Installing a glue down engineered hardwood floor.
How to install engineered wood flooring on concrete.
Hardwoods provide style and elegance that adapts easily to any interior design whether modern contemporary or country.
Most people can install this type of hardwood flooring as long as they are willing to do a little bit of work.
Step 1 prepare the room.
Engineered wood flooring offers the timeless look of hardwood but is perfect for basements and other areas where moisture can be an issue.
Set the expansion gap.
Treated plywood to the concrete with concrete screws spaced every 16 in.
Follow these steps to install an engineered wood floor in your home.
Follow these steps to install an engineered wood floor in your home.
It s best to use shorter cleats than you would for a wood floor to ensure they sink in all the way.
Engineered wood flooring offers the timeless look of hardwood but is perfect for basements and other areas where moisture can be an issue.
See below for a shopping list and tools.
Before you start installing you are going to want to prepare the room.
Follow these steps install engineered hardwood over a concrete floor.
Apply the glue to a small area.
Here are the basics of how to install floating hardwood floors over concrete.
Lay the 1x4s perpendicular to the direction you intend to install the floor planks.
Lay spacers along the walls to create the expansion gap specified in the manufacturer s instructions.
Moisture impacts the engineered hardwood flooring regardless of whether the subfloor is wood or concrete.
Beauty concrete is ugly.
Then nail the flooring planks with a standard flooring nailer see photo for details.
You simply nail the boards with a flooring nailer.
Installing engineered hardwood flooring over concrete too tight against a stationary object will not allow room for normal expansion and may cause a failure.
Alternatively screw rows of treated 1x4s to the concrete 16 in.
Excessive moisture permeating from floor slabs after installation can cause floor covering system failures such as debonding and deterioration of finish flooring and coating and microbial growth.
Consult the product data sheet for instructions regarding specific trowel requirements.