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How to Lay an Engineered Oak Floor on Joists 

Charlie DIYte (CharlieDIYte)
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Today's video is a complete DIY guide to laying engineered oak floorboards on floor joists.
You can buy me a coffee here www.buymeacoff... or become a monthly member to unlock Discord forum membership, exclusive content and automatic entry into my FREE Monthly Giveaway. Thank you SO SO much!!
You can now access my 🛠Charlie DIYte Amazon Tool Store here www.amazon.co.... - where you'll find all my tried, tested and much loved DIY tools arranged into handy categories.
Today's Toolkit
Engineered Oak Floor bit.ly/34f0xUD
Universal saw geni.us/qWSWiqX (Amazon)
Gorilla bar geni.us/CiwMUBU (Amazon)
Hammer geni.us/tQWVh (Amazon)
Tongue Tite Screws 3.5x45mm geni.us/AtfJq (Amazon)
Erbauer impact driver bit.ly/2qEoKoT
Laminate tie down straps bit.ly/2sbGB78
Battery Glue gun www.ebay.co.uk...
Badaptor for Makita, Bosch, Milwaukee & DeWalt batteries bit.ly/2Xk04Ql
Mains Glue Gun ebay.to/2KRJ6lv
TackFix 180 Second Glue Sticks ebay.to/37z7YYU (as featured in the video)
Tackfix 48 Second Glue Sticks ebay.to/35wK2ne
Or you can use:
Evo-stik wood glue geni.us/EBsqC (Amazon)
Evo-stik GripFill geni.us/CDFf (Amazon)
Egger Joint & Joist Adhesive bit.ly/2Ox4P2Y or available from builders merchants
Broadfix glazing packers bit.ly/2rnUcaN
Broadfix schims bit.ly/2OECAzG
The Amazon and eBay links above are affiliate links. It doesn't cost you anything to click on them but I do earn a small commission if you do.
And here's the legal bit I have to state: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
I purchased the engineered oak flooring from the same company I used a few years ago for my bathroom floor on a recommendation - JFJ Wood Flooring, from their Supreme Oak Flooring Range 21mm thick.
I decided to use the same method of fixing down the floorboards, using Tongue Tite 3.5 x 45mm screws, except this time I also glued the floorboards down, as my floor joists have a decent amount of spring in them, and I wanted to try and prevent the floor from working loose/ creaking over time.
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Charlie DIYte
-- Email: charliediyte@gmail.com
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#engineeredoak #tongueandgroove #floorboards

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5 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 204   
@PEmma-k4j
@PEmma-k4j 2 месяца назад
I watched this ages ago with my dad and it's still very informative plus well presented.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 месяца назад
Thanks, I'm glad you found it useful.
@RozP89
@RozP89 2 года назад
that piece of oak at the end in the doorway is dreamy
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Thanks - I was really pleased with that 👍
@vsberlina3712
@vsberlina3712 4 года назад
"It's nice to have a reminder of the old oak floor that used to be there". I love that. I've tried to keep something old in my renovations also. It's like story telling. Each generation can see a part of the generations that came before them.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Exactly 👍
@tbayboater
@tbayboater 4 года назад
An oscillating tool with a metal blade or an angle grinder with a thin cut blade allows you to cut the fasteners and salvage the boards. I’ve done it with 3/4” solid oak that was nailed to a plywood subfloor. Basically 2-3 times as many fasteners to deal with but hav salvaged several hundred square feet of 3/4by3&1/4 inch hardwood. Great job Cheers
@cedarstuff
@cedarstuff 4 года назад
Great video. Would love to see a bit more on how you did the leveling using the packers & glue.
@YouZbychu
@YouZbychu 4 года назад
Me too. This is where I failed laying my laminate flooring. Now it creaks.
@mr1379
@mr1379 4 года назад
Excellent. Did something similar but I installed my engineered flooring onto existing floorboards.
@ryanstobie6558
@ryanstobie6558 3 года назад
I hope you see this. I am hoping to do the same and wondered if you could answer a couple of nagging questions. What underlay did you use (if any)? How did you deal with uneven flooring?
@raydunn3501
@raydunn3501 4 года назад
WOW,,, Charlie what would we do without you,,, I always lookout for your vids I find them so interesting even if i dont have the work to follow,,, good ideas are given,,, good on ya mate,,, keep going with the channel.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks Ray - I really appreciate that. It nearly killed me, this one. I video'd everything not knowing what angle I was going to take and ended up with about 110 videos each with about 3-10 minutes in duration - I kid you not - and it took about 5 days of solid editing to put together 🙄 Well worth it though when I get positive feedback like that 👍👍👍
@danieljohnson7214
@danieljohnson7214 3 года назад
Extremely comprehensive video glad I found it
@jonodogdesign
@jonodogdesign 3 года назад
So many of your vids have put me more at ease when considering my options for an up coming job! great stuff thanks!
@mikes6844
@mikes6844 4 года назад
So pleased to see such a super job, looks great. I’m a great fan of engineered boards for the reasons you state. Mine have been down for 10 years or more in my living/dining area and even with scratches and stiletto heal marks it still looks fab. Expensive yes, but don’t regret it. Quality is remembered a long time after the cost? Great vid Charlie, inspiration for people to have a go. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@johnfithian-franks8276
@johnfithian-franks8276 4 года назад
Hi Charlie, I have a "Ruffeneck" bar that has two prongs that go either side of the joists and makes getting floorboards up a pleasure.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
That's a great tip. Thanks John, and good to hear from you again!
@YellowPinkie
@YellowPinkie 4 года назад
If you have an old house and do any form of DIY, glazing packers are just the best!
@leebrown5090
@leebrown5090 4 года назад
Looks really good the door tread very impressed matey
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks mate. Door tread!! I knew it had a name 🤣
@tobybuk
@tobybuk 4 года назад
Great video Charlie. Thanks for taking the time to make it for us.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
You're welcome mate. Thanks for taking the time to comment!
@mcba
@mcba 3 года назад
Very well put together video, and a great job on that door profile, nice one!
@valborchardt3596
@valborchardt3596 4 года назад
Hellloooo Charlie, good to see you back again. Thanks for this one, your floor looks great. Take care
@purediy4452
@purediy4452 4 года назад
As always a very well done video always enjoy watching them giving me some really good tips for my day job thank you
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks mate - really appreciate that, and flattered that I have anything to pass on that you don't already know 👍
@wheelyworld
@wheelyworld 3 года назад
Thanks for making this video. You've inspired me to have a go as my floorboards in an old upstairs bedroom I've stripped down, they're awful. I'm going to replace them. I just hope I don't put my foot through the living room ceiling. 👍 Watched a few of your videos today, and they are brilliant.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Thanks mate. Yes be careful. I put my foot through the ceiling into the living room - twice in one day - when I was renovating my bathroom.🤦 I think I had a bad cold and it affected my balance/ coordination! Just make sure you go with a decent product of this type of thickness if you're boarding over joists 👍🏻
@wheelyworld
@wheelyworld 3 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte it was just that small beer of confidence that did it! 👌 Also, I just watched all 40 minutes of the video of Gerard skimming the ceiling and it was just.. memorising to watch! He is such a skilled chap, we really enjoyed watching him work. I feel confident about laying new floorboards but not sure I want to tackle plastering, so if he's free over next couple of weeks to do a 10m sq bedroom, we'd feel in safe hands!!! We are near Solihull! We shall keep him lubricated with strong tea too!!🙏
@ivangreat133
@ivangreat133 4 года назад
Nice work Charlie, the floor looks great.
@jonarchdeacon3761
@jonarchdeacon3761 Год назад
Excellent video as always Charlie. Floor looks amazing!!!!
@mabdub
@mabdub 4 года назад
I Hope we get to see the floor in it's various stages of staining and finishing.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
I think I'm going to have to now 😉
@mabdub
@mabdub 4 года назад
Your bathroom floor is really striking, I look forward to seeing the finished bedroom floor. Thanks for the tips about using engineered oak instead of solid oak which is what many people think is the pinnacle choice; so did I until I heard your explanation.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
@@mabdub You're welcome. Given how good it looks if you go for the good quality version like mine, there's no need what so every to go for solid wood.
@mabdub
@mabdub 4 года назад
Hi, I hope you don't mind me asking how you sealed the bathroom floor to deal with the inevitable contact with water. Do you have to be especially careful about not getting water on the floor?
@garvielloken3929
@garvielloken3929 4 года назад
yEah! Defo!
@iwilson16
@iwilson16 4 года назад
Floor looks amazing! I’m currently fixing up a room in a Victorian property in Edinburgh and also had to level the joists (40mm sag in middle). I bolted 2x4 c24 timber to the side (m10 bolt every 1m) To get around the twisted joist issue I hot-glued plastic packers to the side of the joist at the point where it was bolted in order to get the 2x4 to sit vertically. My joists were only 75mm wide, so relatively easy to drill through that plus the 2x4. Looks like your joists would be pretty difficult to drill through. I’ll be putting down an 18mm sheathing ply sub-floor and then a 5-7mm vinyl/wood plank to finish. That should take u]me up to close to the original floorboard level.
@aj1finch
@aj1finch 4 года назад
Another really interesting one, Charlie. I'm intrigued by the hot glue gun - definitely looking forward to the in-depth review!
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks! The glue gun, mate, is a revelation. I've never owned one and probably never would have, but it's ace. Used it today to glue an internal panel back in the Vito van, which wouldn't click back into place (pulled away when I had a new windscreen recently) because the little plastic grommet things have lost their spring. Worked a treat!
@harrycallaghan22
@harrycallaghan22 4 года назад
Excellent tutorial as usual. Love this channel. Totally inspiring and super helpful.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Aw, thanks Harry 👍
@michaelbernon8117
@michaelbernon8117 4 года назад
OMG! Thank you, i got into an argument with my partner today about how if you dont glue your floor boards down over a joist floor you will have squeaks... thank you..
@5N19ERG0D
@5N19ERG0D 4 года назад
Thank you so much for this video! Brilliant work.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
You're welcome. Thanks for the comment!!
@harvey19750
@harvey19750 3 года назад
What a fantastic video. Thank you 🙏
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
You're very welcome. Thanks for the comment 👍🏻
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
🛠Charlie DIYte Amazon Tool Store amzn.to/3fcLnY4 - all my tried, tested and much loved DIY tools. ☕Charlie DIYte Buy Me a Coffee Membership bit.ly/3xuQ3zb - access our incredible Discord DIY forum and help support my Channel. 👚Charlie DIYte Official Merch Store charlie-diyte.myspreadshop.co.uk/ - all new range of professionally designed merch.
@58elrond
@58elrond 4 года назад
Great quality video as always - pleasure to watch & learn
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks! 👍
@kmonnier
@kmonnier 4 года назад
This was very comprehensive and informative. 💥💥💥💥💥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
You're welcome! Thanks for the comment 💪💪👍
@fqlynx
@fqlynx 4 года назад
Top advice as always by a top man.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Aw, thanks for that 👍
@trobbo7460
@trobbo7460 2 месяца назад
Awesome informational views Charlie. My engineered oak floor starts next week. Any thoughts on how to save a tun of multi tool blades to remove all the chipboard edges to the wall?
@Vyker
@Vyker 4 года назад
I just wish I was as bothered as you are. All of your projects are things that need doing in my place. Never get round to it. How do you do it!! Great video as ever. Well done.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Well, if it makes you feel any better, ironically I spend so much time editing, I never get any of the jobs that need doing done - which is why we moved out of our bedroom in February and are still not back in there 🤣
@marieaudreyduchamp8839
@marieaudreyduchamp8839 4 года назад
Good job as usual Charlie, well done mate
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks Jean!
@aaudain1
@aaudain1 3 года назад
Clearly explained 👍👏✋
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Thanks Anthony 👍🏻
@karlbratby4349
@karlbratby4349 4 года назад
im about to lay 220mm planks the same as yours but solid oak. the manufacturer has advised putting a DPM down even if it's on top of existing wooden floor and tongue tite screw so with your parent's floor using solid oak did they screw and DPM as a moisture barrier? JFJ I believe source some of their planks from french forest floors which Is where my solids were from.
@DaddyBear3000
@DaddyBear3000 4 года назад
Love the look, really nice job. Your joist spacing is pretty small and they’re vintage beasts. Otherwise you’d have to overboard first. 👍🏼
@markhannan5167
@markhannan5167 4 года назад
Great work thanks for video
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
You're welcome. Thanks Mark 👍
@SL-ez7qn
@SL-ez7qn 4 года назад
Good informative video. I didn’t know you could screw flooring boards directly to the joists. Also don’t you need some sort of a moisture barrier?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Well, it depends I guess with joists. I'm going to prevent the moisture rising up from downstairs by reboarding the ceiling with foil backed plasterboard, but you're right, moisture barriers are always an important consideration.
@DerekTJ
@DerekTJ 3 года назад
Great video. I didn't know that you just lay straight onto joists - I thought that a subfloor of osb or ply had to go down first
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Only if the boards you're laying aren't thick enough. These are 22mm and designed to be laid without a sub floor.
@ryank8385
@ryank8385 4 года назад
Great work Charlie
@fridgehorse
@fridgehorse 4 года назад
Just watched one of your older videos where it had annoying constant looped unnecessary music in the back ground. I don’t know if other people commented on it but I’m glad to hear you didn’t use it on this one or a couple of other recent ones. Other than that they’re helpful videos.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Yes I'm sorry about that. It was a big mistake, but you live and learn 🙄
@fridgehorse
@fridgehorse 4 года назад
Charlie DIYte: Thanks... Yep you live & learn, at least you’ve learnt. It’s a pity some mainstream tv program makers can’t learn, especially on documentaries. I often think if “I wanted music over the top, I‘ll put my own on, Ive got an audio player”.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
@@fridgehorse I'd agree with that 😉
@garvielloken3929
@garvielloken3929 4 года назад
Another amazing tutorial
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Aw, thanks Garviel - good to hear from you again 👍
@garvielloken3929
@garvielloken3929 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte Can't tell you enough how inspirational you and your channel have been to me
@garvielloken3929
@garvielloken3929 4 года назад
I actually get excited when theres a notification fro our channel
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
@@garvielloken3929 Seriously? I'm bowled over by that!! This one was really difficult for some reason. I had 110 videos in the folder for this job, each with between 3 and 10 minutes of stuff to sift through and I didn't know where to start with the edit - which took about 5 days solid to do, but it's all worth while when I get comments like that. Thanks so much 👍👍
@garvielloken3929
@garvielloken3929 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte WOW! Just wow. Its easy to forget how much time and effort is put into these videos. I take my earlier comment back & change it to: Another PHENOMENAL tutorial.
@suj1945
@suj1945 4 года назад
Great vid Charlie mate
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks mate!
@t_doc
@t_doc Год назад
Great stuff.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte Год назад
Thanks 👊
@alanmullock381
@alanmullock381 4 года назад
Nice work Charlie!👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@james-jq8sk
@james-jq8sk Год назад
Very impressive, thinking of doing my rental with these engineered boards, I wonder how they would hold up with wheeling suitcases in and out on a weekly basis?
@tubbycarpenter9847
@tubbycarpenter9847 4 года назад
Great video mate
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks mate!!
@OriginalgEd
@OriginalgEd 4 года назад
very informative video, thank you!
@TheDingfish
@TheDingfish 2 года назад
Have watched this video countless times, so useful! Did you have to do a filler over the whole floor once it's down, to get into the grain since oak is such an open grained wood? I notice in your stain video that the grain looks beautiful, extremely evenly toned brown rather than having the grain stand out as black against the brown, I'm currently having this issue with my flooring where I also want to do hardwax oil but I'm getting extremely high contrast with the grain and the only solution i can think of is to fill it..
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Sorry to hear that. No, the engineered oak boards are sanded to a certain finish by the manufacturer - I'm guessing 120 grit or thereabouts because when I spot sanded a few areas to 180 grit the stain didn't take as well as it did to the rest. I wouldn't ever fill it but you might have to sand it with a random orbit sander to achieve a consistent surface that can be stained and oiled.
@Dee2Bee
@Dee2Bee Год назад
Great video, one question: you have 180 seconds to position the board on the glue (14.00) but when you tighten the boards (7.50) surely the glue will have been well and truly set ... ??? Thanks!
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte Год назад
Thanks. To be honest unless you've already bought a glue gun, I would instead buy a bottle of Egger floor board adhesive - as you have as long as you want to position the boards. In answer to your question it's borderline but the glue doesn't go off for a minute or so but you do have to work quickly - so much less stressful using the Egger. www.egger.com/en/building/product-detail/JOINTLOISTADH?country=GB
@Dee2Bee
@Dee2Bee Год назад
@@CharlieDIYte Really appreciate that. Many thanks!
@ArthLud
@ArthLud Год назад
Awesome
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte Год назад
Thanks 👊
@andywagstaff8980
@andywagstaff8980 4 года назад
Hi Charlie excellent video as always. Any tips for cleaning engineered wood as we’ve just had it laid in a new build that we are buying? Many thanks
@bikerchrisukk
@bikerchrisukk 4 года назад
Great video, I would like to glue down boards next time as well, to avoid the squeak. But if there are services running between/through joists, they could need accessing at some point. So if glue is used, do you think it will destroy the boarding when it comes back up, especially T&G? Thanks and keep up the good work! 👍
@jamiegleave7620
@jamiegleave7620 4 года назад
Nice job! I did about 60m2 of pretty expensive engineered oak in the kitchen and utility room about 6 years ago. Boards are great but I found the hard wax oil (osmo) coating didn't stand up to much, particularly when the boards get water droplets on them and leave stains. What's your view on a hard varnish finish instead Charlie?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
To be honest, I'm a massive fan of the Treatex Hardwax Oil. Granted my bathroom floor doesn't get the traffic the kitchen floor would but my experience with varnish is that it's only as hard as the wood below it, and even oak is going to get dented by metal capped shoes, stilettos and the like.
@simonm9503
@simonm9503 10 месяцев назад
Hi Charlie, what blade did you use for the cuts?
@JuiceBanger1
@JuiceBanger1 4 года назад
Good looking job. Had you any cross cuts of boards to do....if so what blade, quantity of teeth did you use?
@keithburgess4499
@keithburgess4499 2 года назад
Hi Charlie, fantastic video, you have inspired me to tackle the job of renovating our bedroom floor myself. One quick question, what colour finish did you use in your bathroom as shown at the beginning of the video. Cheers
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Thanks Keith. Exactly the same. 2/3 antique oak, 1/3 ebony. Treatex.
@RossMitchellsProfile
@RossMitchellsProfile 2 года назад
I find your hot glue gun setup kinda funny, kinda got the oposite adapter situation, got the same brand of adapter for a hot glue gun but it's a Ryobi Hot Glue gun and a Makita Battery.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Good work Ross. Yes that glue gun is very reasonably priced. 👍
@one-off3264
@one-off3264 2 года назад
Nice video, I wanted to see more of how you levelled the floor though! ☺️ I am currently using strips of wood and packers to level my subfloor. I am going to use a 360 degrees laser to create a datum plane and then stick a ruler on the joists at various points and measure where the laser hits the ruler. How did you do it? Did you just rely on the boards as a straight edge and chock up where needed? To do this though surely you would need to start on the highest points otherwise you may encounter a situation where you need to remove material no?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Thanks Euan. I didn't completely level it. I just evened out the worst of the anomalies with wood and packers. The other way you could do it is screw new beams to the existing joists but you'll need a lot of wood for that so your way is probably the best.
@5N19ERG0D
@5N19ERG0D 4 года назад
Can you make a video on how the stand on the chop saw
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
It was just plonked on top of an old Black and Decker work bench. Not the best as long planks tend to crash to the floor when cut in half.
@JosePoloramos
@JosePoloramos Год назад
Might be a silly question but assume two boards meet where a joist isn't present. Is it ok for that joint to not have a joist under it for support. Many thanks.
@jitsmen2519
@jitsmen2519 7 месяцев назад
Hi. This is called a flying joint. Best not to have any flying joints. Use a noggin (piece of timber fixed between two joists) to support this type of joint.
@harpo187bling
@harpo187bling 4 года назад
Good stuff pal.
@mrskyfarmer
@mrskyfarmer 4 года назад
Great video as always. How many times did you go through the ceiling below?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
On the bathroom I literally fell through it twice in one day. My excuse was that I had a cold and my balance was affected 🤣
@MrJofArnold
@MrJofArnold 2 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte When I was a kid my mum fell through the floor in similar circumstances. I picked up her shoe in the living room and took it upstairs to give to her. Such a great family memory! 😆
@cjtathome
@cjtathome 2 года назад
I noticed you have insulated - i have a room that has traditionally had condensation issues (2 external walls). I’m tackling root causes etc but would it be better to let air flow underneath the pine floor or insulate for the cost and environmental benefits ?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Have you looked at this video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-TIDb-pdOnXM.html ? It's a difficult one this. On one hand no insulation allows air to circulate as you say. But it could also allow vapour from the room below to condensate against the wall in the floor void. I insulated between the joists so I can control heating from one room to another accurately, now I have smart TRVs on my radiators, but I was worried about negating the air circulation. I think the main thing is to insulate the external wall as effectively as possible so as to avoid any cold bridging. Maybe don't worry about the floor insulation for now unless you have definite plans to rip the floor up.
@cjtathome
@cjtathome 2 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte , thanks Charlie , my floor is up currently. Full refurb and spraying for beetle while I’m at it. Cleaned out all the rubble and thought why not insulate it. The damp video was really good.
@attos11
@attos11 3 года назад
Hi Charlie, I have been watching you video on how to lay engineered floorboard. I have just moved into a 1930 flat with original pine floorboard. I tried to get a carpenter to repair this floor but basically they come to give a quote and never follow through. I decided to do it myself with the help of my brother- he is supervising it virtually. Anyway, you went through 3 different kinds of glue , I am leaning more towards the egger glue, but my question if I may is this. Should I glue the floorboard to the joists instead of screwing them. My brother is a bit against it because he says if I ever need to lift the boards to repair the heating or electric that run underneath I would be stuck. Since I saw you view the only thing I can see is that glueing would stop all the many creaking the floor makes. I have repaired and used plastic shim to support the joist on the concrete, so I can see that gluing would eliminate all the noise. Would you be able to give me your expert opinion?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Hi mate. It's a really good question. So my bathroom floor does squeak in a few places but not enough to annoy me. I agree, if you're going to use a glue, that Egger or even Gripfill would work well. I wouldn't bother buying a glue gun. So my floor was so springy before but it's solid as a rock now. If you glue it you will undoubtedly get a more solid feel. Whether YOU use glue really depends on whether you think you're likely to need to take it up for any reason - he's absolutely right on that one. If it's only a small section and the rest isn't glued, I probably wouldn't bother glueing the repaired bit. The reality is, assuming all electrics junction boxes if any, are in maintenance free boxes (eg Wago) your electric wires are not going to be chewed by rodents and any plumbing is unlikely to need any maintenance, and you've done any insulation to your satisfaction, you're unlikely to ever want to take it up - assuming of course you like your choice of flooring and are unlikely to go off it in a few years time!! Don't forget, if you lay a floor like mine, even just screwed down it would be a hell of a job getting it up. You'd have to cut through the tongue and groove and rip it up because you wouldn't be able to locate those hidden screws. Plus in my case there's skirting on top of it. So my anxiety is the new copper pipes that I didn't deburr before soldering together. So any pin hole leaks and I'll be going in from the room below! Hope that helps.
@attos11
@attos11 3 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte Hi there, thanks for your response very helpful, I will consider them a bit more. But I will probably just screw them and live with some of the creaks that will develop over the months and years. Thanks again.
@joescores19
@joescores19 4 года назад
My budget is small and I need to cover 100 square meters, thinking of buying a solid timber 20 mm thick, would you recommend it? Great video btw.
@1979com
@1979com 4 года назад
are we meant to put glue in the tongue and groove? thanks
@alexdarton5940
@alexdarton5940 4 года назад
Hi Charlie. Another great video, thanks. Curious to know your thoughts on the insulation you packed in between the joists. Particularly around electrics (need to be careful of heat build up?) and also whether a ventilation gap would be needed between the top of the insulation and bottom of the flooring? Much appreciated. Keep up the good work! Alex.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Hi Alex, thanks for this. I decided to insulate (with Rockwall) a) for sound; and b) for heating considerations. At some point I'd like to install the Drayton wiser system, and it will be much more effective to zone each room if they're properly insulated. The point you make about the electrics is a good one - which is why I was careful not to bury the electrics in the insulation, rather have it sitting on top. The room below is the sitting room, the ceiling of which needs reboarding, so I'll probably use foil backed plasterboard so as to stop vapour from going through. I also have a pretty good dehumidifier running at the moment - video to follow 😉
@alexdarton5940
@alexdarton5940 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte thanks Charlie. Appreciate your reply. 👍🏻
@AliAli-ir8kq
@AliAli-ir8kq 4 года назад
I love your Channel 😍
@ChrisHogan87
@ChrisHogan87 4 года назад
Good video as always, what brand of offset drill attachment do you use and how do you rate it?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks mate. Wiha - yes, it's fantastic quality - funnily enough I thought I'd do a video on it some time soon as I think it's a tool everyone should know about 👍
@ChrisHogan87
@ChrisHogan87 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYteCheers thanks for letting me know, I'd definitely be interested on video about them.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
@@ChrisHogan87 I'm posting the video tomorrow so look out for it. If you click the bell notification icon next to the subscribe button on my channel it should ping through when it's live.
@Dr.Stacker
@Dr.Stacker 7 месяцев назад
How do you remove floorboards that run under upstairs block walls?
@dawnhandford8619
@dawnhandford8619 4 года назад
How far away from the wall do the floor boards need to be (for expansion) if necessary?
@reallyniceone
@reallyniceone 2 года назад
Hi Charlie, great video and very helpful. Hoping you can help to steer me in the right direction. I have an existing 18mm pine floor that I intended to remove and install 18mm engineered oak to the joists but some people have suggested that I lay the engineered oak on top of the pine. I’d rather not do this because I have a 30mm granite hearth that would only leave 12mm exposed but I’d like to know your thoughts on the pro’s and con’s?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Yes I think laying on top is a bit of a botch and could give you problems with floor heights in doorways between rooms. Clearly it's much easier to lay on top as pulling up floor joists is a pain and then you've got to pull out or grind off all the nails but it's a neater job and gives you the opportunity to insulate between the joists. Just remember that 18mm engineered oak might not be thick enough for you to join in between joists with using a noggin to support the join. That was the beauty of the 22mm I used. It's strong enough not to require a noggin.
@reallyniceone
@reallyniceone 2 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte thanks Charlie, that’s what I thought too but certainly something to think about in relation to the thickness, either extra support beneath of the 22mm as you suggested. Many thanks 👍🏻
@aleksandrk9703
@aleksandrk9703 2 года назад
Why did you not use a damp proof membrane between the floor and the insulation? I presume you used insulation because there is a cold surface below the floor of the room.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
It's not necessary because there are no cold surfaces to create a dew point although for belt and braces I might use a foil backed plasterboard when I repair the sitting room ceiling. I did it primarily to make zonal heating more sensitive when I installed our smart heating system with its smart thermostats.
@BODGE71
@BODGE71 4 года назад
How did you put the floor boards down around the radiators? Did you remove the radiators first?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Damn it, I meant to show that. I think I'll have to do a video to show how I did the plumbing, and /or possibly an outtakes video showing the bits I didn't include. It took a lot of planning as I had to do the plumbing before I laid the floor because I didn't want to notch the joists so I had to take the pipes round the back of the joists (there's a gap between the joists and the wall as they rather bizarrely just sit on a timber pad that runs the width of the room). Basically I made sure I had two short lengths of floor boards terminating just next to each pipe. I had to route a groove in the left hand board so that it could slot together with the tongue of the right hand board. I started with the left hand board, slotted the board over the radiator pipe at 90 degrees to the wall (I had to take the radiator off the wall to do this) and then rotated the board clockwise into position, under the new insulated wall. The hole I drilled in the board was wide enough to give me sufficient play to enable me to rotate the board and crucially to move that board out of the way so I could rotate the second board into position, which I did in the same way but this time rotating it counter clockwise and then slot the boards back together, if that makes sense.
@BODGE71
@BODGE71 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte wow. Sounds complicated.
@jeffthewhiff
@jeffthewhiff 3 года назад
Very informative video, Charlie, and I am currently working on my laundry area floor. I live in an old house too and the floor joists are not level and there is one that is twisted, so it is going to be a challenge to level the floor and I am still wondering if it would be a good idea to hire a profession flooring installer to complete my project.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
That's exactly the problem I had, the twisting, which is what put me off attempting to level it as some people have suggested (check out HA's comment not far above this one). You could get someone in but chances are with all the research, you'll end up doing a better job. 👍🏻
@jeffthewhiff
@jeffthewhiff 3 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte Charlie, thanks for your reply to my post. Yes, I am a handy guy and own a small painting business, so I really think that I can install the floor myself, but it will just take me a bit longer to do so. Also, is it best to wait a few days before installing new wood flooring, Charlie? I have heard that by doing this, it helps the wood get used to the humidity in the home and reduces the chances of the flooring shrinking.
@bk3120
@bk3120 2 года назад
Why did you put the floor down onto the joist straight away and not on top of the old floorboards? We are in a similar situation, but we are thinking of putting a layer of sound damping insulation on top of the old floor boards and then on top the new floor... would like to understand your thoughts on that.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
I had to rip up the old floorboards because they squeaked to high heaven but also because I wanted to insulate between the joists and move the radiator across the room. For me, sound insulation isn't important but the Rockwall will help with that. There was no need to leave the footboards down as the 22mm oak can be put down without any sub structure or noggins. Also, if you're sound proofing, it's important you don't screw down the new floor. You ideally want it floating to prevent sound travelling through the joists.
@bk3120
@bk3120 2 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte Thanks, that's very sound advice, I appreciate it!
@an-sofievanrafelghem1918
@an-sofievanrafelghem1918 2 года назад
Thank you for this video Charlie, I'm feeling confident to try this now! Do you think this is possible with engineered oak which is already waxed and oiled, or would you recommend going for an unfinished board?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 2 года назад
Yes definitely. If you can find a pre finished board you're happy with, it removes the need for you to do it yourself.
@an-sofievanrafelghem1918
@an-sofievanrafelghem1918 2 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte thank you! ☺️
@shaun...6838
@shaun...6838 4 года назад
Top job C. Will this expand and contract much ?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Shouldn't move at all, except perhaps if I didn't acclimatize the boards properly.
@AccountantDoesDIY
@AccountantDoesDIY Год назад
Hi Charlie. Do you have any videos of a ground floor room being done? We’ve got T&G engineered wood floorboards throughout the hall, lounge and sitting room, fitted about 3 years ago during a refurb (done before I was into diy at all). They suddenly started to get quite bouncy and squeaky particularly around the doorways. I recall the builder at the time saying he had a hell of an issue levelling the ground floor floors before laying the boards so I suspect uneven subfloor/screed is the issue. I’ve not done any exploratory work yet, but guess I’ll just need to take off the skirting and lift up the boards one by one. I doubt the builder used screws given the screeding and think the boards are genuinely just “floating” on whatever underlay they used. I’m scratching my head as to how to fix the excessive bouncing / squeaking!
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte Год назад
Hi Chris. Sounds like they are floating as you say but also possibly real wood rather than engineered? Real wood tend to expand in high moisture which could be why they're bouncy whereas oak laminate on a ply base doesn't as it can't move. You could get a dehumidifier and see if that helps, before doing anything more invasive? If it doesn't, you're going to bed to remove some slithers of wood to relieve the upward pressure.
@raymondkelly3181
@raymondkelly3181 3 года назад
any ideas on a tongue and groove cutter for ends as I have some long runs. Thanks
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Yes, have a look at Wealdon Tools. They do some really good, reasonably priced router bits. I made my own groove as you saw, for the threshold strip, using my biscuit jointer bit.
@raymondkelly3181
@raymondkelly3181 3 года назад
Thanks Charlie. Got the exact same boards from JFJ - but have UFH. Using the glazing packers
@gaborzamborszky5992
@gaborzamborszky5992 4 года назад
How much width do you recommend between joists?
@niall456
@niall456 4 года назад
Do you not need to leave expansion gaps? I laid oak floorboards from B&Q and they expand quite visibly over a year
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Not with engineered oak as the ply sub core doesn't move. If it's solid oak, then yes it will move all over the place
@Mazza95
@Mazza95 3 года назад
What about expansion gaps as recommended by the manufacturers with floating floors? I've always been cautious not to lay engineering flooring over joists and screwing down, particularly because of the squeeking when the boards expand.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Engineered flooring doesn't expand or contract. That's the beauty of it.
@Mazza95
@Mazza95 3 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte Although engineered hardwood floors can withstand changes in temperature and moisture better than solid wood floors, it is thought that they still need an expansion gap to allow for small movements as recommended by the manufacturers. The same goes with laminate and LVT flooring. I guess what I'm wondering is, if this is the case only in floating floors or in screwed down and glued floors too.
@stephencassells2855
@stephencassells2855 3 года назад
Hi Charly, I have a drop of 8 cm from one side of the room to the other and wondered if you have any tips to enable me to level the room? Also, do you think I need underlay, my situation is really similar to yours. Cheers
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
Hi Stephen. HA a few comments above yours has explained what he did here. Basically he used 3x2 timbers cut at an angle (you'd need 4x2) and then on the other side he used a combination of Broadfix packers and timber shims where the difference was only a couple of cms. It's a massive pain and will take you ages, but well worth it. I probably wouldn't bother with underlay but if it's downstairs and draughty below it would be well worth investing in some sort of insulation to go below it.
@davidpearson3052
@davidpearson3052 4 года назад
Great video again Charlie, did you foam around the edges?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
That's my next job, David!
@davidpearson3052
@davidpearson3052 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte I'm in the middle of fitting flooring and skirting board, never thought of putting foam in there. What made you think of it?
@azza1793
@azza1793 4 года назад
So i’m assuming that by using the straps across pretty much the width of the whole room that you don’t screw down every board?
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
I screwed down every board. You just extend the straps a little for each additional line of boards that you lay.
@dannymurphy1779
@dannymurphy1779 4 года назад
Super vid Charlie! Just wondering what happens if you need to get them up??? I had a leak with an oak floor and I was able to get them up because the chipboard they were glued on had weakened with the water ingress, it was water going through the cracks not a pipe leak. Would it be possible to have some kind of access point that wasn't glued so you could open it to get a multi tool in there to cut the glue between plank and joist? If anyone can solve this access issue it's you anyway :)
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks Danny 👍 I've thought about this and if for example I had a leaking pipe I'd probably go in from below by taking the plasterboard ceiling down in the sitting room. Just praying I don't have to!
@TevjaWeston
@TevjaWeston 4 года назад
1st Looks good
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
👍👍
@adamwilliams9463
@adamwilliams9463 4 года назад
Why is it age restricted
@AndrewHelgeCox
@AndrewHelgeCox 3 года назад
Don’t you need a subfloor under these boards? I thought this kind of flooring is meant to float.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 года назад
No, not with these 22mm thick floor boards with tongue and groove all the way round. Anything thinner and you would at the very least need to insert noggins where the boards butt up to each other.
@geoffreycasey875
@geoffreycasey875 4 года назад
What is the difference between a crow bar and a gorilla bar?
@woody123930
@woody123930 4 года назад
Gorilla bar has a straighter hook. I find I get better leverage with a gorilla bar because the round curve of a crow bar can get in the way esp if your working close to a wall for example
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
@@woody123930 Thanks Tony - I missed that so I'm grateful you replied for me 👊👍
@isyt1
@isyt1 4 года назад
Wee tip: If you are going for engineered wood then make sure the top section (the slice that contains real wood) is of a decent thickness. I floored my kitchen with the cheap stuff - maybe 2mm veneer - and every drip of water darkens it at the seams. Looks shit.
@danielburton5468
@danielburton5468 4 года назад
Boards should always be joined on a joist other wise they will creak
@ZylonFPV
@ZylonFPV 4 года назад
It’s feb 2020 and you didn’t review this glue gun yet - just mentioning in case this is a useful reminder.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
It's coming, my friend! It only went on sale on 28th January, www.ebay.co.uk/itm/124063571962 and I've got a couple of videos to get out of the way first. Got to say though, it's been a complete game changer for me. Losing count of the amount of jobs I've used it for!
@ZylonFPV
@ZylonFPV 4 года назад
Cool! I know ryobi also has one on sale too. I use my glue gun a lot but it’s a really cheap one from banggood and is not very good 😛
@andyf10
@andyf10 4 месяца назад
Why grind the old nails off? Just hammer them in 🤷
@jonesconrad1
@jonesconrad1 4 года назад
-"cleverly designed"- cut to fit round the radiator
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
It shouldn't have been as complicated as it was, but I had to fit the boards around the pipes rather than vice versa, which have me a real headache. After much head scratching I realised I had to cut the boards down so each board terminated just after the pipe, introduce a new groove in the cut edge using my router and then slide the board down onto the pipe at 90 degrees to the wall and rotate it into position.
@jonesconrad1
@jonesconrad1 4 года назад
@@CharlieDIYte I was only winding you up mate (it did sounds a little oversold :) to someone who's made lots of these kinds of things), I might rewatch it I missed the groove in the board. Keep up the videos.
@jmtworm
@jmtworm 4 года назад
I was wondering how you got around the radiator pipes, cheers Charlie DIYte
@mabdub
@mabdub 4 года назад
Did you know that your video has a warning which says, " may be inappropriate for some users"? Wow, that warning is beyond me, I didn't see anything in the video that was at all offensive. I don't get it, maybe some gorillas took offense to the name of your "crow bar". I hope you didn't mean to be offensive and I'm just too thick to get the point.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 4 года назад
Thanks for pointing this out. There's been a massive change to RU-vid's policies imposed by the US government in the last week to protect kids from online content. I have to self certify now whether every video I upload contains children or is aimed at them. The warning message you refer to is a bit heavy handed but hopefully they've imposed it across the board but will make it more focused as the months progress.
@mabdub
@mabdub 4 года назад
I'm Canadian living in Canada, we know all about rules and restrictions imposed by our neighbour. Often leaves us scratching our heads in wonder.
@mabdub
@mabdub 4 года назад
Just checked your video again. The warning has since been removed.
@dash1dash2
@dash1dash2 3 месяца назад
Engineered floor should always be installed on a subfloor, not directly to floor joists. What are you doing. 😭 That's why your floors were creaking before, and they WILL creak in the future. Adding a plywood subfloor adds the missing rigidity you need to stop or at least prevent movement that creates gaps and creaks. You also have planks joining above a void. This is 100% going to fail over time as wood expands and contracts. Yikes. And don't get me started on sound and impact noises.
@CharlieDIYte
@CharlieDIYte 3 месяца назад
Absolute rubbish. This is 22mm engineered oak that the manufacturer has designed to be laid directly onto joists and also it's tongue and grooved all round so that you can join without noggins. It hasn't squeaked once since I laid it
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