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Thread: Fluted decking...Up or down?
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30th April 2008, 11:37 PM #1Novice
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Fluted decking...Up or down?
I've built about 250 sq.m of decking around our house, about half replacing existing deck which had the fluting facing up. Some tradies I spoke to reckon this is correct.
Advice direct from manufacturers/importers specify the design is to face the fluting down (which I have done) to allow ventillation and prevents rot between the joists and boards and prolongs the life of the deck. My own experience with fluting up is a build up of mildew which becomes slippery.
Is there a definative answer to this or is it just personal preference regarding asthetics?"If it aint danceable it aint rock 'n' roll":band:".
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30th April 2008, 11:38 PM #2
Manufacturers are right, reeding goes down for the reasons they stated.
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30th April 2008, 11:43 PM #3Novice
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Sorry...didn't do a search for "reeding" or "grooving".
Found it."If it aint danceable it aint rock 'n' roll":band:".
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1st May 2008, 11:04 AM #4
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1st May 2008, 11:38 AM #5
Really simple one ribs DOWN
Ribs are to give ventilation between the top of the joist and the underside of the decking
cheers utemad
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1st May 2008, 01:24 PM #6Merbau Mangler
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I know of one instance where the deck was being installed with the ribs facing up - the reason the tradie gave was for traction in wet weather. Luckily the person having the deck installed caught him before he had laid too much decking. He told him to rip it up and put it around the other way.
Logic would dictate that ribbing facing up would not only rot the timber underneath where it hits the joists but also it would also allow water to sit on the deck (in between the ribs) for longer (no ability to run off) and hence degrade the wood faster...but then again logic doesn't always come into it.
What reasons did the tradies give for ribbing facing up?
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1st May 2008, 04:45 PM #7
What about all the 140mm decking that is dressed on both sides (no ribbs)?
Dr - 307.All decks should be stained....black white black white black white.......after all it would match anything!
All roofs should be covered or tiled.....black colorbond, silver mist, black colorbond, silver mist, black colorbond.........after all, we wouldn't want a mismatch!
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1st May 2008, 04:55 PM #8
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1st May 2008, 05:29 PM #9Novice
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1st May 2008, 07:02 PM #10
Gees that'll incrase your lineal to m2 rate to something like 40 lineal / m2...
Might try that as a new selling pitch could be a winner but i would need seriously long screw to fix it down
Food for thought thanks bricki
cheers utemad
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1st May 2008, 08:46 PM #11Senior Member
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1st May 2008, 09:14 PM #12
Never thought of that ... a shot of liquid nails on the joist and a brad driven through on the angle would do the trick.. we definately are onto a winner here.. i can hear the timber merchants getting ecited already
cheers utemad
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3rd May 2008, 04:03 PM #13Old Chippy
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Funnily enough I built a deck once with the decking on its edge - the look being sought was for a 'grid with depth' and as client is always right that's what I built.
Just used threaded gal steel rod steel rods hole drilled through face and a nut between each board as a spacer. It was not a huge area (3m x2m) and I used timber of identical lengths. A little fiddly, but simple enough. It was being painted so was primed and painted before assembly then put together. Used brackets underneath to attach to joists which were spaced at 900.
Solid and good looking result, if not my to own liking . . .
BTW - flutes DOWN
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3rd May 2008, 05:24 PM #14
Definately flutes down for appearance sake, and least chance to retain water up top.
Now playing devils advocate, would it really matter if you are laying treated pine planks (uggh) over treated pine joists?
Most caravan park cabins I see are done just this way, and everybody assumes it is right for grip.Ray
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5th May 2008, 07:43 PM #15
Yeah it will matter as treated pine grows algae as bad if not worse than hardwood.. Also treated pine dries out worse than hardwood and splits sooner with the little ridges curling up like spikes making the deck unwalkable in bare feet in a not so long time frame if exposed to a lot of sun... Treated pine decking might not rot in the way hardwood does but it deteriorates in its own way which still renders it useles
cheers utemad
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