Engineered Hardwood on slab
Intoodeep
6 years ago
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6 years agolast modified: 6 years agoG & S Floor Service
6 years agoRelated Discussions
How hard is it to remove engineered hardwood from a slab?
Comments (1)It's not hard if you use the most efficient method and have the right equipment....See MoreInstalling Hardwood and Engineering Hardwood
Comments (11)SJ McCarthy, our contract is stated we are responsible for the materials and we pay for the labor. Unfortunately we never met nor discuss with the owner but only discussed in details ( in the proposal) with the project manager who is the solely the carpenter.) We just found out there were a lot of the DETAILS from the proposal were not explained (per the PM,but who knows) in detail to the owner or almost like "bait and switch" - for example like item #2- he spent more time because the owner did not get him another helper to help him- I told him this should not be the customer's expenses-Anyway we are willing to pay for it. The owner was offering to renew and establish a new contract from the original contact ( we felt that he cherry picking the items from the proposal, we marked them up then again he decided not to included) for the unfinished works . Once he agreed in our 2nd meeting (another example: he agreed tiling our study room to be included from the original contact in our 1st meeting then when he write the REVISED CONTRACT- he wants to charge us ), but again we are facing the same old stories-he tried to change the wording. We were burned so many times and now we diligently review line by line knowing the owner's personality. He kept saying he lived by the contract-then I told him then he should honor the low estimated to install our engineering hardwood floor including removing the carpet-in the end he says he would honor but he did not including the cost in the new REVISED contract which we add into it - we are so tired with his games. So now we put a contingency - once we agree with the new contract, no more additional expenses from the previous work was done- and we do agree that we need to be notified first and need both signatures for additional expenses from the new contract. and no more point finger of "not included" since we have discussed in detailed and are in the contract. The new addition has a hardwood floor installed - with Dri-core. Once hardwood floor was installed- they are some areas squeak- we were told by PM -put a marked up then he would fasten without explaining to us-these would be additional ridiculous charges (PM told the owner, too-we told PM that they should explain it to us- ) Regarding the installing the engineering hardwood floor is for our existing rooms(concrete slabs that has plywood already)- we are told just to put a vapour barrier. Is it possible to let me know what brands for the glues have to be moisture resistant ($2/sf) or moisture PROOF ($3/sf).? The manufacture instruction suggests to use Franklin Tongue and Groove adhesive (cross linking polyaliphactic emulsion glue) www.titebond.com -any suggestions? This Applachian engineering hardwood floor - FLOATING only needs GLUE between the wood (tongue and groove per the manufacture manual ) then would be FLOAT - this is not to be GLUE DOWN on our concrete floor (could be glue down if necessary but not in our case). Here is the website- on PAGE 9 http://www.appalachianflooring.com/uploads/general/documents/engineered-installation-guide.pdf We trust the PM and we pay for it- we just want to move on and complete the project-It has been almost 10 months. We have to do what we have to do to protect ourselves now- The owner refuses to install our towel bar in our new shower without charging us, and we told him we will take care them by ourselves. I will update this post and hoping for a better solution. Thank you...See MoreGlue or float engineered hardwood to slab
Comments (2)It is highly dependent on the AGE of your slab. If it is older than mid-1980's build, then you have a HIGH chance that you do not have a vapour barrier underneath. That means your glue costs just when up. You have to move to the big boys of glue = $2-$3/sf just for the material. The labour costs will keep going up. A floating floor can be stabilized by leveling the subfloor and using something like 6mm cork underlay to help with the 'solid' feeling under foot. A properly installed floating hardwood floor with cork underlay should feel as solid as a glue down floor. I've seen it time and time again. Start with the age of the slab and then make your decision from there....See MoreCarpet to Engineered Hardwood on slab -Floor outlets question
Comments (1)Watch the video on the Leviton Concrete Floor Boxes webpage. I think you would instruct the people installing the carpet to just cut the pad and carpet around the box, leaving the box sticking up above the concrete with the yellow protective cover in place. After you replaced the carpet with the hardwood, you'd follow the instructions to remove the protective cover, cut the box to the proper height, and complete the installation. -- amateur...See MoreIntoodeep
6 years agoG & S Floor Service
6 years agoSJ McCarthy
6 years agoIntoodeep
6 years agoIntoodeep
6 years agoSJ McCarthy
6 years ago
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