Want to fit an engineered wood flooring, had made my mind up on using a brand called Kahrs which I told was very good the 'Audi' of flooring, but I've heard its not that great now marks easy etc. I've also looked at the B&Q stuff about the same price now its in the sale at £36 per m2. Any one fitted either of these be it Kahrs or the B&Q stuff and got any comments on them ?
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Engineered Wood Flooring
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Make sure you leave a gap when fitting. My mates builder didn't. It expanded against the walls in his 40ft by 40ft consevatory ... you can guess the rest. The builder just closed his comapany before legal action started ... -
You also need to store the floor in the room it will be fitted in for a few days before fitting, so it adjusts to the temp. in the room.Fiscal nomad it's legal.Comment
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Yes. but more work than click-together engineered wood covering.Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostWouldn't quality sanded and polished floor boards be better?Comment
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Yeah probably, but I have massive gaps in the boards and they are so drafty as its 1930's house, engineered wood flooring is going to help me keep the heat in. I don't want solid wood as its tounge and grove, with the engineered you can get the click system and its more stable solid apperently.Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostWouldn't quality sanded and polished floor boards be better?Comment
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That is bad. Its supposed to be a floating floor with space under the skirting to expand/contract.Originally posted by Jeebo72 View PostMake sure you leave a gap when fitting. My mates builder didn't. It expanded against the walls in his 40ft by 40ft consevatory ... you can guess the rest. The builder just closed his comapany before legal action started ...Comment
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We have been looking into this also. The solid wood can be a pain. It needs to be in the room for a few days before fitting and can expand/contract a lot making it look a mess - My sister has it and it can look quite gappy. The engineered stuff does not expand as much. Also the solid stuff is more expensive to fit and takes longer. We would need some bonding material to get it to stick to our floor. We were also told that the solid wood is no use for underfloor heating because th planks are so thick.Rule Number 1 - Assuming that you have a valid contract in place always try to get your poo onto your timesheet, provided that the timesheet is valid for your current contract and covers the period of time that you are billing for.
I preferred version 1!Comment
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Pray you don't need access to water pipes etc after you laid flooring that's glued onto hardboard base sheets that are themselves screwed into the original floor. Might be easier to sell the house than get it up again.Originally posted by TonyEnglish View PostWe have been looking into this also. The solid wood can be a pain. It needs to be in the room for a few days before fitting and can expand/contract a lot making it look a mess - My sister has it and it can look quite gappy. The engineered stuff does not expand as much. Also the solid stuff is more expensive to fit and takes longer. We would need some bonding material to get it to stick to our floor. We were also told that the solid wood is no use for underfloor heating because th planks are so thick.Comment
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I am sure that is wrong. The wooden floor should glue together and float.Originally posted by TonyEnglish View PostWe would need some bonding material to get it to stick to our floor.
I will ask my builder.......Comment
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