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| Different
species highlight the cased opening and separate the two different floors. Use
your imagination to give the customer a unique floor. The different species
require attention to sanding detail. Be sure to finish it out properly; this is
not the place for drum sander dish-out or edger/buffer scratches. |
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Finishing the job with a proper
transition piece can get you paid-- in full! I have seen situations where the
contractor left $300, $500, even $1,000 at the job because they didn’t finish
up with the proper transition. I have gone to the jobs where the threshold to
the laundry room, bath, or a similar item has not been completed or installed
properly. It was either absent, not finished, and or not fastened. Even if the
intent is to install it later, the delay allows for the possibility of damage
to the edge of the exposed flooring, not to mention the cost of travel and time
for another trip to the job site. This just adds more cost plus the money held
by the consumer for an incomplete job.
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Another situation where a herringbone chevron pattern was
not T&G engaged. There is movement at the intersections that resulted in
uneven sanding as well as noises.
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In my
experience many transitions are made at the jobsite to custom fit to the
different flooring materials. You should figure for all the transitions and
have the material available during installation to finish the job.
The
following are some items to address with transitions and site finished solid
wood. Transitions occur mostly in the high traffic areas, so the flooring in
these areas should be the best pieces of the product. A bad board located where
people walk, immediately demands attention and gives the customer a reason to
be critical of any irregularity, no matter how small. In the area surrounding
the transition, don’t install a prominently different looking board, select
boards that blend with the overall look of the flooring.
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This is the overall view of the background photo on the
title page and a continuation of the parquet pattern of the previous page. Note
the filler along the ends of pieces at the direction change. Without the
T&G engagement, the result is an uneven floor with a lot of overwood and underwood.
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Another
option is to select a different species to actually highlight the transition.
Applications that require a 1 ½-inch-thick threshold, such as those associated
with carpet to hardwood transition on a slab, are situations where this can be
used. The different look can help the
consumer and their guests identify a change in height. The different species
can also be used in a doorway to facilitate a change of flooring direction or
to transition to a different floor.
Hiding an
irregular measurement across the doorway is another function of a transition.
Using a wider piece of the same species cut to fit the irregularity can
effectively camouflage the cut. Or using
multiple species strips to distribute the irregularity over more than one board
can also mediate the cut. It also identifies the contractor as the craftsman
offering more than one option.
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This installer could have done a better job; should have
used a single piece in
the doorway. A little pre-planning could have avoided this,
not to mention the mis-cut edges.
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For the
application where the ends of flooring abut a feature, fitting the transition
piece perpendicular to the boards properly finishes the exposed edges. This
most often occurs in a doorway, cased opening, or framed hearth. The location of the change of direction can
also be important. Typically, with a cased opening the flooring boards end
along the center line of the jambs. And the perpendicular transition is on the
side of the jamb away from the primary flooring.
Another
situation often occurs at an outside doorway. As we have noted before, when
approaching the exterior door, we want to protect the flooring from the
elements by back-sealing the nearby pieces. Where the ends approach the
doorway, installing a board perpendicular to the exposed ends also helps
protect by isolating the end grain from the elements.
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This floor is about to be sanded and finished with no
threshold to the bath or the laundry room. The contractor lives 30+ miles away
and it will take at least two trips, maybe three or four, to finish the job. 60
to 120+ miles and extra 3 to 4 hours travel time; an expensive omission.
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Most
importantly, always provide for an interlocking tongue and groove fit. Use a
factory edge and or groove the exposed edge/end and insert a slip tongue or
spline. Without the interlock, movement and associated gapping and noises are a
likely occurrence.
What about a factory finished product? Most name brand
factory finished manufacturers offer transition materials with the same finish
and color of the flooring for the standard transmission. The same basic ideas
and rules apply. Select uniform looking boards and maintain tongue and groove
engagement. The local wood flooring distributor will likely stock standard
items for transition.
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Note the hump about 5 rows in front of the hearth. This was
a reversal without a spline. As the flooring gained moisture, it buckled
slightly. The best repair for this situation is to remove and reinstall the
flooring from the reversal to the hearth wall. Be sure to install a proper
spline and re-fasten that edge.
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You may
still have to modify a transition to fit the application. For the thicker
materials like the 1 ½-inch-thick transition mentioned with slab situations, if
a full thickness piece is not available, you may have to stack and off-set two
standard thicknesses to match the proper height. For other situations you may
also have to plane down the thickness of different parts to match unusual
heights. A good table saw and a power planer come in handy for these
modifications. When stacking pieces be sure to fasten the two pieces
together.
I have
addressed changes of direction in some of the examples above. The primary directive
is to provide a tongue and groove engagement at these locations. Without this
interlock the flooring connection is weakened and some objectionable movement
is likely to occur. The fastening of these areas without the T&G engagement
is generally with face nails, which can draw attention as an objectionable
visual feature.
Flooring
reversals fall into this category and absolutely require a T&G engagement.
Flooring reversals also help to decrease the total width of a run. In a large
home for instance, starting along the center-line and reversing, allows the
flooring’s potential directional movement to be split in the two
directions.
The
consumer often has questions about changes of direction. They may want all the
flooring to go in the same direction. With a flooring installation over a slab
this is not an issue. However, over a wood frame system, the flooring direction
should be perpendicular to the joist direction. In this case, if the consumer
insists on flooring running parallel to joist, solid blocking should be added
between joists under the subflooring every two feet. The consumer should be
informed that flooring changes of direction are considered acceptable and
normal. The best direction is generally along the long dimension of the room.
I can’t
say it often enough–a tongue -and-groove engagement at transitions and changes
of direction is a requirement. Also, finish the job before you leave with ALL
the appropriate transitions. Return trips and dissatisfied customers cost too
much money.