Not afraid to admit, inexperienced DIY'er who fell victim to fatigue. Lessons learned for sure. I installed a Mohawk product with click-lock, 12mm thick, 7"+ wide plank.
As I installed the floor, I had a few situations where my expansion gap is way too big, creeping up to 3/4" in some spots. I'm sure those experienced can guess all the ways it happened, and I'm sure I committed all the sins. No sense in beating a dead horse. Beautiful floor otherwise.
I installed in our warm/humid midwest summer and am afraid contraction will expose the gaps under the quarter round once dry/cold winter sets in.
Should that happen, is caulk the best method to "hide" those contractions should they appear? Or does anyone have other ideas? I haven't installed the quarter round yet, so I still have access to those gaps. One idea I had was gluing small strips to reduce my gaps. Even with contraction, they'd be nearly unnoticeable should contraction occur. Thoughts?
2nd issue. I had quite the puzzle to deal with near the room entrance. Long story short, I had 4 door jams near a corner all within a few feet of each other. I cut out all jams, and the flooring cuts went pretty well. Unfortunately, in order to get one jam cut piece to clear the other jam cut piece, my install order was backwards and left me tapping in middle pieces because I could no longer engage click-lock. Which actually went fine until I ran against another wall and couldn't get clearance to tap in the piece. I decided to cut off all the click-locking on the board being tapped and the adjoining jam cut board to give clearance for the board. It worked, but now I have nothing holding the door jam board in, which of course is now slightly raised. Since that board technically isn't click-locked in, could I put a few finishing nails in it to hold it down? It'd only be that board which isn't locked into any other board.
In hindsight (and after some food and a good nights rest), I would have approached this differently, but now it's all installed and I want to avoid pulling it up if possible. I'm not a flipper, I'll be in this house for the foreseeable future. So possible issues that could arise will be all on me.
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks!
As I installed the floor, I had a few situations where my expansion gap is way too big, creeping up to 3/4" in some spots. I'm sure those experienced can guess all the ways it happened, and I'm sure I committed all the sins. No sense in beating a dead horse. Beautiful floor otherwise.
I installed in our warm/humid midwest summer and am afraid contraction will expose the gaps under the quarter round once dry/cold winter sets in.
Should that happen, is caulk the best method to "hide" those contractions should they appear? Or does anyone have other ideas? I haven't installed the quarter round yet, so I still have access to those gaps. One idea I had was gluing small strips to reduce my gaps. Even with contraction, they'd be nearly unnoticeable should contraction occur. Thoughts?
2nd issue. I had quite the puzzle to deal with near the room entrance. Long story short, I had 4 door jams near a corner all within a few feet of each other. I cut out all jams, and the flooring cuts went pretty well. Unfortunately, in order to get one jam cut piece to clear the other jam cut piece, my install order was backwards and left me tapping in middle pieces because I could no longer engage click-lock. Which actually went fine until I ran against another wall and couldn't get clearance to tap in the piece. I decided to cut off all the click-locking on the board being tapped and the adjoining jam cut board to give clearance for the board. It worked, but now I have nothing holding the door jam board in, which of course is now slightly raised. Since that board technically isn't click-locked in, could I put a few finishing nails in it to hold it down? It'd only be that board which isn't locked into any other board.
In hindsight (and after some food and a good nights rest), I would have approached this differently, but now it's all installed and I want to avoid pulling it up if possible. I'm not a flipper, I'll be in this house for the foreseeable future. So possible issues that could arise will be all on me.
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks!