Concrete Tile Floors
Below are not Mexican Saltillo tile. They are concrete tile.
The concrete is anything from regular aggregate concrete to various mixtures of light weight aggregates. One production process is called Encaustic tile and is treated the same as all concrete tile with our products. However, test carefully before sealing. Some manufacturer's use mold releases that can create blotchy finishes. Look for manufacturer to say to wash the tile before sealing as a clue.
A concrete tile (cement tile) can look exactly like a clay tile or a natural stone. Or, just about anything else. This is one of the advantages. Concrete can look like almost anything. This also causes confusion about what you really have on your project. See the acid sensitivity test to confirm if you have a clay or a concrete product.
Note that removing grout residue from the grouting process with acidic cleaners can cause etching of the surface unless done with caution.
The manufacturing process for concrete tile varies from dry pressed by machine, to wet cast in molds, to extruded by machine. As with anything of concrete, the color options are many. It is usually colored with iron oxide pigment at the surface, or throughout the mixture.
Further "Items of Interest" for this surfacing, and all others, are at the bottom of this page.
Your Choices for Sealing
This surface is anything from low to medium high absorption depending on how it is finished.
Our suggestions to test are:- Penetrating petroleum solvent formulas with acrylic solids. These can be sprayed to finish nicely, but solids level might need to be adjusted if manufacturer allows dilution.
- Water based film forming that can flow out and self-level.
- Water based penetrating that is usually invisible when dry.
- Click here to see What effects you can expect from each sealer type.
- Click here to see our suggested sealers, cleaners, and application tools.
Some questions you may not be thinking to ask right now that could become important:
. Was it sealed in the past? Does that matter?
. Will a new sealer be compatible with whatever was used before?
. What sealer will give the visual results you want?
. Will you also be able to have a sealer solve problem(s)? ( Answer: yes. Just know which to pick.)
Items of Interest
How to select a sealer
A sealer can do far more than just bead water and look pretty! To see what that is click here.
Important: If your project has had any sealer applied in the past, it must be evaluated differently. To see why, Click here!
Sealer "solids" levels?
A porous surface will require more gallons (more money) of a lower solids sealer than using a higher solids level sealer. That, plus different surfaces have different requirements. It is only a matter of which is best for your needs.
The more porous the surface, the more solids will be required to achieve the desired effects of gloss, strengthening, stopping efflorescence, etc.
The more porous the surface, generally the greater the need for the sealer to create a stronger surface.
An old sealer below the surface, even after stripping, will lower the absorption and porosity to some degree. Sometimes it is uneven below the surface and can create an uneven coloring effect with a color enhancing sealer applied later. Another reason to test first.
Do not believe yet that you have the type of surfacing you were told:
Colors fading?
Renew a glossy finish
Re: "penetrating sealers": do not apply thin layer upon thin layer. Apply a sufficient quantity to insure below surface penetration & bonding. A layer of sealer on top of another layer of sealer can result in poor bonding between layers and that can cause separation peeling that looks grayish.
Concerned about Doing It Yourself or what your contractor says?
If you are concerned about doing it yourself - consider that the satisfaction of a project is directly related to YOUR knowledge of what needs to be done and how. Who actually does the work is less important.
The goal for contractors is - NO CALL BACKS. A good contractor will understand the logic of not taking shortcuts.
©
The goal for contractors is - NO CALL BACKS. A good contractor will understand the logic of not taking shortcuts.