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[email protected] empress2454@wowway.com is offline
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Default buckling bamboo floor

well, if you remove the covering trim and shorten the boards where they
contact the wall will does that look like it will correct the problem
(is it binding), there are a number of tools that can handle this, the
easiest would be a circular say set to the right deapth, but you may
remove too much that way, best to use something that will only take off
1/2" at a time.

Empressess #124457


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wrote:
The house I bought last winter has a bamboo floor in the kitchen (and
radiant heat in the floors). The bamboo is natural-colored and grained
like a wood floor (lines visible, not dots of endgrain). It sat fine
through the winter, but the humidity of summer has caused the boards to
swell, buckling the center of the floor upwards. The middle 6-7 of the
3-1/2" (x 5/8" thick) boards are humped over most of the 13-foot length
of the kitchen, as much as 2" high in the middle of the hump. In
addition to being trecherous walking if one (visitors) are not
expecting it, I am concerned that further floor or cabinet damage can
occur if a heavy friend steps on it (forcing the adjacent boards
outwards and/or upwards, against wall and under cabinets).

As far as I can tell, the flooring goes all the way to the walls under
the cabinets. The floor was laid about 5 years ago, and the prior
owner simply lived with the fact that it popped up every summer here in
north NJ. He tells me the installer is out of business.

Any suggestions? Will a typical homeowners' insurance plan cover
repair of a problem like this? Is there a solution short of pulling
the cabinets and appliances from one wall, reducing the width of a
board to allow for expansion, and replacing everything? Thoughts?

Regards, Teo