How to easily remove vinyl tiles

 by aeray
Featured
The previous owner of our house, unfortunately, tried to "renovate" and "improve" the recently refinished and refurbished original clear-vertical-grain fir floors by sticking self-adhesive vinyl tiles to them to create "area rugs" of faux parquet and faux marble. After scraping, heating, and using a variety of solvents, I hit upon this far easier and relatively non-toxic method: dry ice.
 
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Step 1: Materials

30 lbs dry ice
waxed or parchment paper
hand towel or rags
small flexible putty knife


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canida says: Dec 15, 2010. 10:13 AM
This is absolutely brilliant! I wish I'd known this while removing the "improvements" from my previous house's floors - scraping was miserable.
Thank you for sharing.
aeray (author) in reply to canidaDec 15, 2010. 12:35 PM
Thanks. Scraping is definitely miserable, that's what led me to this. I bet you'll remember next time though.
Dr_Stupid says: Dec 19, 2010. 1:22 PM
What's wrong with the good ol' fashioned elbow-grease method? We have become so LAZY in the 21st century.
aeray (author) in reply to Dr_StupidDec 19, 2010. 1:25 PM
I'm no stranger to elbow grease, but I also enjoy using my brain now and then.
DIY-Guy in reply to aerayDec 19, 2010. 6:05 PM
Thanks to the author for a super clean and no-toxic-residue method without solvents!

Lack of brain fluid usually leads people to apply unnecessary amounts of elbow grease.

Fill 'er up, with cerebral fluid please!
aeray (author) in reply to DIY-GuyDec 19, 2010. 6:36 PM
Thanks for the comment!
EmmettO says: Dec 15, 2010. 11:01 AM
Huh, I've demolition tons of vinyl tile, but never thought to use cold. I didn't realize the glue would be cold sensitive. Still, unless I had a lot of dry ice available, (which may not be unreasonable) this would be too slow for me to do commercially.

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?
sleeepy2 in reply to EmmettODec 21, 2010. 6:49 AM
It definitely works on concrete floors and with commercial grade mastics. This is one of the methods asbestos abatement workers use to remove vinyl asbestos floor tile without rendering it friable (the other is using infrared heat machines).

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.
ringai in reply to sleeepy2Jul 10, 2012. 6:43 AM
Thanks! I was hoping to find a comment about just that. My basement has two layers of that crap. Now I know how to deal with it.
aeray (author) in reply to ringaiJul 10, 2012. 10:52 AM
Some before-and-afters would be appreciated.
sleeepy2 in reply to aerayJul 10, 2012. 11:20 AM
Here's a "during".
tile.jpg
aeray (author) in reply to sleeepy2Jul 10, 2012. 12:21 PM
Awesome. How's it working?
sleeepy2 in reply to aerayJul 10, 2012. 6:49 PM
It usually works well, when you take your time. The picture is of asbestos abatement workers, who do not like to take their time. Also, double layers of tile can be difficult at times.

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.
ringai in reply to sleeepy2Aug 9, 2012. 6:40 AM
Nice tip on the sizes. Thanks!
aeray (author) in reply to sleeepy2Dec 21, 2010. 7:48 AM
Good to know! Thanks for the info. Hopefully EmmettO tries it.
EmmettO in reply to aerayDec 21, 2010. 10:35 AM
Now all I have to do is find dry ice. :) It's not always available by me.
Johenix in reply to EmmettODec 15, 2010. 7:57 PM
Some years ago in the 1950's-60's Popular Science published this same tip but without the parchment paper.

Personally, I would put the dry ice in a rectangular metal cake pan and drag it from tile to tile with a string.
aeray (author) in reply to JohenixDec 16, 2010. 10:27 AM
I initially used a cake pan, but it dissipated the cold too much, and took a long time to chill the tile.
aeray (author) in reply to EmmettODec 15, 2010. 12:33 PM
These are the cheapo self-adhesive ones. I don't know if it will work with trowel-on. Let me know if you try it.
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.
Sunnedaez says: Oct 18, 2011. 9:22 AM
This is an extraordinary idea and I am going to try it on a job coming up. What was the square footage of the areas of tile you had to remove? The job I have is 6 feet by 12 feet = 72 sqft.. I don't think 30 pounds of dry ice will be enough.
aeray (author) in reply to SunnedaezOct 18, 2011. 11:14 AM
My space was about 8' x 20', so 160sq.ft.
Keko says: Sep 23, 2011. 4:23 PM
I have done this. The nutcase that put the tiles down used about and inch of glue. It took me an entire weekend to sand it off. Golly.
jsadler1 says: Jun 23, 2011. 7:58 PM
Poisonous is a misleading concept in dealing with CO2. It is true that it kills differently than CO but if you reach a 23% concentration of CO2 it will kill you. Thirty pounds of dry ice in a small room might reach that level.
aeray (author) in reply to jsadler1Jun 24, 2011. 4:33 PM
As I noted, it isn't poisonous, but it can kill you.
saxmaster765 says: Jun 17, 2011. 10:52 PM
Here's a question - Do you think this genius idea could work with 2 layers of vinyl at once? A previous owner poorly did our kitchen floor.
aeray (author) in reply to saxmaster765Jun 18, 2011. 7:30 AM
I don't see why not, although you might have to concentrate on one layer at a time. Try it and let me know.
sampowell says: Jun 18, 2011. 7:19 AM
You can also use a wall paper steamer if the tile is on concrete. You get a bit of water. Use a spatula to pick up the hot, limp tiles. The dry ice method can be expensive.
saxmaster765 says: Jun 17, 2011. 10:57 PM
The only other clean way I can think of doing this is with a heat gun and putty knife. The way you showed us here is the best way, and I plan on trying it. Good job!
ryry2011 says: Feb 7, 2011. 3:12 AM
5 worthless
aeray (author) in reply to ryry2011Feb 7, 2011. 8:05 AM
5* stars for "worthless"? Wow, and petty.
ryry2011 in reply to aerayFeb 7, 2011. 12:41 PM
what is the point of it
aeray (author) in reply to ryry2011Feb 7, 2011. 12:59 PM
Apparently your reading comprehension is a little lacking.
ryry2011 in reply to aerayFeb 7, 2011. 1:10 PM
ok
mg0930mg in reply to ryry2011Jun 17, 2011. 6:42 PM
This is helpful, unlike anything where you show people how to put together knex pieces...
dianesswi says: Jun 2, 2011. 6:07 PM
Cool idea!
I'll keep this in mind for when we tackle the hideous "cork" tiles in our foyer.
aeray (author) in reply to dianesswiJun 2, 2011. 6:52 PM
I'd love to see some before-and-after photos.
naomi1431 says: Feb 8, 2011. 2:20 AM
I wonder if this would work for vertical tiles--on a wall? Anyone tried it?
aeray (author) in reply to naomi1431Feb 8, 2011. 7:18 AM
What kind of tiles? What kind of substrate? How are you planning on keeping the dry ice up on the wall? It may work, but more details will help too.
thejunkman says: Jan 3, 2011. 12:55 AM
Has anyone else tried this? Also, will it work for vinyl that's been on
concrete slab floor for 20 years?
Thank you.
aeray (author) in reply to thejunkmanJan 22, 2011. 3:00 PM
Give it a shot and let us know. After 20 years, the glue may be even more brittle and receptive to this.
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