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Andrew Mawson
 
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Default reclaimed parquet flooring - help!


"ceg" wrote in message
...

hi allyou've prob been asked this several times before but after

looking
on posts left right and center on diy not, I'm now totally confused

so
thought I would drop an email to you...

I've got some reclaimed parquet flooring to be laid on a self

levelled
compounded concrete floor...

the parquet we have has got bitumen on and from the posts I've seen

it
looks like the majority of this has got to come off... (fun job from
the sounds of it!)

anyhow this is the bit that's baffling me, is what to stick it down
with? the f21 styccobond stuff, techy dept there seems to be saying

all
the old bitumen has got to come off it to bare wood - which I know

is
not going to happen! also having phoned around lots of local people
this seems to be hard to get hold of. also being a 1960's house not
totally convinced there is a dpm (2 other ground floor rooms have
parquet flooring, and this room being the old kitchen presumably had
the old vinyl tiles, which I believe had the bitumen down so

assuming
that is the dpm. I guess another question will be does the f21 act

as a
dpm?) on the synaprufe front, their techy team say that this isnt
suitable for parquet flloring and is now amending their web site...

I'm also wantig the floor to be laid in herringbone style so matches
the other rooms, where do you start laying it? also is the 2 row

flat
edge essential as my other half is not keen on this..

and then to the finishing.. is it ok to use some sort of

varnish/sealer
once sanded, so that I don't need to wax floor every 6 months? does

this
work? looking for a least maintenance floor, which will still look

nice
ie a compromise...

any help or advice you can give would be much appreaciated....

thanks
in adavance for any help c


--
ceg


When I laid a 12' x 12' reclaimed parquet floor in my workshop I left
the old bitumen on, and just dipped the underside of the blocks in the
melted bitumen bath (large pan on electric ring) then sid them into
place. It's still holding 15 years later so can't be all wrong!

(I know - luxury for a workshop, but the price was right and it saves
chipping tools when you drop them G)

AWEM