06-07-2017, 06:44 PM
After 20 years the ceramic tile on our kitchen floor has many cracks and chips, and the grout has been a b tch to try to keep clean. After lots of consideration we decided on solid bamboo. Not my preferred choice, but the available options get limited in a hurry when you want to put wood over radiant heat. So here's what it looked like before I tore it out.
About 217 ft. sq. between the kitchen floor and adjacent 1/2 bath. First step was getting the tile up. All day on my hands and knees was not my idea of a good day, so I bought a large pneumatic scraper from HF. You have to have a pretty large compressor to drive the thing, 10 CFM. Fortunately, I do. For most of the tile this thing was the bomb; they popped right off and generally as one piece.
I had all the tile out in maybe 2 hours. Now the harder part; taking up the underlayment. Removing the bulk of it wasn't bad. I cut it with a circular saw set to the 7/16" thickness of the underlayment in squares about 30 x 30 inches. I pried up the first piece with a small crowbar. Fortunately most all the staples came up with it. The rest of the squares I pried up with a roofing shingle spade. Awesomely effective.
That didn't take very long either, but now I was faced with cutting the underlayment flush with the cabinet bases at the back of the toe kick. My first approach was to use an oscillating multi tool. Worthless. OK, now what? I went to my local ACE hardware to look at my options, and found a little 3-3/8" carbide tipped circular saw blade. OK, this has possibilities, but now I need an arbor for it. So I bought a 4" long 3/8" hex head bolt. Back at the ranch, I ground the head of the bolt until it just fit through the arbor hole, then made a little fixture to hold the bolt and blade so I could weld them together. I tried to be careful about putting too much heat into it, but the blade still warped. Oh well, at least it spun pretty true on the centerline of the arbor. OK, I now needed a way to limit the depth of cut to 1/2" so I cut some 2-3/8" plywood discs with an adjustable circle cutter and then bored the center holes out to 3/8". The little saw/arbor chucked into my 18V drill and looked like this.
It took a little getting used to, but once I got the cut started it worked very well.
With care, I could even cut around the radiused ends of the cabinet bases. I made a few relief cut out to daylight, too, to make prying it up easier. But as you can see, it came out very nice.
I got all 40 ft or so cut in an hour or so, and turned what I thought was going to be a very difficult job into almost fun. A couple more things to do before I can put down the new underlayment but I'll soon be going in the right direction.
I don't know if there is a commercial tool made to do this (Proxxon, perhaps), but if there isn't and you are ever faced with a similar challenge, you saw it here first!
John
About 217 ft. sq. between the kitchen floor and adjacent 1/2 bath. First step was getting the tile up. All day on my hands and knees was not my idea of a good day, so I bought a large pneumatic scraper from HF. You have to have a pretty large compressor to drive the thing, 10 CFM. Fortunately, I do. For most of the tile this thing was the bomb; they popped right off and generally as one piece.
I had all the tile out in maybe 2 hours. Now the harder part; taking up the underlayment. Removing the bulk of it wasn't bad. I cut it with a circular saw set to the 7/16" thickness of the underlayment in squares about 30 x 30 inches. I pried up the first piece with a small crowbar. Fortunately most all the staples came up with it. The rest of the squares I pried up with a roofing shingle spade. Awesomely effective.
That didn't take very long either, but now I was faced with cutting the underlayment flush with the cabinet bases at the back of the toe kick. My first approach was to use an oscillating multi tool. Worthless. OK, now what? I went to my local ACE hardware to look at my options, and found a little 3-3/8" carbide tipped circular saw blade. OK, this has possibilities, but now I need an arbor for it. So I bought a 4" long 3/8" hex head bolt. Back at the ranch, I ground the head of the bolt until it just fit through the arbor hole, then made a little fixture to hold the bolt and blade so I could weld them together. I tried to be careful about putting too much heat into it, but the blade still warped. Oh well, at least it spun pretty true on the centerline of the arbor. OK, I now needed a way to limit the depth of cut to 1/2" so I cut some 2-3/8" plywood discs with an adjustable circle cutter and then bored the center holes out to 3/8". The little saw/arbor chucked into my 18V drill and looked like this.
It took a little getting used to, but once I got the cut started it worked very well.
With care, I could even cut around the radiused ends of the cabinet bases. I made a few relief cut out to daylight, too, to make prying it up easier. But as you can see, it came out very nice.
I got all 40 ft or so cut in an hour or so, and turned what I thought was going to be a very difficult job into almost fun. A couple more things to do before I can put down the new underlayment but I'll soon be going in the right direction.
I don't know if there is a commercial tool made to do this (Proxxon, perhaps), but if there isn't and you are ever faced with a similar challenge, you saw it here first!
John