Occasionally if the floor joist are spaced two far apart to properly support the sheeting then floor creaking may occur.
Floor of bathtub creaks.
One tile has a hairline crack now.
Using your power drill make a pilot hole through the subfloor then a smaller pilot hole into the finished.
This could be due to new construction under the tub.
The noise is typically from movement.
The tub does appear to be level so i don t think that s the problem.
Squeaking in an acrylic tub when weight is placed on the floor of the tub can be due to the tub flexing or bending.
I know it s not the floor boards since the rest of the bathroom is silent.
The tub creaks a lot and there is a great deal of vertical play when standing and moving around.
A few well placed screws can eliminate the squeak.
Is this from humidity.
Driving short screws through the bottom of the subfloor through the bottom of the finished floor can alleviate the noise.
With no water each footstep in an empty tub loads and unloads the floor of the tub thus the movement.
Yeah it sounds as if they removed the structural support.
It doesn t seem to be such an issue when it s full of water and i m sitting down i suppose the weight is more evenly distributed.
The grout in an a joining bathroom cracked also after squeaking in winter.
The four year old tile floor in our bathroom started squeaking during winter after four years and stopped squeaking in summer.
Bigjaylow nj i recently installed a new acrilic tub in my bathroom.
If you re doing a full remodel and can see the bathroom floor framing from the room below you can usually see where the floor moves and squeaks when someone walks on it.
Since the first shower in it i continuously hear a loud creaking as i move my feet all over the base.
Then fill the holes with wood filler.
A lot of times when new construction is nailed or screwed down they have a little give and take which will cause the sound of creaking.
It was about three years old.
Oftentimes the squeaks and creaks you hear are caused by the floorboards rubbing against nails or the floorboards.
Screws will normally do a much better job of holding the.
This can potentially weaken the tub and lead to cracks and splits in.
The tub flange moving against the wall the tub drain plumbing maybe rubbing against the subfloor.
I think the floor was not prepped correctly.
Loaded with water the water weights the tub down thus no movement.
Or if separating floor from subfloor is causing the creak drive two nails at opposite 45 degree angles into joists which you can locate with a stud finder.
Rarely is this the case.