The sock is a geo-textile used to filter fine particles of dirt so that the water entering the tile is not going to muck it up.
You can drill through tile, but doing so would most likely crack and break the entire tile. It is not recommended to drill through a tile, unless it is a soft tile, where the tile will not break if drilled through.
wall tiles are used on walls. floor tiles are used on floors. if you want to interchange. you can make the wall tile as floor tile and vice-versa
Vitrified tile are stronger and much less pores. Meaning it is more stain resistant. Ceramic is glazed with only a thin layer of color. The remainder is red or white clay. If it chips you are left with clay showing. Where as vitrified and solid in color and material. Ceramic cannot be used outside where vitrified can. Vitrified though is far more costly then ceramic.
A tile installer or tile setter.
White mortar is the same as gray except it has been bleached. White thinset is needed if you are using a light tile with light grout.
When you rub a mineral on a tile it is called streaking a mineral. The line that is left is called the streak, and the tile itself is called a streaking plate.
i case when the beaker get hot it does not affect the lab.
No, you should never do that, it will defeat the purpose of having ceramic tile and it does not look good.
The tile to start with is the one with the white dot. Tiles do not touch the two sides of the tile nearest the white dot (it is on the outside edge of the puzzle). Good luck.
It is for observing colour change.
the color a mineral leaves on a white tile
the color a mineral leaves on a white tile
White thinset
Some are, others are not. The solid white and bone tile are generally self spacing. You can tell from the slight bump on the sides of the tile.
it will get dry and it will die
The sock is a geo-textile used to filter fine particles of dirt so that the water entering the tile is not going to muck it up.