Heat will soften vinyl enough for you to have a go at it with a putty knife.
Removing vinyl adhesive from concrete.
Remnants and residues left over aren t pleasant to look at and make it impossible to add new decor or refinish to the concrete.
Pull the linoleum up in strips to reveal the linoleum glue.
With vinyl the answer is fire or heat if you will.
Let us help you how to remove linoleum or vinyl flooring from concrete.
There are plenty of methods for decorating them that can make you want to pull up old carpet and tiling in an instant.
Glue can be difficult to remove.
First the tile itself is taken up either cut pried or chiseled from the floor.
We use floor razor scrapers to remove the tiles carpet and the black glue on the concrete.
For stubborn vinyl and glue that is stuck to the floor use a heat gun to soften the plastic flooring and adhesive.
Removing vinyl from concrete is similar to removing it from subfloor.
How to remove vinyl flooring from concrete easily the complete guide removing of vinyl cover from the floor is not a difficult task but surely it s a time consuming task.
However getting the adhesive off the concrete may prove to be more difficult.
Contact a pro to help.
So before you get started to this massive task make sure that whether the vinyl cover is definitely unusable or too old.
If that doesn t get the glue off you will need to use a commercial adhesive stripper to soften and remove the glue.
Removing the glue from floors after a tile removal.
The handle is long enough so you get good leverage to scrape with.
Remember what we said about vinyl adhesive.
Concrete floors aren t the eyesore they used to be.
It s a tough cookie and it only gets tougher with age.
Different methods of removing black glue from concrete.
Start by scraping the glue with a pry bar or scraper.
Either lift vinyl with a floor scraper or cut manageable pieces to remove as much vinyl flooring as possible.
Cut it into strips about 6 inches wide.
You can aim a blow gun at the vinyl or put it under several layers of paper and pass an iron over.
This is probably the easiest type of subfloor to get linoleum or vinyl off of but it s still no picnic.
Most vinyl tile flooring installed in the 60 s 70 s and early 80 s had asbestos in both the glue and the tiles.