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Thread: pine decking

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    rural qld
    Age
    68
    Posts
    139

    Default pine decking

    Am putting in a deck on a hse that will be a rental when ( if ) it is ever finished is really a verandah i suppose as its covered completely and am thinking of use pine decking boards as they will be just painted anyway ?

    Can anyone tell me any pitfalls or things that i will need to watch for ? ie splitting , knots etc ??cost is a big factor can any one tell me the difference in life span between "good " boards and pine

    Can i also get the screw nails for the deck to go in my nail gun ? are they the best way to fix
    as always thks

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    brisbane
    Posts
    200

    Default

    Pine will be ok if it's under cover.
    If it's a coil nailer you will be able to get nails for treated pine decking,
    I don't do many decks and if I do I generally use hardwood and drill and hand nail. Pine is ok to put down with a gun, but I would pre-drill and hand nail all the ends and butt joints.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Sydney
    Age
    65
    Posts
    1,248

    Default

    You say pine I hope you mean treated pine. I would suggest Tanalith E if you want a longer life and less hassle than LOSP ( your timber merchant will explain or do a google).
    I must admit that all my experience is with CCA treated pine which you cant use anymore but I'm sure the quality issues will be the same with Tanalith E namely
    The cheaper the price usually means more knots and wetter timber but sometimes this is OK depends on situation, budget etc.
    As far as fixing you don't need to pre-drill pine.
    You can use a nailgun even Paslode gas guns have deck nails and you can get a no mark tip for them. Personnally I always do them by hand using titadeck nails.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    722

    Default

    I did a deck with treated pine ... it worked fine and I just stained it afterward, which I sprayed on. It was easy to nail by hand without predrilling. When the decking turned up I freaked out a bit because it was all warped ... as pine tends to do easilly, however once you get one board down straight you can just use spacers and pull all the following boards into line. I had the deck for a couple of yeard before selling the house and it hadn't deteriorated at that point.

    I'd go pine any day if cost is a factor but hardwood does come up really nice if you intend to keep and use the house.

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