bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
I'm really attracted to bamboo flooring for my dining room/kitchen
area. Can it be successfully laid over a concrete floor? I hear conflicting advice. One said that it must be glued to the floor, but there's no guarantee that it won't move. A search of message boards suggests that it's probably ok. Grateful for any advice! Thanks Chris |
bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 13:08:09 -0700, chris
wrote: I'm really attracted to bamboo flooring for my dining room/kitchen area. Can it be successfully laid over a concrete floor? I hear conflicting advice. One said that it must be glued to the floor, but there's no guarantee that it won't move. A search of message boards suggests that it's probably ok. Grateful for any advice! Thanks Chris Got a link for the material? Some flooring types need to expand and contract. Some need a _quality_ glue. Both can be bamboo, I suppose. -- Oren ...through the use of electrical or duct tape, achieve the configuration in the photo.. |
bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
chris wrote:
I'm really attracted to bamboo flooring for my dining room/kitchen area. Can it be successfully laid over a concrete floor? I hear conflicting advice. One said that it must be glued to the floor, but there's no guarantee that it won't move. A search of message boards suggests that it's probably ok. Grateful for any advice! Thanks Wooden flooring is generally glued to some sort of cushion and the cushion is glued to the subfloor. If the wood is glued directly to concrete, something's gotta give as the humidity changes. I've heard a wooden floor may expand as much as 1/2" inch as the humidity goes from 30% to 60%. |
bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
chris wrote:
I'm really attracted to bamboo flooring for my dining room/kitchen area. Can it be successfully laid over a concrete floor? I hear conflicting advice. One said that it must be glued to the floor, but there's no guarantee that it won't move. A search of message boards suggests that it's probably ok. Grateful for any advice! Instead of message boards and usenet, I've a novel thought. Go to the site(s) of the manufacturer(s) of the product(s) you're interested in and get the skinny on installation from those who are in position to know. -- |
bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 18:54:31 -0500, "HeyBub"
wrote: Wooden flooring is generally glued to some sort of cushion and the cushion is glued to the subfloor. If the wood is glued directly to concrete, something's gotta give as the humidity changes. I've heard a wooden floor may expand as much as 1/2" inch as the humidity goes from 30% to 60%. Some quality glues have a moisture inhibitor/blocker. -- Oren "I wouldn't even be here if my support group hadn't beaten me up." |
bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
Over concrete a floating floor installation is usually recommended over a
moisture barier layer. You can get click-together bamaboo which is a floating installation. This example is from a Canadian distributer.. http://www.costco.ca/Browse/Product.aspx?Prodid=10299914&whse=BCCA&Ne=4000000& eCat=BCCA|20076&N=4009370&Mo=15&No=2&Nr=P_CatalogN ame:BCCA&cat=20238&Ns=P_Price|1||P_SignDesc1&lang= en-CA&Sp=C&topnav= "chris" wrote in message oups.com... I'm really attracted to bamboo flooring for my dining room/kitchen area. Can it be successfully laid over a concrete floor? I hear conflicting advice. One said that it must be glued to the floor, but there's no guarantee that it won't move. A search of message boards suggests that it's probably ok. Grateful for any advice! Thanks Chris |
bamboo florring and concrete subfloor
Oren wrote:
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 18:54:31 -0500, "HeyBub" wrote: Wooden flooring is generally glued to some sort of cushion and the cushion is glued to the subfloor. If the wood is glued directly to concrete, something's gotta give as the humidity changes. I've heard a wooden floor may expand as much as 1/2" inch as the humidity goes from 30% to 60%. Some quality glues have a moisture inhibitor/blocker. Right. I was refering to humidity in the AIR. |
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