How did you clean the grout gap completely from the fix a floor product?
Still holding up? Does the product harden or stay flexible? Good video.
yes it is still holding up. It hardens, not flexible
This is a great repair. I have never tried this product (and hope I will never have to) but great tip to know! I just added you to my suggested channel list by gong to customize channel and and clicking on the pencil icon near your featured channels list. It's a great way to cross-promote, share extra DIY info with your viewers and make Google happy by creating large tentacles throughout UA-cam. Great channel! Renee
great... thanks Renee. I will look into doing the same.
That's a good Idea Ms. Romeo. I just added you the same way. Check out my Channel. You might like it.
Nice video. I am in a similar situation and I'm wondering why you didn't choose to use a drill bit that is small enough to fit between the tiles?
The syringe they provided would not fit in a smaller hole. What you did not see on camera is that I tried to use the bit and I could see it starting to chew up a small piece of the tile. I could not chance damaging one.
If the space between tiles is very small, can I use a syringe? I am afraid of drilling because I have heated floor and I'm not sure where the pipes are located. Thank you!
yes you can use a syringe
This is a great idea!!Thanks for sharing.
Hey thanks for this Ive fixed 3 total plank tiles with this method. Anyone seeing this, this can be avoided big time if the installer uses large format tile thinset, way more expensive but doesn't leave voids behind as it cures and shrinks.
yes this really is all about the installer
In your After shot, still seeing movement. Does this require a second application?
Nice job. Do you think laying a multi tool on top of it while it is turned on and just laying it there would vibrate the glue down a little more? Just a thought.
It is possible that it could vibrate it down. Always worth a try...
Glad you didn't take offence to my comment. I just subscribed and already making suggestions. I was actually just kinda thinking out loud. Your job did the trick for sure. I had used my multi-tool to force some concrete down a crack once (with the blade still on it) and that's what made me think of it. Plus, sometimes I'm a little lazy and if I can get a power tool to do the work, I'm all for that. Love your vids. I can learn a lot about cooking from you too, and my girl says that I could use a little help with my cooking, so we both thank you.
No offense at all. Nothing in these videos is perfect at all. After I recorded the video, I found a spot where I was able to use that injection needle and it worked really well. Thanks as always for watching Patrick.
Still sounds hollow to me
@@patrickbrandon549 I think it's a great idea! Anything that's going to help create movement on a flat surface is worthy of consideration! But I think about the comment section is that you can learn a lot from each other some of that good some of it well not so much!💝
Is it available in India
let ask you is it the same procedure doing the granite tiles
I have used this stuff in a number of places and it's rare that it ever works the way it shows in their videos (drill a hole on one side of the tile and a hole on the other side of the tile... stuff flows through from one hole to the other - my suspicion is that for the marketing video, they lifted the tile, cleaned out pathways for flow and then regrounted before starting the video... just my guess). that said, I was able to pump enough in that I felt it was more secure than it was before and I called it good.
I'm not an experienced tile repair person by any stretch-- is it totally inadvisable to lift the tile and use this stuff? does something always crumble off or shift slightly under the tile and block a clean reset? I saw bassman's question and for sure if you need a hammer to get it out and you have not one more tile then you're not going to go that route but the tiles I've used this stuff with would lift at least a little by gripping with your finger nails and lifting slightly.... thought about using a small flatblade screwdriver on one, prying it a bit and shooting the stuff under there with just the smallest gap I could manage... chickened out as I was concerned some of thinset would crumble and the tile would not go all the way back down.
was the grout line too tight for a grout cutter?
Good product used it a few times.
Subscribed and liked. We have the exact situation going on, thank you for explaining the process clearly and concise
thanks for watching! please share the video
Great advice brother 👌
won't elmers glue or super glue work just as well?
I'm going to use this on my next tile repair. cheers mate!
hopefully you will not even need a repair
How is the fix a floor holding up ?
holding up great!
You only covered the ends of the tile, what if the problem is at the middle (of the tile)?
in that case, you want to use the needle to inject the glue.
the challenge I've found (as an inexperienced, DIYer) is to figure out which way they set the grooves in the thinset. when you have square tiles, some tile setters seem to do the thinset in different directions ... or the grooves weren't done deep enough to have any gap under the tile and so very little flows in. In this case, I just drilled as many holes as I could around the tile and pumped in what I could never quite knowing if I'd reached the interior of the tile -- none of the holes really seemed to take in a lot of the liquid. in any case, the most challenging case of this I've run into so far seems to be holding after the better part of a year in a high traffic area so I guess enough got into the edges to hold it. I hadn't tried the full on cutting of the grout and letting the stuff seep in.
Ok, PEOPLE LISTEN UP ! I HAVE BEEN IN THE INDUSTRY FOR OVER 300 years. Give or take 260. Hang on grabbing a beer.
Good question
Explain in a minute.grab a pencil and paper.
Does the glue also help keep the insects like house ant away? coz they are causing the problem with my house tiles.
I doubt the glue is an ant repellent. Sounds like you have space under he tiles where the ants can live. I am going to be releasing a video on how to kill ants over the next few weeks.
@@flannelguydiy6458 thanks.
Perhaps the grout has gotten old and therefore more vulnerable?? I hope that your problem has resolved and that you are doing great!
Great explanation and video of the technique!!!
Thanks Pit Dog... trying to make videos for projects and recipes that the common person can do.
The best thing to do is to remove that loosen tiles gently and apply a paste for best result. I did in the house of my sis. I will buy this Fix a floor.
Thanks for the tips
thanks for watching
If grout line is big enough best way to do it is drill a hole on one side with an outlet on the other and push it in
yes absolutely.. the problem there was the grout line was much too narrow.
That's a very smart point! That way air can escape allowing the liquid to flow in and fill in more fully.
@@laurabarber6697 Actually the idea is to know when enough has been added as it will come out on the other side.
Can this be used on wall
tiles in a bathroom?
i am sure it can because it is just glue. However, if you have a loose wall tile I would just pop it off and add more thinset
Will this product work if say, I have about dozen loose tiles in the same area of the floor?
yes it will...
I can bet it's a good product, the thing is if you have much more than one tile one can end up with a lot of floating in an entire room. I am almost certain that if the product is evenly applied to the back of the tile and the surface of the replaced tile can maintain the elevation throughput the entire area it Will be an excellent job.
Love this video, easy, simple,detailed, and perfect. Thank u!
thank you!
That looks like a cool product very nice and detailed video thank you for sharing.
Wrenches and boards thank you !
How is it holding up?
It is perfect!
Still no grout crack?
Great tips. I’ll definitely be following your channel.
Thank you!
I was just going down my comments page and saw your's from two months ago where you said you subbed. Sorry it took me so long to come check out your channel. :)
Subbed
Hey Chris... thanks and no big deal. Everyone is busy. You should only sub if you enjoy the content anyway.
one of my bath tile is loose and planning to follow the same procedure as in video. Not sure if i can drill between grout and damage rest of the tiles.
Imagine lifting the cloth in the morning to find dried solid excess glue that was pushed through the cracks to the surface with the weight of the cinder blocks. 😱
I have used and it does work.
yeah... it is good stuff. Thanks for watching Parker
where it could be bought?.
see the link in the description
Seems like something like liquid nails would do the same job
No it would not because liquid nails is NOT liquid. You need to be able to inject the stuff between the tiles and that will never work with liquid nails. However, if the whole tile came off, then you could put liquid nails on it and then stick it to the subfloor.
what about self leveling sika flex
Thanks for sharing this video
you are welcome..
Is this still the best way to fix loose tile? Could someone do a video on how to drill the holes and how deep to drill? It almost seems like drilling 4 holes around a tile the glue wouldn't travel around like in the commercial lol
thanks for watching...
Great video!
The Cooking Pot thank you !
Good job
Thank you Lasse ...
Will this stuff work if the actual movement is coming from the wooden floor beneath the tile?
if the sub floor is moving then you will need to secure that first
What the brand name l am from a carribbean country. They know what iam asking for when trying to get it to purchased
I have a link to it in the description
Great repair!
Thanks Cheryl...
Good video, subscribed!
Thank you Hungry Buzz
Oh wow I had no clue you could do this
yeah neither did I !
Thank you!
April Holly Smith - The Frugal Home
How much it cost
Can I use the product on the heated floor?
i am not sure Tim
After the fix a floor is dry, can I apply sanded grout over it?
yes absolutely... whatever grout you want. That glue is beneath the surface.
How much does it costs in India
How about in wall
About how much of that 10 ounce tube did you use?
that really depends and will differ for each situation. In the video, you saw the syringe that I did not use for this video. Each 10 ounce tube will fill that syringe 5 times. The stuff works great and right now am working on a squeaky floor video and I will also use this stuff for hardwoods.
Thanks for watching everyone and if you found this video helpful I would appreciate you subscribing and following me as I take you though many more helpful and fun videos in the future. You can buy Fix A Floor here.. amzn.to/2vgwoFf
How have your tiles been since this video, are they still solid? Currently looking to buy this product any help would be appreciated. Cheers
Any fillers, like Fix-A-Floor, to fill pits on mosaic floor ?
Flannel Guy DIY how much this product
These are called tiles?
Hmm, didnt you have extra tiles? With the grout out you could have just removed the tile. A multi tool with a carbide rasp would get all the thinset out and even if the tile didnt come up clean a few hits with a hammer you could have got it out.
My guess is they came loose in the first place from using a tile leveling system and not enough thinset
yeah... but the purpose of the video was to show this method for those who do not want to pull tiles up.
Nice, good to know!
From where I will get this product
if your local store does not have it, you can find where to buy in the description of the video
what kind of tile is that? looks like composite wood floor if so it is
not supposed to be grouted
No, it is not wood. It is a porcelain tile.
@ 2:46 honestly made me jump
Isn't this just pva glue?
Use a thinner drill
Isn't this just a half decent PVA Glue?
Not sure what PVA glue is
Poly vinyl acetate glue. The stuff you paint on your fingers and peel off in (UK) schools.
It is sounds same
I thought I heard the tile still moving?
nope.... you didn't :)
Your right,was those skechers
@@richardthomas1531 yep the floor is solid now.
I make a custom machine that injects a material under the surface of the floor and self levels if anyone’s interested. I may make a UA-cam video.
Where can I see your product? Also, have you made a video since your first posting?
could you provide details or a link to a video?
Sounds interesting
Ok you defeated the purpose of the injection by pulling out the grout
That's not going to work. What you are aiming to do is have limited input points the injector is sealing against so as to force the glue to find routes right under the tile. When done properly the glue will emerge from a separate hole.
I thought the point of this product was to 'find' the cavity through the drill holes, rather than pretty much regrout it with a very expensive filler product?
yes you are correct. When you drill a hole and use the syringe, it will find the cavity.
I don’t see this working.. just pop the dam tile and scrape and reset or drill in use the syringe but even that is questionable.
this was two years ago. Floor is solid now. Drilling with the syringe is the way to go
I see you ended up chipping the tile next to it with the knife. I also noticed that after the 24 hours of dry time when you put the towel down, you attempted to touch up the chip with wrong color of touch up so we wouldn't notice it. You should have drilled it, less chance of chipping if using correct size but. That material needs the small hole and higher pressure to get the glue under the tile. You would have gotten safer, better ending results by drilling it.
I hate this dept not what I want to do there no MEN around
Used it. Just as well to use flour and water. Total waste of time and money
What a load.of rubbish, if the tile is hollow in the middle ,how can the glue run into it with all the set adhesive in the way.
This is the absolute worst tile repair. All you did was glue the tile on the edges instead of fixing the actual problem of the thinset not adhering to the back of the tile.
This crap is junk ..its very messy..I ended up just redoing the loose tiles
Nope, you are working more and using too much product just because of you are very insecure.
Only driling a small hole is needed at the sides of the tile AS THE INSTRUCTIONS SAYS.
You need to work a great deal with your self esteem and your self confidence man!!
you sound like my therapist!
@@flannelguydiy6458 ...and my advise is way way cheaper haha
@@Nayo68 can you train me to be more confident splitting wood on my table saw ? 😂
Time wasting and not at all practical
Will this product work on shower wall tiles?
Can we use that on wall tiles?