Mybrains
8th September 2004, 01:31 AM
Hi All.
got a small area (2.4m2) and wife wants floating floor. hammered up old tiles and surface is a bit rough. Suppose I need to level it now. Aint done this before so any help is much appreciated. I saw leveling mix at bunnings. im guessing this is a runny cement mix? I assume I need to glue down alumin strips at edges to stop it flowing onto the ajoining carpet?
floor:
I watched a video on fitting from supplier readyflor. seems straight forward. The big question from a beginner - what would you use in the kitchen? laminate cause its hard wearing, clicks together and is on moisture resistant backer, or real wood veneer (T&G) glued together on ply. Price is no issue as the size is small. I started thinking real wood surface looked better and if damaged, still showed err real wood!, whereas laminate wears/chips to firstly show white, and then black... But Im reading laminate is much tougher and stand up to fridges and the like being dragged over it... also if the fridge or dishwasher floods, laminate may survive better... what do you think?
pete
got a small area (2.4m2) and wife wants floating floor. hammered up old tiles and surface is a bit rough. Suppose I need to level it now. Aint done this before so any help is much appreciated. I saw leveling mix at bunnings. im guessing this is a runny cement mix? I assume I need to glue down alumin strips at edges to stop it flowing onto the ajoining carpet?
floor:
I watched a video on fitting from supplier readyflor. seems straight forward. The big question from a beginner - what would you use in the kitchen? laminate cause its hard wearing, clicks together and is on moisture resistant backer, or real wood veneer (T&G) glued together on ply. Price is no issue as the size is small. I started thinking real wood surface looked better and if damaged, still showed err real wood!, whereas laminate wears/chips to firstly show white, and then black... But Im reading laminate is much tougher and stand up to fridges and the like being dragged over it... also if the fridge or dishwasher floods, laminate may survive better... what do you think?
pete