



View Poll Results: Decking Timber ..... Grooves up or down? That is the question
- Voters
- 102. You may not vote on this poll
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Up
31 30.39% -
Down
71 69.61%
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13th July 2004, 12:06 PM #46
Have tried both
Had a large timber deck built about 8 years ago and with little knowledge at the time, assumed that the grooves were meant to go up for "grip" purposes. Since then I have discovered that if your foot is moving in the same directions as the grooves....forget about grip.
I also spent several hours brushing on some American Redwood coloured stain which looked beautiful at the time.
8 years down the track and I would love to change the colour of the deck but see it as impossible to sand back the timber due to the nature of the grooved finish ( I could be wrong ).
A couple of years ago while watching "Backyard Blitz", Scotty the builder advised the correct reasoning for putting the grooves down ( air flow etc ). As such, when a balcony decking had to be replaced by my Home Builder due to rotting bearers ( under warranty ), I insisted that the pine decking be installed groove down. Apart from the air flow issue, I can repaint it as many colours as I like with easier surface preparation ( even allowing for the earlier comments in relation to painting 1 surface only ).The Thief of BadGags
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14th July 2004, 08:56 PM #47
Having had my go at what I have done and got away with, I have one question and one point to make.
A) If one wanted to get rid of the grooves, is it feasible to punch the nails further in and sand the grooves away with a big floor drum sander thingy?
B) About this 'theory' of grooves down for "airflow".
Provided that you have nailed the boards lake a lady, delicately enough for the grooves still to exist under the boards, I concede that some air may squeeze down there, but so will water. I rather have the joists with bitumen or other stuff to protect them from water, and no pockets for additional water to stay there forever. I find this idea that air will somehow find it's way between the boards nailed with a ton of force against the joist, a bit what to say ... aloof.“We often contradict an opinion for no other reason
than that we do not like the tone in which it is expressed.”
Friedrich Nietzsche
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14th July 2004, 09:26 PM #48
dripping off the underside
I didn't notice anyone mentioning another reason for "grooves down" that I read somewhere: water on the underside of decking has a greater tendency to drip off a grooved surface compared to a smooth one. This would reduce the time the timber is damp and hence extend its life.
Is this true?
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15th July 2004, 12:53 AM #49
Originally Posted by tony2096
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15th July 2004, 10:23 AM #50
Originally Posted by tony2096
window and door sills in uk have grooves routed into them ... surely they wouldn't do it if it didn't work?no-one said on their death bed I wish I spent more time in the office!
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15th July 2004, 11:06 PM #51
Originally Posted by jackiew
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5th August 2004, 11:45 PM #52
Grooves down
Grooves down allows for better ventilation - who thought up the "its better grip" whn grooves up idea? Grooves up means EASIER TO DAMAGE!
"Last year I said I'd fix the squeak in the cupbaord door hinge... Right now I have nearly finished remodelling the whole damn kitchen!"
[email protected]
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9th August 2004, 08:53 AM #53
Originally Posted by bitingmidge
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9th August 2004, 10:26 AM #54
Originally Posted by hexbaz
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12th August 2004, 10:14 AM #55
Originally Posted by Barry_White
I was not suggesting that such a thing would be exported to Oz, just answering BM's question - "why isn't there decking timber grooved on both sides????"
The grooves are down on my decking, by the way.
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12th August 2004, 12:35 PM #56
Grooves down, although it's my belief the Rough head finish came first the reasoning second. An old timber merchant told me this a few years ago when PJK was prime minister in an attempt to help our fledgling "timber value adding" sector he imposed a tarriff on all finished timber products, but not unfinished. So the Yanks/Canadians etc came up with "rougher head dressing" on one face only to avoid the duties as it was not viewed as finished product but rawer resource. And the consumers were given some "interesting" (including reduced glare off batons for the roofing guys)reasons for the finish by enterprising sales staff, as popularity grew, our domestic manufacturers had to follow suit.
If what he told me is correct would this not be a classic case of "The Emperors New Clothes"? :eek:
Another reason I tend to think there is some truth in this besides PJK did do the tarriff thing, is that as Marc said, if airflow was the crucial point in using this finish, the grooves should be deeper and wider Ala decent T&G flooring. But then again its only Pinus species (AKA noxious weeds) and the quicker it rots the quicker you can replace it with real timberBruce C.
catchy catchphrase needed here, apply in writing to the above .
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12th August 2004, 03:33 PM #57
G'day All.
We produced 110x30 reeded Spotted Gum decking for export to japan. They installed it reeded side down. this allows airflow, waterflow and adds to the life of the joists due to the limited likelyhood of fungus developing.
Hooroo.
Regards, Trevor
Grafton
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12th August 2004, 03:36 PM #58
Hey Trevor....is that your gun?
HH.Always look on the bright side...
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12th August 2004, 08:19 PM #59
G'day HH.
Yep sure is. I shoot IPSC open division
Glock model 22 originally in 40 S&W.
Johnny Howard bought the 40 barrel from me in the buyback (stealback) I replaced it with a 357 Sig barrel, Cmore sight, and a KKM comp.
Goes like a dog shot in the ****.
Hooroo
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16th August 2004, 12:04 PM #60
thanks for the great thread i'm about to start a 12x4 metre deck i was going to build it reed up ,but now will do it the correct way thanks for helping me avoid a stuff up that will be one less in the project
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