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#1
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In the middle of a small hallway near the utility room the middle 6 planks
or so have bowed up. So the floor has a big hill in the middle. This happened over a 2 week period of time after the washer water line got a hole a shot out water. Anyway it's a tongue and groove floor so you can pull out the planks. They were help down by paste or something and not nails since it's concrete underneath. So what should I do? I've heard try to shave one of the planks to make it fit together. IT this something I should try? Or is this best left to a total floot replacement even though we're only talking about a 2' by 10' area at6 the most that has come up at least a little. The area near the utility room is worst. |
#2
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Grendel wrote:
In the middle of a small hallway near the utility room the middle 6 planks or so have bowed up. So the floor has a big hill in the middle. This happened over a 2 week period of time after the washer water line got a hole a shot out water. Anyway it's a tongue and groove floor so you can pull out the planks. They were help down by paste or something and not nails since it's concrete underneath. So what should I do? I've heard try to shave one of the planks to make it fit together. IT this something I should try? Or is this best left to a total floot replacement even though we're only talking about a 2' by 10' area at6 the most that has come up at least a little. The area near the utility room is worst. How long has it been since the washer hose did its thing? If it has not been long, I would try putting a heavy weight on thos boards and hope for the best. -- Joseph E. Meehan 26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math |
#3
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I will take weeks to dry, you should wait, or plain an end board. Or run
a dehumidifier in the hall, if you can warm it with spot lights it will raise floor temperature, at low humidity, higher temp drying can be rapid . |
#4
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![]() In the middle of a small hallway near the utility room the middle 6 planks or so have bowed up. So the floor has a big hill in the middle. This happened over a 2 week period of time after the washer water line got a hole a shot out water. Anyway it's a tongue and groove floor so you can pull out the planks. They were help down by paste or something and not nails since it's concrete underneath. So what should I do? I've heard try to shave one of the planks to make it fit together. IT this something I should try? Or is this best left to a total floot replacement even though we're only talking about a 2' by 10' area at6 the most that has come up at least a little. The area near the utility room is worst. Run a dehumidifier in there for a week or so, and see if the planking drops down again as it dries out. Drop some weights on it. |
#5
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It's been around a monrth or two. It took 2 weeks to bow. My father
suggested a hari dryer and that semeed to lower it some. Anything else to "shrink" the wood? I assume I need to paste the planks back on? Since only the middle planks have come up does it mean the others are ok and haven't expanded? "default" wrote in message ... In the middle of a small hallway near the utility room the middle 6 planks or so have bowed up. So the floor has a big hill in the middle. This happened over a 2 week period of time after the washer water line got a hole a shot out water. Anyway it's a tongue and groove floor so you can pull out the planks. They were help down by paste or something and not nails since it's concrete underneath. So what should I do? I've heard try to shave one of the planks to make it fit together. IT this something I should try? Or is this best left to a total floot replacement even though we're only talking about a 2' by 10' area at6 the most that has come up at least a little. The area near the utility room is worst. Run a dehumidifier in there for a week or so, and see if the planking drops down again as it dries out. Drop some weights on it. |
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