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Mathew Newton[_2_] January 31st 19 09:02 PM

Underlay for engineered wood flooring
 
Does anyone have any knowledge/experience of underlay for floating engineered wood flooring on a concrete base?

From some cursory reading it seems that there are varying thicknesses, tog ratings, sound insulation etc and of course price. My initial thoughts are that a decent thickness and tog rating could be beneficial on a ground floor, however I wondered if this would lead to sponginess/springiness underfoot? Perhaps it's a good thing having some 'give' and it may make it a bit quieter to walk on? Speaking of sound, I am assuming the 'sound deadening' underlays are more to minimise transmission of noise *through* the underlay (to rooms below) and not for reducing floor-related noise within the room itself?

Tim Watts[_5_] January 31st 19 10:57 PM

Underlay for engineered wood flooring
 
On 31/01/2019 21:02, Mathew Newton wrote:
Does anyone have any knowledge/experience of underlay for floating engineered wood flooring on a concrete base?

From some cursory reading it seems that there are varying thicknesses, tog ratings, sound insulation etc and of course price. My initial thoughts are that a decent thickness and tog rating could be beneficial on a ground floor, however I wondered if this would lead to sponginess/springiness underfoot? Perhaps it's a good thing having some 'give' and it may make it a bit quieter to walk on? Speaking of sound, I am assuming the 'sound deadening' underlays are more to minimise transmission of noise *through* the underlay (to rooms below) and not for reducing floor-related noise within the room itself?


I used one of the better ones - it is soft, but the floor is not spongy.
The wood evens the load out to the point where it cannot easily compress
a larger area.

I recommend a vapour barrier - some of the underlays have a plastic film
to act as a barrier and it's a good idea to tape these joints.

Check the subfloor for flatness with a 4ft level - you might need some
1mm and 2mm card handy to pack out low spots (happened on every floor
I've ever laid).

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Tim Lamb[_2_] February 1st 19 11:12 AM

Underlay for engineered wood flooring
 
In message ,
Mathew Newton writes
Does anyone have any knowledge/experience of underlay for floating
engineered wood flooring on a concrete base?

From some cursory reading it seems that there are varying thicknesses,
tog ratings, sound insulation etc and of course price. My initial
thoughts are that a decent thickness and tog rating could be beneficial
on a ground floor, however I wondered if this would lead to
sponginess/springiness underfoot? Perhaps it's a good thing having some
'give' and it may make it a bit quieter to walk on? Speaking of sound,
I am assuming the 'sound deadening' underlays are more to minimise
transmission of noise *through* the underlay (to rooms below) and not
for reducing floor-related noise within the room itself?


The professional who fitted our engineered Oak over screed and wet
underfloor heating used a polythene backed 3mm foam. No issues over 9
years use.

Ground floor and solid concrete sub base so no noticeable noise.
The cottage has an extension with screed over block and beam. The tiled
area *thumps* a bit if you walk heavily.

Upstairs, I used 22mm grooved chipboard and aluminium spreader plates,
https://www.screwfix.com/p/polyolefi...rlay-15m/7260r
topped with 12mm hardwood ply and low tog underlay and carpet. Noise
free:-)



--
Tim Lamb

The Natural Philosopher[_2_] February 1st 19 11:22 AM

Underlay for engineered wood flooring
 
On 01/02/2019 11:12, Tim Lamb wrote:
The professional who fitted our engineered Oak over screed and wet
underfloor heating used a polythene backed 3mm foam. No issues over 9
years use.


I used that and its OK after 16 years.


--
"When one man dies it's a tragedy. When thousands die it's statistics."

Josef Stalin



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