We are in the middle of installing floating click lock engineered bamboo throughout the first floor. It has turned out to be more of a project than we first thought. It’s been a month now trying to complete this in between working. Our living room and dining area are finished minus installing the baseboard (which I’m on a second return of because I didn’t like what my husband picked out the first time and then also didn’t end up liking what we ordered online for our 2nd attempt).
I would suggest borrowing the tools needed. But we have purchased a bit more than expected and hope to utilize in the future.
So we ripped out the carpeting. Padding. Tack strips. Hammered down or pulled out staples. Our subfloor, fortunately was in good condition. Removed the baseboard and baseboard heaters. Undercut the door trims. Laid cork underlayment.
The instructions said to leave a half in gap around the perimeter or any fixed structure for expansion due to humidity during season changes. We started on the longest wall going perpendicular to the floor joists. We had to rip the first row with the table saw. And then you just put the next row at a 30 degree angle and click down, repeat. We ended up having to take down door trim for the boards to lay under that and not have a gap.
We found out install was a bit more challenging with the floor we chose because the planks are 3 different widths. So a bit more planning than start second row with last piece cut from first row. (There are a couple rows that end with more than a half in gap. I didn’t want to place quarter round, so ordered 5/8in thick baseboard so there won’t be gaps). Stagger the seams! Measure twice and cut. We probably have more than the 10% estimated waste.
Cutting the planks to fit around the stairs and closet was a pain. The jigsaw kept splintering the wood so I had to use the saw I used to undercut the door trim to cut out a square in the plank. It did the job. Then I found I have a gap between the floor and the trim on one side of the stairs, which I will try to cover with plinth block moulding.
We also found out during install there was more than an 1/8 inch dip in the subfloor of about 6 inches wide running along the stairs. I ended up sliding a strip of underlayment under the hardwood to level it out.
For the dining area, we cut into 1/2 inch thick of 2 layers of plywood with a circular saw down to the subfloor. Hammered in too many rows of staples. Fortunately, you won’t have to plan to contain the saw dust from doing that. We still need to do the kitchen.
Sorry for the long post. It’s been challenging. Definitely a learning curve. Overall I’m happy with the results. But I’m not looking forward to finishing the project.
Here’s a pic prefinished.
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Good luck with your flooring!