I've not posted for a while and this is going to be a long one but I hope of interest to folks -
Preamble - a while back I bought an old property circa 1920's which had part woodblock and part quarry tile flooring and as part of a new extension wanted to lay the entire ground floor with similar parquet even though the original was in a pretty sorry state.
I sourced on eBay 2 separate pallets of similar style pitch-pine flooring and then events kinda overtook me - work, health issues etc such that these pallets ended up under tarpaulins and felt in my garden for circa 7 years and so this is how I ended up processing and laying them, albeit it is still work in process and only ~10 sq m out of a total of 60 to go....
Looking online at what others had done was instructive however most to my mind weren't doing it right in that this type of flooring was commonplace up to the 1920's at which point synthetic materials were available that enabled cheap carpet covered flooring for the masses.
All the examples I could find of re-laying this type of flooring seemed to focus on how to manage the fact that typically this was originally laid using hot bitumen and ignoring the fact that now some 100+ years later as we all know wood does, the blocks had shrunk or moved and were anything but regular in block shape!
My plan was to obviate these problems by trimming the blocks such that each were all the same dimensions and thus could be laid together whatever their heritage with impunity!
So because of the mixed history of the blocks I had - existing + 2 separate eBay purchase I had to work out the minimum common size that I could trim them to whilst not creating too much wastage and across the most worn to the least worn I ended up with a size of 225 x 75 x 20mm.
So come last August I thought I'd unpack the pallets and start moving the blocks back into the house to acclimatise there whilst I set too to resize them
Some wet rot evident on some blocks - but in the main they are dry. I did find a few desiccated rodents amongst the blocks -
Against advice elsewhere on this forum I planned to make a sliding jig for my bandsaw and using some hardened M42 tipped blades here was the 1st attempt -
I was processing them in batches of maybe 2.5 sq m at a time as otherwise I would run out of space in my workshop, and what became clear was that after bandsawing maybe 3-4 sq m the blade was well and truly blunt, and at £24 a blade this was not an economic route to follow.
Next step was to try running the blocks through my old Startrite PT260 thicknesser, and this seemed to work quite well, not too much snipe and relatively fast to take 2-3mm off in each pass. It was however a truly filthy job and even with my cyclone chip extractor running the entire workshop was covered in filthy dust. Also after every batch the feed roller and beds needed cleaning with cellulose spirit to remove gummed on bitumin.
This batch of blocks had come from a house that had seen some wear and tear and it looked like the floor had been sanded and varnished at least twice and the sides of the blocks had significant dirt encrusted lacquer on the sides which I found to be incredibly abrasive even blunting a carbide scraper, so I tried coating one side with cheapo paint stripper and leaving it overnight. This seemed to work fine and the following day it was relatively easy to scrape the accumulated crud off one of the long sides such that I could subsequently plane that edge at a true 90 to the planed base on my jointer.
Having now 2 sides prepped I needed to make a jig to do the final cuts on the other 3 sides on my small table saw - plan was to take ~2mm off both ends to remove darkened bits where the grain had shrunk and then using the fence to cut the remaining uncleaned long side.
I machined up a scrap of maple to make a T track to fit the saw and then with a scrap of ply and a block of sapele and a 2mm shim of brass made a slide, fence and adjustable end-stop to finish the blocks -
underside of the slide with four embedded nylon guides
T-slot guide
Guide in-situ with a test block ready to trim end - fence to the right is set to the required width...
So once through the saw as in the pic with the brass shim up, turn the block around and put shim down to take 2mm of the other end, then run through the saw against the fence to trim the final side.
Prepped block -
To be continued.....
Preamble - a while back I bought an old property circa 1920's which had part woodblock and part quarry tile flooring and as part of a new extension wanted to lay the entire ground floor with similar parquet even though the original was in a pretty sorry state.
I sourced on eBay 2 separate pallets of similar style pitch-pine flooring and then events kinda overtook me - work, health issues etc such that these pallets ended up under tarpaulins and felt in my garden for circa 7 years and so this is how I ended up processing and laying them, albeit it is still work in process and only ~10 sq m out of a total of 60 to go....
Looking online at what others had done was instructive however most to my mind weren't doing it right in that this type of flooring was commonplace up to the 1920's at which point synthetic materials were available that enabled cheap carpet covered flooring for the masses.
All the examples I could find of re-laying this type of flooring seemed to focus on how to manage the fact that typically this was originally laid using hot bitumen and ignoring the fact that now some 100+ years later as we all know wood does, the blocks had shrunk or moved and were anything but regular in block shape!
My plan was to obviate these problems by trimming the blocks such that each were all the same dimensions and thus could be laid together whatever their heritage with impunity!
So because of the mixed history of the blocks I had - existing + 2 separate eBay purchase I had to work out the minimum common size that I could trim them to whilst not creating too much wastage and across the most worn to the least worn I ended up with a size of 225 x 75 x 20mm.
So come last August I thought I'd unpack the pallets and start moving the blocks back into the house to acclimatise there whilst I set too to resize them
Some wet rot evident on some blocks - but in the main they are dry. I did find a few desiccated rodents amongst the blocks -
Against advice elsewhere on this forum I planned to make a sliding jig for my bandsaw and using some hardened M42 tipped blades here was the 1st attempt -
I was processing them in batches of maybe 2.5 sq m at a time as otherwise I would run out of space in my workshop, and what became clear was that after bandsawing maybe 3-4 sq m the blade was well and truly blunt, and at £24 a blade this was not an economic route to follow.
Next step was to try running the blocks through my old Startrite PT260 thicknesser, and this seemed to work quite well, not too much snipe and relatively fast to take 2-3mm off in each pass. It was however a truly filthy job and even with my cyclone chip extractor running the entire workshop was covered in filthy dust. Also after every batch the feed roller and beds needed cleaning with cellulose spirit to remove gummed on bitumin.
This batch of blocks had come from a house that had seen some wear and tear and it looked like the floor had been sanded and varnished at least twice and the sides of the blocks had significant dirt encrusted lacquer on the sides which I found to be incredibly abrasive even blunting a carbide scraper, so I tried coating one side with cheapo paint stripper and leaving it overnight. This seemed to work fine and the following day it was relatively easy to scrape the accumulated crud off one of the long sides such that I could subsequently plane that edge at a true 90 to the planed base on my jointer.
Having now 2 sides prepped I needed to make a jig to do the final cuts on the other 3 sides on my small table saw - plan was to take ~2mm off both ends to remove darkened bits where the grain had shrunk and then using the fence to cut the remaining uncleaned long side.
I machined up a scrap of maple to make a T track to fit the saw and then with a scrap of ply and a block of sapele and a 2mm shim of brass made a slide, fence and adjustable end-stop to finish the blocks -
underside of the slide with four embedded nylon guides
T-slot guide
Guide in-situ with a test block ready to trim end - fence to the right is set to the required width...
So once through the saw as in the pic with the brass shim up, turn the block around and put shim down to take 2mm of the other end, then run through the saw against the fence to trim the final side.
Prepped block -
To be continued.....
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