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[email protected] September 16th 05 12:06 AM

Laminate flooring in doorways/adjacent rooms
 
I am laying the same glueless laminate flooring in adjacent rooms, I
understand that I need to use an expansion strip in the doorways.

In the first room I started in the opposite corner of the room working
towards the door.

When I start on the next room should I continue from the doorway (i.e.
continuing working in the same direction) or start on the opposite side
from the door again where the longest straight wall is and work towards
the door again ? (so that the flooring is laid in both rooms working
towards the common door ?

Hope that makes some sense !

Frosty

P.S. Also, how important are the expansion strips, should I put one in
the doorway of the built in larder too if I'm laying flooring in there
too ?


Lurch September 16th 05 02:05 AM

On 15 Sep 2005 16:06:03 -0700, scrawled:

When I start on the next room should I continue from the doorway (i.e.
continuing working in the same direction) or start on the opposite side
from the door again where the longest straight wall is and work towards
the door again ? (so that the flooring is laid in both rooms working
towards the common door ?

Er, is the room a different size then depending which end you measure
from? How's starting at a different end of the room going to make much
of a difference? Or am I missing something?

P.S. Also, how important are the expansion strips, should I put one in
the doorway of the built in larder too if I'm laying flooring in there
too ?


Depends how big the rooms are and whether it needs some expansion in
that area. If you've measured it out and there should be an expansion
strip then fit one.

I overheard a bloke talking a while back and he was quite impressed
with how he managed to get his laminate floor to fit perfectly up to
the skirting all the way around the room, with none of these big gaps
everywhere like everyone else has. Hmmm....
--
Stuart @ SJW Electrical

Please Reply to group

DJC September 16th 05 02:10 AM

wrote:
I am laying the same glueless laminate flooring in adjacent rooms, I
understand that I need to use an expansion strip in the doorways.

In the first room I started in the opposite corner of the room working
towards the door.

When I start on the next room should I continue from the doorway (i.e.
continuing working in the same direction) or start on the opposite side
from the door again where the longest straight wall is and work towards
the door again ? (so that the flooring is laid in both rooms working
towards the common door


I wouldn't think it critical either way.
I put down a floor then needed to take it up top do some plumbing, I
only needed to take up half the floor, but that was the wrong half, so I
ended up re-doing the lot; start where you are last likely to need
access in future.
Sometimes it is easier or neater to trim the last few boards on a
particular side. Starting with the longest straight wall is probably best.
Unless the boards look different when viewed from one side rather than
the other it should not look any different where they meet at the door.
Besides the threshold strip will separate the two runs.


P.S. Also, how important are the expansion strips, should I put one in
the doorway of the built in larder too if I'm laying flooring in there
too ?


May depend on how big the cupboard -- does it extend sideways further
than the width of the door? -- in which case best use and expansion strip.


--
David Clark

$message_body_include ="PLES RING IF AN RNSR IS REQIRD"

Rob Morley September 16th 05 03:11 AM

In article . com,
says...
I am laying the same glueless laminate flooring in adjacent rooms, I
understand that I need to use an expansion strip in the doorways.

In the first room I started in the opposite corner of the room working
towards the door.

When I start on the next room should I continue from the doorway (i.e.
continuing working in the same direction) or start on the opposite side
from the door again where the longest straight wall is and work towards
the door again ? (so that the flooring is laid in both rooms working
towards the common door ?


Always start along the longest straightest wall. I'm not sure what
difference you think that will make to expansion gaps.

P.S. Also, how important are the expansion strips, should I put one in
the doorway of the built in larder too if I'm laying flooring in there
too ?

Probably not needed if you're leaving a gap around the rest of the
larder.

Richard Conway September 16th 05 09:30 AM

wrote:
I am laying the same glueless laminate flooring in adjacent rooms, I
understand that I need to use an expansion strip in the doorways.

In the first room I started in the opposite corner of the room working
towards the door.

When I start on the next room should I continue from the doorway (i.e.
continuing working in the same direction) or start on the opposite side
from the door again where the longest straight wall is and work towards
the door again ? (so that the flooring is laid in both rooms working
towards the common door ?

Hope that makes some sense !

Frosty

P.S. Also, how important are the expansion strips, should I put one in
the doorway of the built in larder too if I'm laying flooring in there
too ?


If the floor has obvious joins (i.e. some laminates have a tongue and
groove style groove) then you might want to make sure these match up on
either side of the expansion strip so it looks like a continuous floor
and flows nicer


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