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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 10:18 AM
  #31  
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You went for the click fit wooden floor?
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 10:19 AM
  #32  
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tounge and groove i think, where they slot into each other. but was glued down.
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 10:23 AM
  #33  
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how long was the wood left in the house before fitting and how long before you finished the screed did you lay the floor?

I have bought enough to do the entire ground floor of my house but do not know how its going to be put down so its on hold until I find out what is going to work best.
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 11:17 AM
  #34  
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Our floor has faired better than Floors2Go
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 11:19 AM
  #35  
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Originally Posted by Scooby Soon!
how long was the wood left in the house before fitting and how long before you finished the screed did you lay the floor?

I have bought enough to do the entire ground floor of my house but do not know how its going to be put down so its on hold until I find out what is going to work best.
2 months though it was left in its packaging. was layed 3 months after the screed was put down..
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 11:19 AM
  #36  
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Originally Posted by Coffin Dodger
Our floor has faired better than Floors2Go
is that good? how has it expanded?
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 04:21 PM
  #37  
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Originally Posted by Coffin Dodger
Once again (falling on deaf ears), why not go for a click together solid oak floor which is laid floating on an underlay. .
My parents had this layed about 15-20 years ago and it still looks great now, I think it had one re polish about 9 years ago.
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 04:56 PM
  #38  
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Originally Posted by SamUK
is that good? how has it expanded?
Yeah fine so far, odd creak occasionally but generally pretty pleased with it.

I was referring to the fact that Floors2Go have gone into administration (i.e. bust) in the meantime.
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Old Oct 27, 2011 | 05:14 PM
  #39  
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If you went for solid wood flooring, then that is the problem. You don't lay solid wood on a concrete substrate. You must use engineered flooring made from high grade ply with 6-8mm solid wood bonded on top. Solid wood will twist and cup, lifting it from the bonding. Engineered is a lot less prone to these conditions.

Our house is fully floored in engineered flooring. We had 8" of concrete laid on top of a damp proof membrane, 6" of celotex/kingspan Insulation boarding, a further damp proof membrane, underfloor heating pipes and then a 3" self levelling floating special concrete floor, made by Lafarge. Flooring was laid 3 months after cure, but not before we got the moisture content down to less than 25% in the floating floor. We had the underfloor system running at low temperature and huge wind machines blowing air across the surface to draw out the moisture, with de-humidifiers collecting the moisture.

5 years on, touch wood, it is still stuck down!

Last edited by andy97; Oct 27, 2011 at 05:16 PM.
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Old Oct 29, 2011 | 08:01 PM
  #40  
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We got solid oak v-groove for £17/m²....



Company we got it from seem to have gone bust a few times owing a lot of people money and leaving a lot of unfulfilled orders. Guess we got lucky
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