A few years ago a bought a veritable house of horrors. The latest finding, I was reapplying the patio grout the other day and no matter how much I put in, it just disappeared below.
"no, surely not, they didn't did they?"
They did.
Lifted up a few slabs and realised my patio structure is a few joists (not enough) with 18mm plywood (not marine grade) sheets on top, followed by dot & dab (not enough) adhesive for the patio itself. Unsurprisingly the ply was basically now like cardboard and the reason why the grout failed to find a home in a few places is where the ply had disappeared and there was nothing beneath.
So....
I've got too many projects on to give this a "proper" treatment so I'm working out the best bodge for a bodge and will deal properly at a later date.
My thoughts are...
(1) Check joists are sound/replace where needed
(2) replace all plywood
(3) drill a handful of drainage holes in ply
(4) treat plywood (inc edges) with yacht varnish
(5) re-lay patio
My logic is, with properly maintained grout, the volume of water getting to the ply should be minimal. What gets there should sit on the varnish until it either evaporates or builds up enough to find it's way to a drainage hole. Given the current setup lasted 13 years, I'm confident this bodge should get me through to when I can treat properly.
Question for you smart minds, with an economical hat on, what would you do differently?
TIA
"no, surely not, they didn't did they?"
They did.
Lifted up a few slabs and realised my patio structure is a few joists (not enough) with 18mm plywood (not marine grade) sheets on top, followed by dot & dab (not enough) adhesive for the patio itself. Unsurprisingly the ply was basically now like cardboard and the reason why the grout failed to find a home in a few places is where the ply had disappeared and there was nothing beneath.
So....
I've got too many projects on to give this a "proper" treatment so I'm working out the best bodge for a bodge and will deal properly at a later date.
My thoughts are...
(1) Check joists are sound/replace where needed
(2) replace all plywood
(3) drill a handful of drainage holes in ply
(4) treat plywood (inc edges) with yacht varnish
(5) re-lay patio
My logic is, with properly maintained grout, the volume of water getting to the ply should be minimal. What gets there should sit on the varnish until it either evaporates or builds up enough to find it's way to a drainage hole. Given the current setup lasted 13 years, I'm confident this bodge should get me through to when I can treat properly.
Question for you smart minds, with an economical hat on, what would you do differently?
TIA