If you just removed carpet and now you need to remove the carpet glue from a concrete floor here are some tips the methods below are easy ways for preparing your concrete floors for laminate tile or hardwood you can try the environmentally friendly products or use the proven but toxic chemical glue strippers.
Removing carpet glue from concrete before staining.
Before moving forward take note.
It also makes applying a concrete stain color challenging because the stain can t get past the glue to do its job.
The good news is removing carpet glue from a concrete floor is possible.
Separating the adhesive from the concrete is.
In the end the manual method for removing carpet glue may be your best bet.
Leaving the glue on the floor is not a good option because it can collect grime.
The scraper can easily remove big chunks of the glue which helps get the job done more easily later.
Step 1 scraping the carpet glue.
Carpet adhesive is stubborn and difficult to remove.
The more glue you remove from the concrete before using a glue remover the better and faster it will work.
Getting rid of the glue can be a troublesome job especially if it is there from many years.
We recently completed an acid stained concrete flooring project in the main sanctuary of a church before the christmas holidays that presented a huge challenge in terms of removing carpet glue.
Scrape the entire floor then sweep or vacuum up the loose glue.
The glue was thickly applied and very old 35 years so it had crystallized into a very dense material.
This adhesive residue must be removed before you stain or recover the concrete with tiles carpet or wood.
Though incredibly effective this specialty glue is also notorious because it leaves behind sticky residue that is hard to remove with traditional removal methods.
Remove as much of the carpet glue as possible by scraping it using a razor blade scraper.
After pulling up the carpet the first step is to remove as much glue from the concrete as you can with a floor scraper.
Instead what is often left behind is course sections of dried adhesive that have bonded to the concrete floor in such a way that they are very difficult to remove.
Unfortunately when you remove the carpeting to replace it the adhesive usually does not come off with the carpet in all areas.
Carpet adhesives manufactured in the 1980s or earlier may contain asbestos a known.