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[email protected] May 13th 09 01:11 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
Is it possible to damage the house from using the living room as a
work out area? I was concerned about all the shocks to the floor from
jumping rope, etc. I have a newer home built in the last 5 years.

thanks

Charlie Darwin[_2_] May 13th 09 01:35 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
wrote in message
...
Is it possible to damage the house from using the living room as a
work out area? I was concerned about all the shocks to the floor from
jumping rope, etc. I have a newer home built in the last 5 years.

thanks


Do you think the kind of floor covering-- and whether it's on joists vs. a
slab, etc., might have anything to do with that...and do you think it might
be helpful to let us know that? Do ya'. huh?



[email protected] May 13th 09 02:08 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 


Do you think the kind of floor covering-- and whether it's on joists vs. a
slab, etc., might have anything to do with that...and do you think it might
be helpful to let us know that? Do ya'. huh?


sorry,

its on joists

[email protected] May 13th 09 02:46 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 


Or, you could google for reports of floor damage due to
bouncy exercise. I guess, to really be sure, you'd have to
post a video of your exercise routine, so we can all watch,
and be better informed. Wear something tight, nylon, and
yellow, please.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
*www.lds.org
.


eh, not something you would want to see

[email protected] May 13th 09 11:06 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
On Tue, 12 May 2009 18:08:12 -0700 (PDT), wrote:



Do you think the kind of floor covering-- and whether it's on joists vs. a
slab, etc., might have anything to do with that...and do you think it might
be helpful to let us know that? Do ya'. huh?


sorry,

its on joists


Over time, the floor will develop sqeaks you will hear with every step
as you walk. It's almost a certainty.


cshenk May 13th 09 11:18 PM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
wrote

Is it possible to damage the house from using the living room as a
work out area? I was concerned about all the shocks to the floor from
jumping rope, etc. I have a newer home built in the last 5 years.


Grin, I see it's on joists not slab. The next bit would be weight of the
person. If a fairly standard '200 lbs or under' not a concern.

If it was on slab, weight is not a concern.

If however a 350 lb person could jump 12 inches then let gravity take them
back down, possible concern to the flooring over the joists. I dont have
the physics background to know what a 350 lb weight dropped from 12 inches
would be in actual impact force but it's more than just 'gently' setting 350
lbs on the same surface.

Is that what you are looking for in information?



mm May 14th 09 05:52 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
On Tue, 12 May 2009 17:11:43 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

Is it possible to damage the house from using the living room as a
work out area? I was concerned about all the shocks to the floor from
jumping rope, etc. I have a newer home built in the last 5 years.

thanks


How much do you weigh?

David Combs June 13th 09 04:18 AM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
In article ,
cshenk wrote:
wrote

Is it possible to damage the house from using the living room as a
work out area? I was concerned about all the shocks to the floor from
jumping rope, etc. I have a newer home built in the last 5 years.


....

But if there's water pipes (or worse!) running under the floor,
after a few years 30-min exercise per day (jumping jacks, etc),
you just might get a break. Especially in an older house.


David



KLS June 13th 09 12:05 PM

Can bouncy exercise damage the floor?
 
On Sat, 13 Jun 2009 03:18:00 +0000 (UTC), (David
Combs) wrote:

In article ,
wrote

Is it possible to damage the house from using the living room as a
work out area? I was concerned about all the shocks to the floor from
jumping rope, etc. I have a newer home built in the last 5 years.


But if there's water pipes (or worse!) running under the floor,
after a few years 30-min exercise per day (jumping jacks, etc),
you just might get a break. Especially in an older house.


Depends on what you mean by "older." I think most houses built before
1950 were pretty damned sturdy: the lumber was so much better back
then, and builders didn't cheap out the way they do now. I would have
no hesitation to jump rope in my living room of my 1930 house.


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