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[email protected] March 22nd 05 07:08 PM

Bamboo Flooring
 
Sorry if this is a bit OT! I'm considering installing pre-finished
bamboo flooring (real, not laminate) in my "family room", and was
wondering if anyone in the group had any experiance with bamboo
flooring. Specifically in the areas of durability, and scratch/scuff
resistance.
I understand that much of this is also based on the finish...I was
hoping for an "all other things being equal" type of comparison.

Any help or advice would be gratly appreciated! Thanks in advance!

Hal


B a r r y March 22nd 05 07:47 PM

wrote:
Sorry if this is a bit OT! I'm considering installing pre-finished
bamboo flooring (real, not laminate) in my "family room", and was
wondering if anyone in the group had any experiance with bamboo
flooring.


We installed it in a relative's farm house.


Specifically in the areas of durability, and scratch/scuff
resistance.


His has been similar to many prefinished floor products, with a bit more
dentability. It will scratch, but it's a little tougher than a
typical polyurethane hardwood floor, but less scratch resistant to a
finish product like "Traffic".

Barry



HMFIC@1369 March 22nd 05 09:18 PM

The distinct difference is that it is not as hydroscopic as wood products,
and a more renewable resource.

As for the construction (scratch and scuff) it is based simply on it's
pre-finish by the manufacturer. In that case quality counts, but the surface
and wear and tear, would be equal to any other product wood or otherwise.
Bare Bamboo should easily outlast bare wood!

joe


wrote in message
ups.com...
Sorry if this is a bit OT! I'm considering installing pre-finished
bamboo flooring (real, not laminate) in my "family room", and was
wondering if anyone in the group had any experiance with bamboo
flooring. Specifically in the areas of durability, and scratch/scuff
resistance.
I understand that much of this is also based on the finish...I was
hoping for an "all other things being equal" type of comparison.

Any help or advice would be gratly appreciated! Thanks in advance!

Hal




Rick Stein March 23rd 05 02:41 PM

We installed bamboo in a portion of our house 4 years ago. We used a
3-ply lamination, each piece 3.625" X 36" (I think those are the right
dimensions)long, tongue and groove, and end-matched. We bought the
pre-finished, natural color, horizontal layup product. We love the
stuff. It's a renewable resource, feels great on bare feet, and although
not impervious to scratches, chair leg denting, etc . . . it seems every
bit as durable as the oak flooring in other parts of our house. We are
just starting to build a new house (and a new, large shop!) and will use
bamboo throughout the main floor.

From my personal experience, I highly recommend the stuff. As an added
bonus, the stuff is relatively inexpensive (I just paid $2.18 per square
ft.)

Rick

wrote:
Sorry if this is a bit OT! I'm considering installing pre-finished
bamboo flooring (real, not laminate) in my "family room", and was
wondering if anyone in the group had any experiance with bamboo
flooring. Specifically in the areas of durability, and scratch/scuff
resistance.
I understand that much of this is also based on the finish...I was
hoping for an "all other things being equal" type of comparison.

Any help or advice would be gratly appreciated! Thanks in advance!

Hal



[email protected] March 23rd 05 03:03 PM

I installed a bamboo floor in a client's house two years ago. They
love it! It is harder than red oak due to a very high silica content.

As others have noted, it is a much more "renewable" resource--a new
crop can be cut every 5 years, and it grows from the roots (can't do
that with oak!).

The silica does mean it's harder on saw blades: the floor I laid was
only 200 s.f. but by the time I finished the nearly-new blade I started
with was beginning to burn the curf.

Oh, the stuff is just flat-out beautiful in the morning sun!

Dan


Mark March 30th 05 02:36 AM

I can relate the same experience.
We love it.
Rugs are around high traffic areas. The only difference in durability
compared to oak is that bamboo dents easier. (dropped a fire extinguiser one
day!).
Mark

"Rick Stein" wrote in message
...
We installed bamboo in a portion of our house 4 years ago. We used a
3-ply lamination, each piece 3.625" X 36" (I think those are the right
dimensions)long, tongue and groove, and end-matched. We bought the
pre-finished, natural color, horizontal layup product. We love the
stuff. It's a renewable resource, feels great on bare feet, and although
not impervious to scratches, chair leg denting, etc . . . it seems every
bit as durable as the oak flooring in other parts of our house. We are
just starting to build a new house (and a new, large shop!) and will use
bamboo throughout the main floor.

From my personal experience, I highly recommend the stuff. As an added
bonus, the stuff is relatively inexpensive (I just paid $2.18 per square
ft.)

Rick

wrote:
Sorry if this is a bit OT! I'm considering installing pre-finished
bamboo flooring (real, not laminate) in my "family room", and was
wondering if anyone in the group had any experiance with bamboo
flooring. Specifically in the areas of durability, and scratch/scuff
resistance.
I understand that much of this is also based on the finish...I was
hoping for an "all other things being equal" type of comparison.

Any help or advice would be gratly appreciated! Thanks in advance!

Hal





Andrew Barss June 23rd 05 08:45 AM

Mark wrote:
: I can relate the same experience.
: We love it.
: Rugs are around high traffic areas. The only difference in durability
: compared to oak is that bamboo dents easier. (dropped a fire extinguiser one
: day!).


Non-carbonized bamboo is substantially harder than any species of oak.


See

http://www.woodfloorsonline.com/techtalk/hardns.html


- Andy Barss

B a r r y June 23rd 05 11:54 AM

Andrew Barss wrote:

Non-carbonized bamboo is substantially harder than any species of oak.


See

http://www.woodfloorsonline.com/techtalk/hardns.html



A-ha!

Thanks, Andy.

I felt my BIL's bamboo floor was softer than typically used hardwoods,
but it's carbonized, with a color similar to light walnut.

Thanks again for the link.

Barry


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