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Rolled Vinyl Flooring Moisture

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Old 04-02-2025, 07:17 AM
Wondering Wondering is offline
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Originally Posted by kingofbeer View Post
We have the Rolled Vinyl Flooring product in the main bathroom and most of the house. Not something that we are happy with of course. We noticed that some caulk on the outside of the shower was cracked. We removed all of the caulk and pulled up some of the vinyl. The concrete floor underneath the vinyl was damp. Yesterday we purchased a moisture meter to test. We lifted up a good part of the vinyl and are using a fan to dry out the floor. We will see after the concrete dries out, if the moisture is gone for good. Have anyone of you had this problem before?
Do you have gutters all around the house? If not. the concrete act as a sponge and that is why your floor is damp.
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Old 04-02-2025, 07:38 AM
vintageogauge vintageogauge is offline
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It's amazing how they have cheapened flooring. It used to be carpet or tile, 12", 16", 20" then 24", hardwood, then rectangular tile, then wood look tile, then engineered hardwood, then LVP flooring and now rolled vinyl, next will be good old fashion linoleum.
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Old 04-02-2025, 07:45 AM
CoachKandSportsguy CoachKandSportsguy is offline
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Originally Posted by asianthree View Post
We ripped up the LV flooring in our bathroom, not only was there moisture, mold was present. Just not a fan of LV.
I disagree agree about tile. True Our other 3 homes tile was indeed slink when wet, but grout aged but didn’t get that discolored look for 10 years.

However the hand scraped or flat finish newer tile when wet isn’t slippery.
Our tile guy said the newer grout has an additive, no longer attracts dirt or needs to be sealed. We have 3,000sf of tile, so far looks exactly the same as day one. I dripped fresh cooked beet juice on the tile and grout without knowing it. 4 hours later I just wet paper towel, cleaned it. No stains to the grout. Even I was amazed
tile is the way to go. Our tile in the shower had a few cracks at the corners, and I sealed them with identical color silicone caulk right away, making sure that it was very dry prior to applying. . and the new grouts are very stain resistant and color is very permanent.
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Old 04-02-2025, 09:30 AM
kingofbeer kingofbeer is offline
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Originally Posted by Switter View Post
It'll dry out. Leave a fan blowing on it for a day or two to speed the process. If you have one, you could even throw a dehumidifier in the bathroom and shut the door, although I wouldn't go out and buy one just for that purpose. Water doesn't really affect concrete. In fact, when they install vinyl plank flooring on a concrete floor, they put down 6 mil poly to protect the vinyl plank from moisture coming up through the concrete. I think it's more important to determine the source of the water. Is it coming from underneath your shower floor? Like is there a leak in your drain or shower floor? Or is it just from getting in and out of the shower? I'd be surprised it would be the last thing unless you come out of the shower dripping wet.
i suspect this --- getting in and out of the shower.
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Old 04-02-2025, 09:32 AM
kingofbeer kingofbeer is offline
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Originally Posted by Wondering View Post
Do you have gutters all around the house? If not. the concrete act as a sponge and that is why your floor is damp.
Yes. We have gutters all around the house.
  #21  
Old 04-02-2025, 09:50 AM
mraines mraines is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kingofbeer View Post
We have the Rolled Vinyl Flooring product in the main bathroom and most of the house. Not something that we are happy with of course. We noticed that some caulk on the outside of the shower was cracked. We removed all of the caulk and pulled up some of the vinyl. The concrete floor underneath the vinyl was damp. Yesterday we purchased a moisture meter to test. We lifted up a good part of the vinyl and are using a fan to dry out the floor. We will see after the concrete dries out, if the moisture is gone for good. Have anyone of you had this problem before?
I had vinyl in my entire home. After a hurricane, (I think it was Irma) I had water leak into the house. Then I started noticing black spots in the linoleum. I eventually called my insurance company who sent people out to look for leaks, which apparently, I had. They put holes in my walls and found mold. I had to have it all ripped up and have replaced it with tile. Good luck.
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Old 04-02-2025, 11:03 AM
FredMitchell FredMitchell is offline
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First find the source of water, which is most likely a leak. We had this problem. One clue might be wet molding. The other clue is that the LVP seems to have water under it and you can feel that it presses down to the concrete when you walk on it. If it is not a drain issue, the floor of the shower itself will be fine.

The cause of the problem was a leak in the plastic pipe to the shower. Somehow it had been nicked during the build. It eventually failed with a miniscule leak. Since the leak was between the valve and the head, it only leaked, and slowly, while the shower was running.

Lots of flooring needed to be replaced. Also a heater and fan was used for about 48 hours to dry out the drywall before closing it up and replacing the flooring.
  #23  
Old 04-02-2025, 12:23 PM
Fastskiguy Fastskiguy is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pugchief View Post
Properly installed LVP is waterproof, except at the edges. All edges should be caulked to seal the joint. They typically also apply a leveling compound and/or a sealer over concrete prior to installation.
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Originally Posted by asianthree View Post
Our 2nd home in TV we wanted to replace vinyl for ceramic. I asked installer how messy this would be. He grabbed cut down the middle and pulled up. Spots of glue every couple of feet, not close to how it should have been glued. Top it off the amount of debris that the flooring was installed over was unbelievable. He smiled, not messy at all, I just have to sweep and vacuum all the junk left on the floor.

I always wondered why you got a hollow foot step with a crunchy sound in some areas.
I kinda like the appearance of our rolled vinyl but as far as durability or installation....not so much. For some reason I couldn't post a picture but it's fragile and pulling up in places. I'm not particularly upset, some of the stuff going into these houses is pretty cheap and a replacement with something nice is in the budget for someday.

Joe
  #24  
Old 04-02-2025, 12:24 PM
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PugMom PugMom is offline
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Originally Posted by Pugchief View Post
Ceramic tile looks nice and is very durable. Unfortunately, it is also extremely hard on your feet, knees, hips and lower back. And when you need to replace it, removal is expensive and it's a colossal mess. YMMV
we went with the ceramic tile because of this pictured Pug, LOL. the vinyl flooring was becoming discolored from the accident spots as well as the cleaners i used, so tile was a no-brainer
  #25  
Old 04-02-2025, 01:41 PM
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I must admit I find these threads interesting because I used to be a mold and moisture inspector and investigator in my previous life in Maryland. Finding the water source is the most important thing. Vinyl flooring is always been interesting to me because we would consider that an inappropriately located moisture barrier which you can't have one concrete. If the vapor barrier insulation by the builder has any breaches or problems moisture will move into the concrete via capillarity and when it touches air conditioning which tends to sit on the floor you get condensation thanks to the dew point. Why more people don't have this problem is beyond me. When I had the luxury vinyl plank installed in my Village's home I made sure that it floated so there was an opportunity from moisture to vent via the gap between the vinyl and the wall.
  #26  
Old 04-03-2025, 09:22 AM
kingofbeer kingofbeer is offline
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I like to take hot showers which creates a lot of steam. Sometimes we close the door leading to the bathroom in the winter when the house is cold inside. Thinking that the humidity in the room may have caused this problem.
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vinyl, moisture, caulk, rolled, concrete

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