Total brain lapse resulted in me laying the first row of subfloor panels in line with each other, i.e., all seams are on the same line, about 7m in width.
Should I tear them up, take the hit (about 2500kr in subfloor panels I have to throw away) and do it right, or continue from my new starting point but lay them correctly i.e., staggered?
Total brain freeze resulted in me laying the first row of floor chipboard in line with each other, meaning all the joints are on the same line, about 7m in width.
Should I tear them up, take the hit (about 2500kr in floor chipboard I have to throw away), and do it right, or continue from my new starting point, but lay them correctly i.e. staggered?
If you have all the joints on the joist, there shouldn't be any problem, right? If not, you can notch in a block under all of them and screw them down?
Here's how it looks. They end around the nearest floor joist. So maybe I could saw 22mm deep with the circular saw over the nearest floor joist and then continue with staggered laying. What do you think about that versus tearing everything out and starting over?
Perhaps best to do as you wrote, take the circular saw and make a straight cut over the nearest joist. No need to tear up everything!
Is the tracked flooring board sufficiently load-bearing to be spliced in the air? Have laid almost 70sqm at home but laid regular flooring board first precisely because of the load-bearing capacity.
Maybe best to do as you wrote, take the circular saw and make a straight cut over the nearest joist. No need to tear everything up!
Is the notched floor particleboard sufficiently load-bearing to splice in the air? I've laid almost 70sqm at home but laid regular floor particleboard first precisely because of the load-bearing capacity
Yes, they are load-bearing if the perforated edges are glued together. But that assumes I lay everything staggered, which I will do now after correcting the mistake
Big thanks! Slightly panicked when I thought I needed to tear everything out and start over, but if they are spliced on a joist, it should be "ok"
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