matt94surf
16th March 2005, 02:18 PM
Hi all,
We have recently purchased a timber postwar house which was quite nicely renovated by the previous owners. The floors are polished/painted hardwood, and compared to timber floors of other post war homes I have seen our's appears to be on the better side of normal. ie. no gaps between boards nice timber gain etc. However in some areas of the house the floorboards tend to flex considerably between the joists when walking around. I am wondering wether they were over sanded and thus are now thinner and this is causing the flexing (looking at the edge up against skirting boards it appears the sander has really got stuck into them), or wether it is the particular species of timber used for the floorboards or wether it is a combination of over sanding and the species of timber?
Has anyone come across this before and if so are there any suggestions to reduce the flexing other than laying a new floor over the top of the existing floor.
Cheers,
Matt.
We have recently purchased a timber postwar house which was quite nicely renovated by the previous owners. The floors are polished/painted hardwood, and compared to timber floors of other post war homes I have seen our's appears to be on the better side of normal. ie. no gaps between boards nice timber gain etc. However in some areas of the house the floorboards tend to flex considerably between the joists when walking around. I am wondering wether they were over sanded and thus are now thinner and this is causing the flexing (looking at the edge up against skirting boards it appears the sander has really got stuck into them), or wether it is the particular species of timber used for the floorboards or wether it is a combination of over sanding and the species of timber?
Has anyone come across this before and if so are there any suggestions to reduce the flexing other than laying a new floor over the top of the existing floor.
Cheers,
Matt.