To make this easy but effective floor adhesive remover add equal parts hot water and white vinegar in a bucket.
Removing foam backed carpet glue.
Our landlord has given us permission to remove the rubber backed carpet in our basement.
Go to any corner of the room and pull up a small area of the carpet until you can see the floor underneath.
Pour the boiling water over the carpet glue and allow it to sit there for.
If the old glue has a brownish tint to it you can assume it s made with a tar based material.
If the glue is more yellowish in colour choose an adhesive remover.
My final method looked something like this.
Remove as much of the carpet glue as possible by scraping it using a razor blade scraper.
You ll be using white spirit as a solvent to remove the foam from your floor.
Boiling water will soften up hard to remove glue.
Step 2 use boiling water.
The room is 15 feet by 28 feet and the carpet was a direct glue down.
Pour the solution onto the areas of leftover adhesive on the concrete.
After scraping up the foam backing i poured some of the sentinel on a small area of the floor and spread it around with an old mop.
Removing carpet glue with vinegar.
The truth is you re liable to find anything under your old carpeting.
Carpet adhesives manufactured in the 1980s or earlier may contain asbestos a known.
Removing it the wrong way could cause damage to the floor and to the carpet and that s the last thing you want.
Let the solution sit for several minutes while the vinegar dissolves the glue.
It s not uncommon to find floors covered with foam backing material that s been glued straight to the floor.
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.
Mineral spirits is a good solvent with which to start experimenting it can soften synthetic adhesives and it s safe for most floor finishes.
Successfully removing carpet adhesive.
A third option is spray lubricant which is a petroleum distillate like mineral spirits and can loosen the adhesion of the latex to the finish.
Before moving forward take note.
If mineral spirits doesn t work try denatured alcohol which is good for removing dried latex paint.
In the end the manual method for removing carpet glue may be your best bet.
The scraper can easily remove big chunks of the glue which helps get the job done more easily later.