Laminate vs Luxury Vinyl Plank Flooring
C R
4 years ago
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Luxury Vinyl Plank Interlocking Vs. Peel and Stick Floors
Comments (19)OK....so here is what I WOULD DO: Pull the carpet and lino BOTH and FIND OUT what's underneath. Carpet hides the WORST subfloors (both in prep and in materials) on the planet. Builders KNOW they can mess up the subfloor because carpet will hide everything. So....once carpet and line are GONE...I would then choose an installation material BASED ON the subfloor material that is in place. Example, if you have PERFECT PLYWOOD (which is EXPENSIVE....so I HIGHLY DOUBT IT) then you can think about peel and stick vinyl (which will be cheap, cheerful and require replacement rather quickly = 5 - 7 years). If you have PERFECT CONCRETE SLAB (again...HIGHLY DOUBT IT) then you can think peel and stick. See above. Now back to reality. The chances are you have bad subfloors. As in laun or fibre board or OSB (oriented strand board = looks like the plywood has been made from potato chips). If this is your substrate, peel and stick will NOT STICK. That means you NEED TO LOOK at floating (click together). The price will go UP because of the price of the locking system (royalties, manufacturing machines are expensive, etc) but the INSTALLATION will be faster/easier. Or you have horrible concrete (lumpy, pitted, sloped, etc.) and you need SERIOUS repairs on the concrete. That type of repair isn't going to come cheap. And it is a gut-wrenching DIY project. And vinyl is great for dogs....but PLEASE WORK with a product that is NOT MATTE. We have dozens of threads with people CRYING over their matte finished vinyl....and HATING IT. And NO, the finish is not defective. Which makes them even MORE upset....because there is no warranty covering "angry". And just for fun, a rental unit will have a different life expectancy for flooring. Rental units have a 7 year life cycle for flooring. Yep. That's sever (7) years and the floors need replacing. So....choose what YOU LIKE today. Get it as tough as your budget can allow (high-end laminate in the living spaces + decent vinyl in kitchen/bath/laundry) and then realize it will only survive a few more years (2-4 years) as a rental floor. That's it. And LAMINATE (especially the high end one's) are EXTREMELY tough. They are STUPID-EASY/cheap to install as DIY and require LESS PREPARATION to the subfloors than vinyl. Because rental property is in your future, don't think anything beyond "seven years"....See MoreShaw vs tilebar optoro luxury plank vinyl floors to finish my basement
Comments (0)I am looking for luxury plank vinyl floors to finish my basement. Does anyone have experience with tilebars line of LVP optoro. I am looking at Shaw and Coretec but see that tilebar has a new line of vinyl planks at a good price. I appreciate opinions about any of these brands. Thanks Houzz people! Tilebar optoro...See MoreEngineered Vinyl plank vs. Luxury Vinyl plank
Comments (0)I will be starting a renovation of my second floor later this year, and will be putting in all new flooring. I really don't want carpeting but, at the same time, I would like something that is less noisy than hardwood. Have been looking at Engineered Vinyl Plank (EVP) and Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP). I have LVP in my kitchen and love it, but have heard good things about EVP. Does anyone have experience with one or both, or any recommendations? Thank you!...See MorePorcelain Tiles Vs Luxury Vinyl Planks in Bathroom Floor
Comments (2)The tiles will hold up better, but are colder and harder. The tiles are best for wet/humid rooms. I think they are more attractive. Also easier to keep clean. But they are more expensive than LVP to buy and install....See MoreC R
4 years agoD Walker
4 years agoC R
4 years agoSJ McCarthy
4 years agoMindy
4 years agoHU-222036920
4 years agoHaute Shoppe Studio
4 years agoaeldred8
3 years agoHaute Shoppe Studio
3 years ago
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