Vinyl Planks over Cement Board

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Jason

Member
Joined
Feb 10, 2020
Messages
7
Location
Southern California
Hello all,

First time poster. I currently live on the 2nd floor of a condo with linoleum in the kitchen / bathrooms and carpet in the living and bed rooms. Our water heater just started leaking and am having it replaced as I type this, but I had to tear up all the flooring in the kitchen since it all got wet. The water heater is in a kitchen cabinet.

In the kitchen, it appears there is an original layer of linoleum that was applied directly to the cement board. On top of that is another layer of linoleum, and then someone has put down 5/16th plywood, which then had another layer of linoleum. I've torn out the top linoleum and the plywood, but still have the 2 layers of linoleum that is on top of the cement board. (I think those two layers of linoleum saved my cement board, plus we caught the leak soon)

We are wanting to do vinyl throughout the whole house, so I think I'd be pulling up all linoleum and looking to install the vinyl planks.
We also plan to use a product like quietwalk underlayment to be kind to our downstairs neighbors.
My question is, as long as everything is flat and level, do I need to put down any other product first before putting down the underlayment and then vinyl planks? Or can that just be put directly on the cement board?
 
It would depend on the product, but if everywhere you plan to install it is on the same plane, you are probably good to go.
The specs on most all lock or click together will say flat to 3/16" in a 6 to 10 foot span or radius. This keeps the floor joints from flexing. If the joints flex, they can weaken over time.
Just get as close as you can to the manufacturers specs.
 
Some products have a backing such as cork or a thin foam. This is a sound deadening material. If it has this, don't add another layer of it.
 
One other thought. Is there a way for you to determine if your floor is a single layer floor such as tongue and groove OSB, or if it's a two layer floor consisting of a sub floor with an underlayment on top.
 
I don't think I'll be able to figure that out without doing a significant tear-up of the floor.
So far I've only seen in the kitchen and bathrooms, where it appears to be cement board. In the bathrooms, I built and replaced the cabinets and that seemed to be cement board too. There are two spots where the previous owner has someone cut into the original linoleum to check why there were soft spots, I think. Its pretty crumbly there so I think I'm going to use flexible Floor patch / leveler to fix those spots.
I haven't tried to get under the carpet in the living areas to see if what they used, I'd assume it might be plywood in there, but I guess it could be cement board through out since its just a 1,000 sq ft condo.
We've got a 4 month old baby, so I think my wife is hoping I'll have it done ASAP, lol.
 
Are you sure that is cement board? It could be haydite. They often use it on upstairs apt. floors to save weight. Haydite tends to crumble or get powdery when it gets old. If it is Haydite, most floor patch will not stick to it.
 
I’m not sure it’s cement board actually. The condo was built in 1986, so your description seems to match up since it is crumbling in places. Do you think the flexible floor patch / leveler it's the right product to use?
 
You can take an awl, or ice pick (yes,we all have ice picks) :D..... or some needle nose pliers and get an inch away from a convient carpeted corner....... Just grab the pile close to the corner with the pliers, or stab the awl into the backing close to the corner to lift the carpet back. It won't hurt anything. Once you take a peak, you can tuck the carpet back where it was.
 
Oh sorry, I thought you were asking if I could take apart the actual subfloor. Yeah, I think Floorist's comment above is correct and its something like Haydite all through my condo. My condo is single level on the 2nd floor. The building only has 2 floors though, upstairs and downstairs residences.
So I'll just need to repair the Haydite / Cement board type subfloor I have in the kitchen, no idea if the previous owner dropped something heavy on it or something to cause it to crumble in some places.
We're considering Home Depot's LifeProof product. It's got a 6mil wearable surface and claims to be waterproof and scratch resistant. I've seen 12mil is more ideal for long lasting or "very active families", but this isn't our forever home, we live in SoCal so its just something to build equity until we can get into something bigger someday (or just get the heck out of CA)
The LifeProof product states that in includes an attached underlayment, but I'm not clear if its a bad idea to also put a product like QuietWalk underlayment under it too.
Some websites have said having 2 underlayments can cause too much movement and cause vinyl planks to separate. But I'm not clear if that includes attached underlayment like the LifeProof has.
I'm mostly just hoping to reduce noise for ourselves and our downstairs neighbors. We'll more than like do area rugs too.

Here are the products we're considering
LifeProof
https://www.homedepot.com/p/LifePro...-Flooring-20-06-sq-ft-case-I966106L/300699284
QuietWalk
https://www.homedepot.com/p/QuietWa...e-and-Engineered-Flooring-QW360B1LT/307956358

And thank you for all of the great information you guys have been able to give me.
 
If the product has an attached underlayment, do not add anything else. Might seem friendly as far as being neighbourly but it will void any warranty because the minimal added thickness will cause the flooring joints to flex more than they were designed to flex.
That said, what you probably have is a 3/4" to 1 1/4" plywood floor with an additional inch or more thickness of a poured gypsum based product on top of that. Looks like concrete but it isn't concrete. That product itself is a great sound deadner. It should also be a very flat surface, so that is a great thing.
Around here and nationwide Coretec vinyl planks are extremely popular. Great guarantee too.
Whatever you choose, follow the manufacturers instructions.
If you have any more questions, keep asking.
We don't get tired of questions..... Except for Daris. He's like 170 years old.
 
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[QUOTE="highup, post: 63891, member: 388"
We don't get tired of questions..... Except for Daris. He's like 170 years old.[/QUOTE]
Daris first job was putting carpet in a cave on a dirt floor.
 
[QUOTE="highup, post: 63891, member: 388"
We don't get tired of questions..... Except for Daris. He's like 170 years old.
Daris first job was putting carpet in a cave on a dirt floor.[/QUOTE]
Carpet back then was pine needles and they were picky when sleeping on them. But the best part was when you farted it smelled like someone had shit in the pines.
 
Thanks guys, lol.

So I do have another question. I was considering trying to make the whole condo seamless and just lay the floor continuously without any threshold transitions at the doors. But the more I think about it, since you have to start at the left back along the longer wall, I'm not sure if this is wise. For instance, I could start in the kitchen but by the time I got through the living room, into the hallway, and to the door of the babies room, I'd then have to start working backwards, which I suspect would make my life very difficult.

Is there a better way of making it seamless, or is that just not recommended and I should install the threshold parts?
 
I just did a 25 foot long living room installing Coretec flooring the backwards direction. It can go either direction. Easier as the way they show, but it still works fine backwards.
I had to go backwards because I was continuing from the opposite side of the house which I did 2 years ago.
Have you chosen a product,?
 
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Hey Guys, hoping you might have some insight on this. Here is a picture of what my floor looks like and what I'm trying to accomplish a little bit. I want to eventually remove all the linoleum (you can sorta see that there are 2 layers) and then try placing vinyl planks down everywhere. I was able to peal back some of the carpet and see this stuff on top of the plywood is everywhere, but in the kitchen it is in pretty bad shape. There are 2 spots like this, but this one seems to be the worst. Basically, whatever the material that is down on top of the plywood is disintegrating. It turns to dust. I was trying to get rid of the loose material, but it keeps growing.
My plan originally was to just fill these somewhat big spots with Henry 345 Patch and Level but I'm getting concerned its getting really big and it might be too much to fill with that stuff. And a little worried if I put vinyl planks on top of it, it'll continue to get worse.
Has anyone dealt with something like this before or know what it is? Floorist above thought it might be haydite, but I'm not sure if that is a compound you put down or if it is a board that is installed on top of the plywood.
I figured I'd asked the experts before I got too far with doing it wrong and made more work for myself later.

Thanks guys
 

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I'll bet that is easy crete. The plywood is the pan so to speak. If you can push an Awl or nail into it or scratch it real easy. It is a gypsum base concrete in your case in a upstairs condo for sound supression. Don't tear out any ore and if it is what I say it is you may have to get a cement contractor to deal with what already is out. Can of worms for you-maybe.
 
Interesting, it is looking like we probably have the gypsum concrete. I think what you are describing looks and sounds like what we have. I'm now considering just filling the holes with the Henry 345 and then maybe putting 1/4" plywood down everywhere. The gypsum concrete under the carpet looks pretty level, but not perfectly, so I'd think I'd need to do something to fix that. Either plywood everywhere or self leveling compound over a lot of it.
 
When you mention quarter inch plywood I'm assuming the tile is slightly thicker than the rest of the house. I don't know of a way to successfully nail or staple plywood on top of that cement type product, especially something thin. Being a condo I'm not sure you'd be allowed to put quiet over that anyway, maybe maybe not. I'm thinking because of fire codes.
If that is a gypsum type product most cement based fillets are not compatible with it and it may need a latex based filler. That said there may be a primer that could be put on the gypcrete or whatever that is that would allow a cement base filler to be used to feather out or to fill in low spots. No matter what you use, you will probably need some sort of sealer applied to the existing floor before putting any filler or leveler on it. Without applying a sealer to the floor topping that's on there now, it is so absorb any that it will suck the moisture out of the filler faster than you can spread it and it won't stick or spread properly.
Pour a small amount of water on to that filler where the cabinet was in the picture that you showed and see how quickly it absorbs into that material.
 
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I think I'd as a homeowner I'd find some way to patch in that spot level with the rest of the floor and lay my new floor right over the top of what is there if it is within the parameters of the flooring you want to put down. I'm not familar with laminate or any of the lvp's. I just jumped in here because I recognized the gypcrete.
 
I think that would be best Daris. Might need to cut an inch or two off the sheet vinyl edges where they transition into the carpeted areas. Cutting the vinyl edge back would get rid of any edge curling before floating or ramping out with filler into the living room.
 

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