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15th July 2007, 10:27 AM #1Member
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Why are my floor boards suddenly cracking after 90 years ?
The house is about 90 years old high set (6' high) & the floor is pine about 3/4" thick. Stumps were replaced with concrete some 10 years back & i have done nothing structural to it what-so-ever.
Several floor boards have started to split with 1 to 2 foot cracks a few mm's wide. Now the only thing that has happened is that i have put a gas heater in & whilst this seems an obvious answer...it barely raises the temp of the floor at all..just ever so slightly warm to touch with the palm of my hand. But...the splits are occuring within a 6-8 foot radius of the heater.
Now im used to the doors & windows all moving with the dry & then that rain last month but do you think its the sudden rain that moved the floor or could the heater be the culprit. Believe me that heater is only just slightly warming the floor boards a few degrees in a big arc...it isnt hot.
Some pics
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16083344@N00/812969066/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16083344@N00/812969050/
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15th July 2007, 10:30 AM #2
My best guess is that the lack of moisture in the air would be the main cause.
I know of 80 plus year old homes that are developing huge cracks in walls and foundations.If you are never in over your head how do you know how tall you are?
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15th July 2007, 10:45 AM #3Member
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15th July 2007, 12:46 PM #4
G'day.
temperature changes will not affect a floor as much as Humidity will.
A fire will dry the air as well as warm it. the dry air will take up moisture from anywhere it can get it. ie: your floor. Happens all the time.Hooroo.
Regards, Trevor
Grafton
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15th July 2007, 12:56 PM #5Member
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15th July 2007, 02:32 PM #6
I've never had probs with cracking floorboards, but I have real dry skin and when I use gas or wood heat in a relatively tight house I have to deal with cracking skin. The fix is place a noncombustable/nonmeltable container of h2o on top of the space heater and it will slowly evaporate the h2o and rehumidify the house. Have to be careful not to overdo it or can cause difficulty with wallpaper or any other item that too much humidity bothers.
"Look the pyramid is opening."
"Which one?"
"The one with the everwidening hole in it."
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15th July 2007, 03:03 PM #7
Yup We have the same problem. Same area (Bris) and we also recently purchased a gas heater. There is a new split about 300mm long, 1 metre from the heater.
Mick is the gas heater flued or is it a flueless/portable unit? Ours is flueless and we move it around, this and the thick coir mats with rubber backing have probably saved us from more splits. Our heater blows out hot air across the floor, my solution is more mats and to elevate the heater 1m off the floor. I'm hoping this works.
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15th July 2007, 03:58 PM #8
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15th July 2007, 04:23 PM #9Member
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Its a flueless one. Im taking a lot more notice of the floor today & where i could see daylight with about a 1 or 2mm gap between the hardwood of the old enclosed veranda...im now seeing bloody 3 mm
I had no idea the timber had that much moisture in it...i am elevating the heater now onto an old table with the water on top to head this off at the pass. Its only for 6 weeks a year that we need it anyway.
Tks blokes !
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15th July 2007, 04:25 PM #10Member
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16th July 2007, 01:09 AM #11
Sure it just needs to be a little warmer than the ambient temp of the room. I was using a "Dearborn" model when I used this method. One could always flathand the top without burning.
"Oh my god, Nickys bleeding. I'll just get a strip of my petticoat... Here you tie him up with this..."
Nancy
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16th July 2007, 06:51 AM #12Member
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Tks capt. I have a bowl in front of the heater & it is reducing slightly. My walls & ceiling are also pine boards & ive just noticed that all the 'bows' (where they were pushing each other out slightly) are out of them now also.
What do you think about a good wet mop every few days would do as then the moisture could get into the floor via the gaps in between ? I usually just mop with an almost dry mop.
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16th July 2007, 08:44 AM #13
Don't do the Wet Mop trick.
It will cause more harm than good.
Just continue as you are.Hooroo.
Regards, Trevor
Grafton
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16th July 2007, 01:00 PM #14
Glad to be an asst. It seems I take much more than I generally am able to give here. I'm still new to woodwork, and learn a lot reading here on the other side of the world. By the way, how do you guys keep from falling off the bottom of the globe?
"Hmm...let me check the other side of the record. Yep their still talking Chinese."
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16th July 2007, 01:20 PM #15
Hi
Global warming
"they" blame it for everything elseKind Regards
Peter
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