Vinyl Flooring With Silicone

Flooring Forum - DIY & Professional

Help Support Flooring Forum - DIY & Professional:

Oddney

New Member
Joined
Sep 26, 2023
Messages
1
Location
birmingham
HI and thank you for accepting to the forum

I had some work done in my kitchen, some vinyl/lino flooring installed, but the installer used silicone to stick the vinyl flooring down.
I'm I right to say that you would only use the silicone to seal the edges once,

I only ask because there is a strong small of silicone days and a few weeks after.

he did silicone all the work surfaces also just to seal them, but i have never know anyone to stick vinyl flooring down with silicone .

PS he said it was evo-stik all weather adhesive.
 

Floorist

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Moderator
Pro
Joined
Feb 21, 2011
Messages
17,337
Location
The free state of Missouri
Can't buy it in the US. Looks like what we call a pressure sensitive adhesive. Just about all adhesives have some lingering odor. Call the manufacturers tech line and they should have some idea how long it will smell.
 

highup

Will work for food
Supporting Member
Pro
Joined
Mar 6, 2011
Messages
17,399
Location
,
Was this the adhesive? It's the only thing I saw that said all weather. What was the name of the flooring?
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20230927-064523.png
    Screenshot_20230927-064523.png
    215.2 KB · Views: 0

highup

Will work for food
Supporting Member
Pro
Joined
Mar 6, 2011
Messages
17,399
Location
,
I'm confused, the poster was thinking he used silicone, but I didn't see silicone on the manufacturers site.
I'm thinking there was just a lot of silicone around the perimeter, on top, not underneath.
Some silicones are super stinky until fully cured.
 

Floorist

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Moderator
Pro
Joined
Feb 21, 2011
Messages
17,337
Location
The free state of Missouri
I'm confused, the poster was thinking he used silicone, but I didn't see silicone on the manufacturers site.
I'm thinking there was just a lot of silicone around the perimeter, on top, not underneath.
Some silicones are super stinky until fully cured.
In the UK, they make a full-spread adhesive that is silicone. Saw it on a UK flooring forum.
 

C.J.

Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Pro
Joined
Apr 23, 2021
Messages
3,483
Location
In the boonies
Some silicones are super stinky until fully cured.

The less expensive tubes of silicone really do stink for a day or so but when we’re talking about spending $7 a tube vs $12 I can see why people buy the stinky stuff. Same thing with paint thinner vs mineral spirits, you can save a buck but it’s gonna stink for a few. Not really the best idea in an occupied residential situation.
 

Floor Dude

Member
Joined
Jul 2, 2023
Messages
10
Location
Nevada
It looks like what they sell in the bucket is not a pressure sensitive adhesive. It is meant for wet applications. (Ie do not let it gas off) so would be fine for a felt or paperback sheet vinyl.
If they used the other product and just applied with a caulking gun, then that is a big no, and your manufacturer would likely consider any warranty void.
 

highup

Will work for food
Supporting Member
Pro
Joined
Mar 6, 2011
Messages
17,399
Location
,
The less expensive tubes of silicone really do stink for a day or so but when we’re talking about spending $7 a tube vs $12 I can see why people buy the stinky stuff. Same thing with paint thinner vs mineral spirits, you can save a buck but it’s gonna stink for a few. Not really the best idea in an occupied residential situation.
I don't buy it, the customer gets it on their bill.
 

highup

Will work for food
Supporting Member
Pro
Joined
Mar 6, 2011
Messages
17,399
Location
,
I never tried any of their adhesives. I just watched one of their videos on this adhesive and it looked like it was being spread with an 1/8 by 1/8 V notch trowel. It wasn't, but looked like a ton of adhesive.
 

Latest posts

Top