How to Buy Wood Flooring

Here are your options in wood floor materials, with costs and skills needed.

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Love wood floors? It’s no wonder. Wood is rich-looking, warm, durable and easy to keep clean. It’s still the most seductive and charming type of floor in a home.

But it’s also a big investment, one that you’ll live with for a long time. In this article, we’ll tell you how to size up the many types of wood floors available and make the choice that best fits your home and budget.

Most wood floors fall into two categories with unique characteristics: solid wood and laminated (layered). We’ll tell you the strengths and weaknesses of each type, as well as the price range and the skills needed if you want to install them yourself.

Do-It-Yourself?
Limitations
  • Expands and contracts with humidity changes. Expect slight cracks to open between strips during the dry season unless you control indoor humidity year-round. The cracks will be prominent in light-colored wood.
  • Must be nailed to a wood subfloor. Not ideal over concrete, since you must first add at least a 3/4-in. plywood layer as a nailing surface.
  • Not suitable for damp areas.
  • Expect “character” squeaks from loosened nails after a few years.

Laminated floors consist of wood layers, much like plywood, with the “show” wood on the top. Don’t confuse these with “laminate” floors, which have a tough plastic top layer. You can choose among a wide variety of flooring boards 3/8 in. to 5/8 in. thick, 3 in. to 8 in. wide and up to 8 ft. long. The top layer of wide boards usually consists of narrower strips to better mimic solid wood strip floors. The boards have precise tongues and grooves for tight-fitting joints. Laminated floors are prefinished in a wide range of stains. Depending on the thickness of the top “wear” layer, laminated floors can be sanded and refinished zero to four times. Material prices range from $5 to $12 per sq. ft., virtually the same as for prefinished solid strip floors.

Installation Techniques

With the floating technique, you don’t fasten the flooring to the subfloor. Rather you glue or snap the edges of the boards together to make a solid sheet that rests on a pad. This technique works well over concrete as well as wood subfloors. A floating floor must be free to expand and contract. Use special transitions to cover the edges where the floor meets carpeting, tile, stairs and other types of flooring. Buy a sound-deadening pad from a dealer; floating floors tend to be loud underfoot.

Limitations

Do-It-Yourself?
A floating floor is easy to lay but requires simple carpentry skills around edges and transitions. When edge-gluing, use special clamps to make sure the joints stay tight until the glue dries. Rent or buy these clamps from the flooring dealer if you do it yourself.

Glue-Down
Most types of laminated floors can be glued to a wood subfloor or dry concrete. However, when the wood contracts, a glue-down floor is more prone to gaps at the joints than a floating floor is.

Limitations

Do-It-Yourself?
Glued floors are easy to lay. Simple carpentry skills needed for transitions.

Nail-Down
Much like solid strip floors, some types of laminate flooring can be nailed (usually stapled) to solid wood subfloors.

Limitations

From The Family Handyman - May 2003
 
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