I am renovating our bathroom and am at a loss about the floor grading. I understand that the floor outside the shower needs to be graded to a floor waste. Our bathroom floor is James Hardie Scyon/Secura floor, installed on the joists over a brick pier foundation in a 1980's cut and fill home, with the floor surface equal height to the adjacent hallway floorboards. I'm wondering how to grade the floor to the floor waste. I'm also worried about floor movement.
I've seen lots of people talk about tiling over floor leveler. If the floor leveler does it's job then where does the grade come from? I assume you shouldn't create the grade with the tile adhesive?
The installation guide for the floor suggests that tiles can be installed either directly to the flooring, or over a sand-cement mortar bed on the sheets (obviously with waterproofing in there too). If you were going directly onto the floor (with waterproofing and adhesive), then that would mean you would need to grade the floor itself by either flexing or sloping the floor. The installation guide suggests a frame tolerance of 3-4mm over 3m, which is approx. 0.1% difference. The NCC 2022 part 10.2.12 speaks to a minimum continuous fall of a floor plane to the waste being 1:80, which would be 60mm over 3m or 20x over tolerance, so i don't understand how the tiles could be installed on the flooring without a screed bed.
As such, I assume the grade will have to come from a sand-cement mortar bed. I know there's lots of complexities with screeds - bonded vs unbonded, location of membranes, movement considerations etc. I'm concerned about the potential for the screed cracking given my substructure, especially if the screed is thin (<40mm), and am worried about large floor height differences with the adjacent flooring if the screed is very thick.
I'm not sure where to go from here. Am I overthinking something? Have I already got myself too deep?
Can I just do a thin screed over the floor to create a grade, get it waterproofed, then tile over the top? Not sure about bonded vs unbonded screed in such a scenario, and if any product would be needed between this and the floor for movement considerations.