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Stormin Mormon
 
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Default Trailer floor tear out

I've done an assortment of things in my life. But this is a new one on me.
I've been asked to estimate (and possibly do) a floor tear out, for a
trailer bedroom.

There was a water leak, which is the subject of another post.

The bedroom is about 12' 6" by 13', some closet along the wall. But she
doesn't much like the closet. She'd rather have a long closet, with
accordian fold door.

So, the project is to tear out the floor, and put down a sheet of whatever.
I'm thinking 3/4 or 5/8 T and G is probably standard for this kind of thing.
There is a section of floor maybe 6 by 6 which is just about ready to fall
through.

Beams run side to side across the trailer, and on 24 inch centers.

She'd like "some of that fireproof insulation", which I read to be
fiberglass batts.

She'd like some kind of decorative hardwood lay on top of this, and not sure
that's my department. And maybe carpet, which is definitely not my
department.

OK, folks, what advice can you give me? How to estimate? Any tips to make
the job go easier (things like "cut a chunk of plywood about 3 foot square,
and use it for a platform to kneel on" kind of thing. Is there any
experience out there, in terms of estimating the labor involved?


--

Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
www.mormons.com



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AutoTracer
 
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Default

By trailer do you mean a mobile home (semi perminantly parked at a park) or
a towable 30"-40" trailer with a hitch and exposed wheels. 12"x13" sounds
like a single wide mobile home, is it?

You got to be consciencious of how the wind will travel under trailer when
towed but not so much on a mobile home which rarely gets moved.
Construction is significantly different to.



"Stormin Mormon" wrote in message
...
I've done an assortment of things in my life. But this is a new one on me.
I've been asked to estimate (and possibly do) a floor tear out, for a
trailer bedroom.

There was a water leak, which is the subject of another post.

The bedroom is about 12' 6" by 13', some closet along the wall. But she
doesn't much like the closet. She'd rather have a long closet, with
accordian fold door.

So, the project is to tear out the floor, and put down a sheet of

whatever.
I'm thinking 3/4 or 5/8 T and G is probably standard for this kind of

thing.
There is a section of floor maybe 6 by 6 which is just about ready to fall
through.

Beams run side to side across the trailer, and on 24 inch centers.

She'd like "some of that fireproof insulation", which I read to be
fiberglass batts.

She'd like some kind of decorative hardwood lay on top of this, and not

sure
that's my department. And maybe carpet, which is definitely not my
department.

OK, folks, what advice can you give me? How to estimate? Any tips to make
the job go easier (things like "cut a chunk of plywood about 3 foot

square,
and use it for a platform to kneel on" kind of thing. Is there any
experience out there, in terms of estimating the labor involved?


--

Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
www.mormons.com





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Colbyt
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Stormin Mormon" wrote in message
...
I've done an assortment of things in my life. But this is a new one on me.
I've been asked to estimate (and possibly do) a floor tear out, for a
trailer bedroom.

There was a water leak, which is the subject of another post.

The bedroom is about 12' 6" by 13', some closet along the wall. But she
doesn't much like the closet. She'd rather have a long closet, with
accordian fold door.

So, the project is to tear out the floor, and put down a sheet of

whatever.
I'm thinking 3/4 or 5/8 T and G is probably standard for this kind of

thing.
There is a section of floor maybe 6 by 6 which is just about ready to fall
through.

Beams run side to side across the trailer, and on 24 inch centers.

She'd like "some of that fireproof insulation", which I read to be
fiberglass batts.

She'd like some kind of decorative hardwood lay on top of this, and not

sure
that's my department. And maybe carpet, which is definitely not my
department.

OK, folks, what advice can you give me? How to estimate? Any tips to make
the job go easier (things like "cut a chunk of plywood about 3 foot

square,
and use it for a platform to kneel on" kind of thing. Is there any
experience out there, in terms of estimating the labor involved?



Chris,

I haven't worked on a MH for years.

The older ones were not built anything like a traditional house. Everything
takes 2-3 times the normal amount of effort and even then you haven't really
done a first class job. There is never anything to anchor anything to.
Avoid the job if you can. That would be 2-3 times whatever factor you
normally add for Mr. Murphy.

With 24" centers you need at least 3/4" and it will still have some spring.

Good Luck.


Colbyt


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TURTLE
 
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"Stormin Mormon" wrote in message
...
I've done an assortment of things in my life. But this is a new one on me.
I've been asked to estimate (and possibly do) a floor tear out, for a
trailer bedroom.

There was a water leak, which is the subject of another post.

The bedroom is about 12' 6" by 13', some closet along the wall. But she
doesn't much like the closet. She'd rather have a long closet, with
accordian fold door.

So, the project is to tear out the floor, and put down a sheet of whatever.
I'm thinking 3/4 or 5/8 T and G is probably standard for this kind of thing.
There is a section of floor maybe 6 by 6 which is just about ready to fall
through.

Beams run side to side across the trailer, and on 24 inch centers.

She'd like "some of that fireproof insulation", which I read to be
fiberglass batts.

She'd like some kind of decorative hardwood lay on top of this, and not sure
that's my department. And maybe carpet, which is definitely not my
department.

OK, folks, what advice can you give me? How to estimate? Any tips to make
the job go easier (things like "cut a chunk of plywood about 3 foot square,
and use it for a platform to kneel on" kind of thing. Is there any
experience out there, in terms of estimating the labor involved?


--

Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
www.mormons.com


This is Turtle.

Price out 8 Sheets of 3/4" Plywood, Nails, and 4 rolls of 24 inch center
insulation. If you feel cheap use 5/8" plywood. You should be able to take the
floor out and replace it in one day. So for labor what would you want per day
for me to come get you and work your guts out all day. What would you want for a
days work like that ?

Now your going to find out that the insulation is one big blanket from one end
of the trailor to the other and is not between the floor rafters. If you
insulate you will be double insulating the room.

Now to work off of. Use the new plywood your going to lay back down and just
cover area up.

TURTLE


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I R Baboon
 
Posts: n/a
Default

i would go down to local gas staion. get 5 gallons of hi-test, dump said 5
gallons on moblie home, and light. they were never meant to be repaired
easily. the flooring systems used in them are junk. good luck finding solid
anchorage anywhere. especially if you have to go further then just the
subfloor

"Stormin Mormon" wrote in message
...
I've done an assortment of things in my life. But this is a new one on me.
I've been asked to estimate (and possibly do) a floor tear out, for a
trailer bedroom.

There was a water leak, which is the subject of another post.

The bedroom is about 12' 6" by 13', some closet along the wall. But she
doesn't much like the closet. She'd rather have a long closet, with
accordian fold door.

So, the project is to tear out the floor, and put down a sheet of

whatever.
I'm thinking 3/4 or 5/8 T and G is probably standard for this kind of

thing.
There is a section of floor maybe 6 by 6 which is just about ready to fall
through.

Beams run side to side across the trailer, and on 24 inch centers.

She'd like "some of that fireproof insulation", which I read to be
fiberglass batts.

She'd like some kind of decorative hardwood lay on top of this, and not

sure
that's my department. And maybe carpet, which is definitely not my
department.

OK, folks, what advice can you give me? How to estimate? Any tips to make
the job go easier (things like "cut a chunk of plywood about 3 foot

square,
and use it for a platform to kneel on" kind of thing. Is there any
experience out there, in terms of estimating the labor involved?


--

Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
www.mormons.com





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