close

Welcome to Plastering-Machines.co.uk

Please login or register below.
Toppanel
Featured
Mtec 100 Plastering Machine

Spray Multifinish

Check out the M-Tec 100. Proven the best of it's kind on the market.
Read more...
Plastering Articles
plastering articles

Articles and Resources

Plastering articles and resources by category.
Take me there...
Plastering Training
plastering training

Plastering Training

Diverse Accreditation in Machine Plastering. Courses every month.
Learn more...
Affordable Solutions
affordable web solutions

Special Offer For Plasterers

Like some of the features on this website?
Let us design and build your own professional
website for as little as £95.00

Login or Register
Flowing Screed PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 10 March 2008 17:30

You can utilize available technology and become a modern contractor of 'today' easier than you might think.

supaflow screedSupaflow is a new generation screeding product that represents a quantum leap forward in
terms of specifier benefits and design flexibility. In addition, it provides a far easier to apply solution for the contractor. It is a flowing floor screed based on calcium sulphate, a different type of binder to the Portland cement used in traditional screeds. It is available as a dry-premix in bags, ready to use, and presents significant advantages over traditional floor screeds. These include speed of application, excellence of surface finish, attainable accuracy of placement and finishing, reduction in thickness and eliminating or substantial reduction of movement joints.

Productivity with traditional site mixing methods is usually low, in the order of 100m²/day (for a gang of two men mixing and laying 11 tonnes of screed and placing this to a minimum depth of about 50mm). The use of factory made semi-dry cement sand screed, like readyscreed, increases productivity to the extent that perhaps 15 to 18 tonnes may be laid in a day by the same two man gang, with compaction if any, and finishing being by hand. In contrast, Supaflo allows screed thickness to be reduced compared with traditional screeds, therefore, one gang of four men can accurately place 2000m² or more of screed a day, 10-20 times more than with conventional materials. In contrast to conventional screeds, where optimal compaction by the use of a plate vibrator or similar is difficult to
achieve, Supaflo is virtually self-compacting, flowing easily into place and filling all voids and irregularities and it is precisely laser levelled to an accuracy of equal to or better than surface regularity SR2.

In many traditional screeds shrinkage is likely to occur. However, with Supaflow the possibility of curling is entirely eliminated, because there is no differential shrinkage. Supaflo can be used in all dry locations and is suitable for most situations where a conventional unbonded, floating or heated Portland cement screed could be used.
Because of these advantages, the use of flow applied screeds has risen steeply in the last few years, with over 50% of all screeds in some European countries now being this type.

Flowing screeds are so simple and fast to lay and provide immense benefit to both contractor and client. Once you've laid one floor with Supaflow, you will never again revert back to conventional screeds - and neither will your client!

Supaflo provides excellent resistance to impact and exceeds the requirements of the most
exhaustive test value requirement (including that for category A floors). The resistance to impact of installed Supaflo easily exceeds that of alternative traditional systems. Its flowing characteristics mean that voids and poor compaction are problems of the past. The material is self compacting as it flows into position. On top of all this, Supaflow floors can receive foot traffic the very next day! This means that the building project can keep on moving at optimum speed. In fact, with the use of a special primer, floor tiling can even be done the very next day too! Now tell us where that is ever possible with conventional sand and cement screeds?

Contact us for a demonstration

Last Updated ( Monday, 10 March 2008 17:41 )