Hello all- hope you can help.
The place I have moved into has real wood flooring, tongue and groove (so its 'like' laminate in terms of fitting it together but it's not). The brand of the wood is Augusta- apparently it is US imported
So the flooring was put down 3 years ago and looks great, but it squeaks like mad when you walk on it- not the end of the world but it would be good to do something about it
What I know about how it was done (that may or may not be the cause of the problem) is:
* The tongue and groove pieces are not glued together
*It rests on the type of foam underlay that is standard for laminate flooring
* the actual 'floor' beneath is cement.
It has been suggested (each piece advice from another expert/sometime contradictory) to me that the flooring squeaks because:
*The underlay is too spongy and it is letting the joints flex. need harder underlay
*The cement floor is uneven and needs levelling
*The tongue and grrove needs to be glued
*The floor needs to be glued direct to cement floor (i.e no underlay)
If anyone can give an enthusiastic amateur a suggested plan of action, it would be much appreciated!
The place I have moved into has real wood flooring, tongue and groove (so its 'like' laminate in terms of fitting it together but it's not). The brand of the wood is Augusta- apparently it is US imported
So the flooring was put down 3 years ago and looks great, but it squeaks like mad when you walk on it- not the end of the world but it would be good to do something about it
What I know about how it was done (that may or may not be the cause of the problem) is:
* The tongue and groove pieces are not glued together
*It rests on the type of foam underlay that is standard for laminate flooring
* the actual 'floor' beneath is cement.
It has been suggested (each piece advice from another expert/sometime contradictory) to me that the flooring squeaks because:
*The underlay is too spongy and it is letting the joints flex. need harder underlay
*The cement floor is uneven and needs levelling
*The tongue and grrove needs to be glued
*The floor needs to be glued direct to cement floor (i.e no underlay)
If anyone can give an enthusiastic amateur a suggested plan of action, it would be much appreciated!