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Thread: New Verandah
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23rd May 2005, 10:53 AM #16
Go for Tongue and Groove - replaced the totally rotten deck of my 1920's house with T&G Jarrah and haven't regretted it. Decking would have looked terrible.
Yes you will need to look after it but look on it as the equivalent of Dry Cleaning. Sometimes we buy clothes which need dry cleaning rather than slinging in the washing machine and we accept the expense and the inconvenience because the more expensive clothes make us look and feel good.
You will hit the resale value of your house if you use decking - it gives the house "street appeal".
Even if you were completely slack and didn't do anything to maintain the verandah it would be a good few years before it really deteriorated.
The Timber advisory board will tell you what gaps to put in the T&G to take account of the time of year you are installing the board so that you don't have whopping gaps or buckling boards as the weather conditions fluctuate. I.e. don't cramp them up tight as tight if you know they are going to expand lots later and don't leave the joints sloppy if the boards are going to contract lotslater.no-one said on their death bed I wish I spent more time in the office!
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5th July 2005, 04:58 PM #17Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- Melbourne
- Age
- 46
- Posts
- 27
Just though I'd post a picture of the new verandah deck.
It's jarrah T&G and I love it. Still have to punch the nails and oil it though.
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