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waxed or parchment paper
hand towel or rags
small flexible putty knife
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Thank you for sharing.
Lack of brain fluid usually leads people to apply unnecessary amounts of elbow grease.
Fill 'er up, with cerebral fluid please!
I wonder if it would work any differently on concrete floors?
These look like the self stick variety of tile which has pretty weak glue in the first place. I wonder if this would work with commercial grade VCT glue?
They use the pelleted version of the dry ice and a push broom. They let a pile sit, push it forward with the broom and pick up the popped tile, and repeat until done.
As a further safety note, if the tile is 9x9, it's almost always asbestos-containing, so try to avoid excessive breakage. 12x12 can contain asbestos, but is less likely.
Personally, I would put the dry ice in a rectangular metal cake pan and drag it from tile to tile with a string.
As for it being slow- it seems slow, waiting around for the glue to pop, but when you take into account the time saved NOT having to scrape or scrub glue residue off the floor, it's pretty fast.
I'll keep this in mind for when we tackle the hideous "cork" tiles in our foyer.
concrete slab floor for 20 years?
Thank you.