alex robinson
Established Member
I am slowly in the process of rebuilding a fairly large shed (many thanks to previous posters for advice about insulated roof panels). The old concrete pad is mostly intact, but there is quite a lot of unevenness (up to 40mm in places where 2 different concrete pours have moved independently).
I would like to put down PIR insulation, followed by a DPM and then a floating MR chipboard floor. For flattening, I was thinking of a simple sand and cement? I have seen in lots of places that it needs to be quite thick to prevent cracking. Given that this is going to be under the floor, does this matter? So long as the end result is flat (not so concerned about level) is there any reason why I cannot go from a feather at the highest points to whatever depth required at the low points? My current plan is to use a laser to fit battens at the correct heights and fill between them. Having levelled a kitchen floor with self levelling compound, that is out due to cost.
Second part of the question - how thick would people suggest the PIR needs to be? I am currently thinking either 30 or 40mm. Obviously more is more, but it gets expensive and it is only an outbuilding..
Many thanks in advance!
I would like to put down PIR insulation, followed by a DPM and then a floating MR chipboard floor. For flattening, I was thinking of a simple sand and cement? I have seen in lots of places that it needs to be quite thick to prevent cracking. Given that this is going to be under the floor, does this matter? So long as the end result is flat (not so concerned about level) is there any reason why I cannot go from a feather at the highest points to whatever depth required at the low points? My current plan is to use a laser to fit battens at the correct heights and fill between them. Having levelled a kitchen floor with self levelling compound, that is out due to cost.
Second part of the question - how thick would people suggest the PIR needs to be? I am currently thinking either 30 or 40mm. Obviously more is more, but it gets expensive and it is only an outbuilding..
Many thanks in advance!