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Alistair McDonald August 31st 06 10:17 PM

Gluing solid oak floor onto concrete
 
Hello all,

I've laid a few "click" laminate and engineered floors in my time, but
I've got a couple of rooms which I've bought solid oak floor for. The
recommended way is to glue them down.

Does anyone have any idea how much longer it will take to do a room in
this way?

Also, is there a better way of laying it than gluing? I guess i'll lose
my "warranty" (like I'll ever claim) if I don;t follow their
recommendations

I've also got a marble fireplace to go round, and I don't want to use a
quadrant to cover an expansion gap - any ideas/assessment of the risks of
bowing?

Tools-wise, I've got several strap/clamp things (bought for this job) and
an adequate saw that'll deal with the 60mm lengths in no time, squarely
and cleanly. The skirting boards are coming off, too.

Cheers,

Alistair

PS: my life is in flux, one of my kids is in hospital, so I may not reply
immediately. Please blame absent-mindedness, not rudeness if I don't
follow the thread as quickly as I should. I hope I can reply to all.

Richard Perkin September 1st 06 02:38 AM

Gluing solid oak floor onto concrete
 
Alistair McDonald wrote in
:

I've laid a few "click" laminate and engineered floors in my time,
but I've got a couple of rooms which I've bought solid oak floor
for. The recommended way is to glue them down.

Does anyone have any idea how much longer it will take to do a
room in this way?

Also, is there a better way of laying it than gluing? I guess i'll
lose my "warranty" (like I'll ever claim) if I don;t follow their
recommendations


Suggestion:

Glue 25mm battens at say 400mm centres onto the concrete. Use PVA to
prime the concrete, then fix battens with Gripfill or similar.

Fit 25mm expanded polystyrene insulation board between battens

Nail boards to battens using nailgun and secret nailing

Hope this helps

--

Richard Perkin
To email me, change the AT in the address below
richard.perkinATmyrealbox.com

It's is not, it isn't ain't, and it's it's, not its, if you mean it
is. If you don't, it's its. Then too, it's hers. It isn't her's.
It isn't our's either. It's ours, and likewise yours and theirs.
-- Oxford University Press, Edpress News

Alistair McDonald September 2nd 06 08:14 PM

Gluing solid oak floor onto concrete
 
On Fri, 01 Sep 2006 01:38:18 +0000, Richard Perkin wrote:

Alistair McDonald wrote in
:

I've laid a few "click" laminate and engineered floors in my time,
but I've got a couple of rooms which I've bought solid oak floor
for. The recommended way is to glue them down.

Does anyone have any idea how much longer it will take to do a
room in this way?

Also, is there a better way of laying it than gluing? I guess i'll
lose my "warranty" (like I'll ever claim) if I don;t follow their
recommendations


Suggestion:

Glue 25mm battens at say 400mm centres onto the concrete. Use PVA to
prime the concrete, then fix battens with Gripfill or similar.

Fit 25mm expanded polystyrene insulation board between battens

Nail boards to battens using nailgun and secret nailing


Cheers, Richard.

I hadn't considered using battens, but on reflection, I'm not sure I want
a 35mm difference in floor height between neighbouring rooms.

Alistair



Richard Perkin September 3rd 06 01:37 AM

Gluing solid oak floor onto concrete
 
Alistair McDonald wrote in
:

On Fri, 01 Sep 2006 01:38:18 +0000, Richard Perkin wrote:

Alistair McDonald wrote in
:


Suggestion:

Glue 25mm battens at say 400mm centres onto the concrete. Use PVA
to prime the concrete, then fix battens with Gripfill or similar.

Fit 25mm expanded polystyrene insulation board between battens

Nail boards to battens using nailgun and secret nailing


I hadn't considered using battens, but on reflection, I'm not sure
I want a 35mm difference in floor height between neighbouring
rooms.


Indeed. I guess it depends on whether you are happy with the
potential heat loss into the concrete below the new oak flooring.

As for time, in my case two rooms were done in one day. Living room:
nailed to existing suspended floor; dining room: nailed to battens.
The skirting boards were part fitted the same day and finished the
following day.

Since then (3 months ago) the floor has been covered with sheets of
hardboard to protect the surface. Now the renovation is complete
we're on with the decorating, so it should all be finished in a
couple more weeks...

Kind regards

--

Richard Perkin
To email me, change the AT in the address below
richard.perkinATmyrealbox.com

It's is not, it isn't ain't, and it's it's, not its, if you mean it
is. If you don't, it's its. Then too, it's hers. It isn't her's.
It isn't our's either. It's ours, and likewise yours and theirs.
-- Oxford University Press, Edpress News


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