DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   UK diy (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/)
-   -   What is the most hard-wearing flooring? (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/211814-what-most-hard-wearing-flooring.html)

Jude[_2_] August 22nd 07 12:36 AM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
We are about to go about replacing an old carpet in our study, which
we spend most of our time in. The office chairs with wheels make
short work of destroying cheap surfaces we have used in the past.

Any suggestions for a hard-wearing surface which is not too cold? Not
keen on laminate or carpet, but wondering if there are good vinyl
floors which might do the trick....

any advice much appreciated :)


DIY August 22nd 07 05:34 AM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
"Jude" wrote:
We are about to go about replacing an old carpet in our study, which
we spend most of our time in. The office chairs with wheels make
short work of destroying cheap surfaces we have used in the past.

Any suggestions for a hard-wearing surface which is not too cold? Not
keen on laminate or carpet, but wondering if there are good vinyl
floors which might do the trick....

any advice much appreciated :)


I was in a carpet shop last week and noticed some wood effect sheet vinyl in
the £20 - £25 per square meter range. It looked indestructible to me, but
then it should be for the price.



nightjar August 22nd 07 08:35 AM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 

"Jude" wrote in message
ups.com...
We are about to go about replacing an old carpet in our study, which
we spend most of our time in. The office chairs with wheels make
short work of destroying cheap surfaces we have used in the past.

Any suggestions for a hard-wearing surface which is not too cold? Not
keen on laminate or carpet, but wondering if there are good vinyl
floors which might do the trick....


My office has an industrial grade vinyl - 3mm thick and impregnated with
particles of what I think is mica. It has had heavy use since 1989 and is
still in good condition, apart from a couple of places, where it was damaged
by tubular steel chair legs after the end caps wore off them. I bought it
from a small, local specialist carpet shop. Alternatively, you can buy desk
chair mats - thick clear plastic mats; roughly circular with a stub that
goes into the desk footwell. However, I've not tried those.

Colin Bignell



Geoff Berrow August 22nd 07 08:49 AM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
Message-ID: from DIY contained the following:

any advice much appreciated :)


Office quality carpet tiles?

--
Geoff Berrow (put thecat out to email)
It's only Usenet, no one dies.
My opinions, not the committee's, mine.
Simple RFDs http://www.ckdog.co.uk/rfdmaker/

TheOldFellow August 22nd 07 12:46 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 16:36:59 -0700
Jude wrote:

We are about to go about replacing an old carpet in our study, which
we spend most of our time in. The office chairs with wheels make
short work of destroying cheap surfaces we have used in the past.

Any suggestions for a hard-wearing surface which is not too cold? Not
keen on laminate or carpet, but wondering if there are good vinyl
floors which might do the trick....

any advice much appreciated :)


I always use industrial carpet tiles under castor chairs. Never had a
problem.
R.

Jude[_2_] August 22nd 07 02:01 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
Thanks for all the suggestions. I am going to investigate the vinyl
option first and then perhaps carpet tiles. We tried the chair mats
over our current carpets and they did a good job for a short time, but
after a year or so started cracking and coming apart, especially under
my heavyweight husband's chair! They also become quite discoloured
and appear dirty.

Thanks again all!
Jude


John Rumm August 22nd 07 02:45 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
Jude wrote:

We tried the chair mats
over our current carpets and they did a good job for a short time, but
after a year or so started cracking and coming apart, especially under
my heavyweight husband's chair! They also become quite discoloured
and appear dirty.


Yup, found the same problem with my one.

--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/

The Natural Philosopher August 22nd 07 02:46 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
TheOldFellow wrote:
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 16:36:59 -0700
Jude wrote:

We are about to go about replacing an old carpet in our study, which
we spend most of our time in. The office chairs with wheels make
short work of destroying cheap surfaces we have used in the past.

Any suggestions for a hard-wearing surface which is not too cold? Not
keen on laminate or carpet, but wondering if there are good vinyl
floors which might do the trick....

any advice much appreciated :)


I always use industrial carpet tiles under castor chairs. Never had a
problem.
R.


That's a good one: The other is industrial grade vinyl.

A third is cheap disposable rugs.

Pete C August 22nd 07 03:38 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
On Aug 22, 2:45 pm, John Rumm wrote:
Jude wrote:
We tried the chair mats
over our current carpets and they did a good job for a short time, but
after a year or so started cracking and coming apart, especially under
my heavyweight husband's chair! They also become quite discoloured
and appear dirty.


Yup, found the same problem with my one.


Was it a flexible PVC one or a hard polycarbonate one?

IME my PC one has lasted a few years of hard use on a not-that-flat
floor and is still clear although a little 'matt' under the chair
itself.

If scratching is a problem then there are 'soft' castors (see Ebay)
for laminate floors that will avoid this.

cheers,
Pete.


The Medway Handyman August 22nd 07 10:48 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
"Jude" wrote in message
ups.com...
We are about to go about replacing an old carpet in our study, which
we spend most of our time in. The office chairs with wheels make
short work of destroying cheap surfaces we have used in the past.

Any suggestions for a hard-wearing surface which is not too cold? Not
keen on laminate or carpet, but wondering if there are good vinyl
floors which might do the trick....


My office has an industrial grade vinyl - 3mm thick and impregnated
with particles of what I think is mica. It has had heavy use since
1989 and is still in good condition, apart from a couple of places,
where it was damaged by tubular steel chair legs after the end caps
wore off them. I bought it from a small, local specialist carpet
shop. SNIP


What you describe is generically known as Altro Flooring The particles are
aluminium oxide. which accounts for it's wear resistance.


--
Dave
The Medway Handyman
www.medwayhandyman.co.uk
01634 717930
07850 597257



The Medway Handyman August 22nd 07 10:49 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
John Rumm wrote:
Jude wrote:

We tried the chair mats
over our current carpets and they did a good job for a short time,
but after a year or so started cracking and coming apart, especially
under my heavyweight husband's chair! They also become quite
discoloured and appear dirty.


Yup, found the same problem with my one.


I didn't know you had a heavyweight husband John?


--
Dave
The Medway Handyman
www.medwayhandyman.co.uk
01634 717930
07850 597257



John Rumm August 22nd 07 11:26 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
Pete C wrote:

Was it a flexible PVC one or a hard polycarbonate one?


Hard to say - its fairly stiff; you could not fold it for example, but
not brittle (at least to start with.

IME my PC one has lasted a few years of hard use on a not-that-flat
floor and is still clear although a little 'matt' under the chair
itself.

If scratching is a problem then there are 'soft' castors (see Ebay)
for laminate floors that will avoid this.


I thin in my case it is not aided by a fairly deep pile carpet that is
not really suited to office use (but it came with the house, and is the
only one I have not got round to replacing), plus the large FB who sits
in the chair!


--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/

John Rumm August 22nd 07 11:26 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
The Medway Handyman wrote:
John Rumm wrote:
Jude wrote:

We tried the chair mats
over our current carpets and they did a good job for a short time,
but after a year or so started cracking and coming apart, especially
under my heavyweight husband's chair! They also become quite
discoloured and appear dirty.

Yup, found the same problem with my one.


I didn't know you had a heavyweight husband John?


Careful, I will tell him!


--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/

Jude[_2_] August 23rd 07 11:44 PM

What is the most hard-wearing flooring?
 
Thanks for all your comments.

Yes, our mats were on a thickish carpet too.

Now I'm thinking of replacing all the flooring so that it doesn't turn
into too much of a mish-mash. We have a bungalow. Carpet in the
hall, study, lounge, sanded floorboards in the bedroom, vinyl wood-
effect planks in the kitchen, vinyl tiles in the bathroom. Having
looked around, its really hard to find anything that would look OK in
all rooms AND stand up to the office chair punishment. As there are
old floorboards everywhere, I'm guessing that a layer of hardboard
would be needed underneath too. Unless these really thick Rhinofloor
type vinyls would work without it?



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:11 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter