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nemofish August 26th 04 09:11 AM

Thre-ply kraft paper
 
Hi

I've recently bought a book detailing how to install hardwood floors as
I'll be installing an oak floor. However, the book is american and states
that you should use three-ply kraft paper when boarding over exisiting
floorboards. This acts as a moisture barrier, reduces noise and provides
a clean working surface. Can anyone tell me what the UK equivalent would
be and can I get it from somewhere like B&Q? The book also says that you
should not use a polythene moisture barrier if that helps.

Many thanks

Mat.

nightjar August 26th 04 03:28 PM


"nemofish" wrote in message
...
Hi

I've recently bought a book detailing how to install hardwood floors as
I'll be installing an oak floor. However, the book is american and states
that you should use three-ply kraft paper when boarding over exisiting
floorboards. This acts as a moisture barrier, reduces noise and provides
a clean working surface. Can anyone tell me what the UK equivalent would
be


Kraft paper is a thick brown paper, shiny on one side, which you would
probably recognise if you saw it wrapped around a parcel. I would use paper
underlay, from a carpet shop, instead - the stuff that replaced interesting
old newspapers under lino.

Colin Bignell



Paper2002AD August 27th 04 03:19 PM

The Americans use kraft paper, ie, made from virgin fibre, ie trees, as opposed
to most of UK 'kraft' wrapping paper which is pretty near 100% recycled. They
do it because they can, since trees are cheap in the US - I hasten to add that
they plant and grow the trees that they use for paper-making. Having said
that, they are building recycling mills for packaging papers, but because most
of the stuff they recycle is made from 100% virgin, their 'recycled' paper is
superb compared to ours.

I would have thought that any old thick paper would do for this kind of
underlay. If you know anyone who works for a corrugated box company, they may
get you a stub end of paper on the reel.

Incidentally, paper cannot be recycled indefinitely. Each time it is subjected
to the paper-making process, the fibres get shorter and the paper gets weaker,
and eventually you would have mush. The whole cycle depends upon the
introduction of virgin fibre - usually from trees, but it could be any
cellulose fibre - to maintain paper strength.

There will be a test at the end of the month, class.


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