Afternoon all
We're currently in the midst of what has accidentally become a renovation on a mid 19th century cottage. (9" solid brick walls)
In our lounge we have a solid floor of unknown age, with a more than slightly uneven surface, that the builders have 'Black-Jack'ed over as a precautionary measure.
They suggested that if we wished, we could lay a floating floor of sorts on top of this - something like a levelling scree of sand, followed by 50mm of Celotex type insulation followed by 18mm T&G chipboard.
The price we were given was a bit out of our budget, so we gave it a miss, and I am considering DIY'ing it.
So I guess a few questions:
1: Is the above a viable solution?
2: Is it feasible for a relatively inexperienced DIY'er to do (I have mostly done destructive, as opposed to constructive work, but I'm not opposed to hard graft.)
3: What materials would you suggest? The chipboard doesn't seem to be an issue, but finding the right PU/poly foam type stuff is a bit harder.
4: Above all, is it worth doing?!
If it helps, the room is roughly 3.5x5m. It will be carpeted using a decent underlay.
Floor height isn't an issue, as we have a roughly 4" drop into the room at the moment.
Thanks in advance
Si
We're currently in the midst of what has accidentally become a renovation on a mid 19th century cottage. (9" solid brick walls)
In our lounge we have a solid floor of unknown age, with a more than slightly uneven surface, that the builders have 'Black-Jack'ed over as a precautionary measure.
They suggested that if we wished, we could lay a floating floor of sorts on top of this - something like a levelling scree of sand, followed by 50mm of Celotex type insulation followed by 18mm T&G chipboard.
The price we were given was a bit out of our budget, so we gave it a miss, and I am considering DIY'ing it.
So I guess a few questions:
1: Is the above a viable solution?
2: Is it feasible for a relatively inexperienced DIY'er to do (I have mostly done destructive, as opposed to constructive work, but I'm not opposed to hard graft.)
3: What materials would you suggest? The chipboard doesn't seem to be an issue, but finding the right PU/poly foam type stuff is a bit harder.
4: Above all, is it worth doing?!
If it helps, the room is roughly 3.5x5m. It will be carpeted using a decent underlay.
Floor height isn't an issue, as we have a roughly 4" drop into the room at the moment.
Thanks in advance
Si