I fitted new boards in my bathroom, and I screwed the boards down. I later decided to get new central heating installed. The so-called heating engineer didn't bother to unscrew the boards, he ripped them out with a crowbar destroying my work. I had to replace all the boards he had damaged. A costly job.
Thank you for the video. Very useful and encouraging for a novice like me. I've got old 1950s flat floor nails in my floorboards and I'm wondering what tools could be good for removing those if some are left behind after the old floorboards come up. Great backing soundtrack by the way. What's the soundtrack? I'd like to hear more of that.
I actually prefer moisture resistant chipboard flooring myself as there are no creeks when put down correctly, the only reason I used floorboards is because it was an insurance job so it has to go back the same.
Its an insurance job so there was no insulation before so unless the customer wants to pay for it which they didn't, then I am not allowed to put it back , and the customer wanted staggered joints not long lengths , does that answer your question?