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- 2 Dec 2004
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Hi all,
Upstairs bedroom, wooden floorboards.
Due to the way the floor beams have been constructed near to the chimney breast, a section of the floor is dipped by a max of 15mm in one area, but typically more like 5-10mm, over a span of around 1.8m.
I have had the floorboards up in a couple of places, the joists either side of the chimney breast run into the side walls of the house, but those directly in line with the chimney breast are terminated just before the chimney, and are supported by a cross member. This cross member was only 2x2, secured to the joists by nails. Obviously insufficient and so over the many years the house has been here, that area of the floor (approx 1.4x1.4m square) has sagged by upto 10-15mm.
I have added in an additional 3x2 cross member, screwed into the joists either side for extra strength. But obviously the sag remains.
The rest of the room is level enough, but that sag area of 10-15mm I assume is too much for fitting laminate floor on and it will likely bounce or deteriorate.
I was thinking are firring strips the best way to solve this? Lay some strip wood and then plane it out to feather edge in order to fill in the middle depression?
Upstairs bedroom, wooden floorboards.
Due to the way the floor beams have been constructed near to the chimney breast, a section of the floor is dipped by a max of 15mm in one area, but typically more like 5-10mm, over a span of around 1.8m.
I have had the floorboards up in a couple of places, the joists either side of the chimney breast run into the side walls of the house, but those directly in line with the chimney breast are terminated just before the chimney, and are supported by a cross member. This cross member was only 2x2, secured to the joists by nails. Obviously insufficient and so over the many years the house has been here, that area of the floor (approx 1.4x1.4m square) has sagged by upto 10-15mm.
I have added in an additional 3x2 cross member, screwed into the joists either side for extra strength. But obviously the sag remains.
The rest of the room is level enough, but that sag area of 10-15mm I assume is too much for fitting laminate floor on and it will likely bounce or deteriorate.
I was thinking are firring strips the best way to solve this? Lay some strip wood and then plane it out to feather edge in order to fill in the middle depression?