Do you have a photo showing it's location a little better? ...not so close up?
Do you have a photo showing it's location a little better? ...not so close up?
Looks in the photo there's a tiny void or space in the center of the last plank.
Were you going to adhere the last plank?
Just be sure to leave some weights on it.
Is there a small gap under that next to last plank? You don't want to fasten the nose to a lank with a bow in it............. and have it all bouncy-bouncy. You can glue that last plank, then attach the nose.
You might try gluing and nailing a narrow strip to the floor like this so once glued in place the molding has no movement. Leave an 1/8" gap between the narrow strip and the plank next to it. The Coretec does not expand or contract, so 1/8" ought to be fine.
The base molding holds the plank down pretty well at that step, so probably not an issue. Sometimes your toe contacts the stair molding as you go up the stairs. When it does, the upward force makes the nose and plank kick upward slightly since the edge isn't actually fastened to the floor. More of an annoyance than a real problem.The gap went away after I installed the last plank. I only had so much space to work with because of the cuts in the skirt board.
I also got the kitchen entry done. Thought I could use t molding but the height was different. I had extra from the bathroom entry. Metal channel was too thin. I glued it upside down with PL Premium. Then I glued the molding onto the channel. Saw it done on web. Got a pair of 11 lb weights on it. Should work. 2 pieces to go. And closets.
It looks great thus far. I'm looking forward to the finished products & hope you enjoy a refreshing beverage afterward.
I need to start working on my floor again.
Be sure the floor is super clean if you use those plastic sliders. One tiny piece of stone tracked in off the driveway will become one-grit sandpaper when it embeds in the plastic and can put a scratch all the way across a room. Those are really made for carpet. They make sliders that are felt on the bottom. Not saying they don't work, just be careful.
Thanks. By my notes, I started all this on April 17. It started with pulling baseboard, carpet, padding, tack strips and a million staples. Then paint. Then floor leveling. And then the flooring. I have a 16 foot wall that needs baseboard first. Once that is on, I can slide the TV stand out on plastic sliders. Will need help from my neighbor to pull TV out of back room and mount it. I have pads for everything. Couch is almost 300 lbs. I have a lever gadget to hold it up while I slip the pads under. I might be able to block up the couch on 2x4's to get it high enough to pull the dollies out and get the pads under. Vacuum first though and dust mop. God the sawdust!
Thanks. By my notes, I started all this on April 17. It started with pulling baseboard, carpet, padding, tack strips and a million staples. Then paint. Then floor leveling. And then the flooring. I have a 16 foot wall that needs baseboard first. Once that is on, I can slide the TV stand out on plastic sliders. Will need help from my neighbor to pull TV out of back room and mount it. I have pads for everything. Couch is almost 300 lbs. I have a lever gadget to hold it up while I slip the pads under. I might be able to block up the couch on 2x4's to get it high enough to pull the dollies out and get the pads under. Vacuum first though and dust mop. God the sawdust!