Hi,
In the middle of a job where a new stud wall is going up with PIR to replace the old lath and plaster one that did bugger all. Had to brick up a fireplace behind said wall as well as remove an old slate hearth in the floor, which left a great big gap as there were no floorboards around the area.
I've screwed in a 2x2 to the area of the joist they hacked out to fit the hearth in. I then put in a few noggins from that joist to the next one, then laid down 22mm chipboard I had lying around cut to size. I was just treating it like any other piece of wood, so I ended up drilling clearance holes and used wood screws I had on hand, which were the decking screw type that has a smooth shank at the top.
Further reading on this implies that this may not be enough to stop creaks from developing; the chipboard is too weak to be held down by just the force of the screw head, and may slide up and down over time. Seen some methods involving gluing down the boards to the joists before laying down, but would rather avoid taking the board back up and potentially weakening the screw holes already made.
I'm probably fussing too much, but would adding more screws in that are fully threaded to each side of the decking screws ensure that it'll stay down solid? My thinking is the decking screws will clamp the piece down and then the fully threaded screws will ensure it is never going anywhere.
In the middle of a job where a new stud wall is going up with PIR to replace the old lath and plaster one that did bugger all. Had to brick up a fireplace behind said wall as well as remove an old slate hearth in the floor, which left a great big gap as there were no floorboards around the area.
I've screwed in a 2x2 to the area of the joist they hacked out to fit the hearth in. I then put in a few noggins from that joist to the next one, then laid down 22mm chipboard I had lying around cut to size. I was just treating it like any other piece of wood, so I ended up drilling clearance holes and used wood screws I had on hand, which were the decking screw type that has a smooth shank at the top.
Further reading on this implies that this may not be enough to stop creaks from developing; the chipboard is too weak to be held down by just the force of the screw head, and may slide up and down over time. Seen some methods involving gluing down the boards to the joists before laying down, but would rather avoid taking the board back up and potentially weakening the screw holes already made.
I'm probably fussing too much, but would adding more screws in that are fully threaded to each side of the decking screws ensure that it'll stay down solid? My thinking is the decking screws will clamp the piece down and then the fully threaded screws will ensure it is never going anywhere.
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