nickson71":3462ltyl said:
If the old floor is that knackered I'd take it up and put new 18mm down ........... but you need to make sure that the joist are fine
as to my mind if the excisting floor is not good enough for a 6mm ply top and then a new floor then there maybe a more serious problem
I'm aware of the problem with the floor in that the joists are only 6 x3 at 600mm centres over a span of 4.5 Metres
Current regs are 400 mm centres? with 9x3 joists over around 3-3.5 m span (approx) with T&G flooring.
The floor has dropped around 1/2 inch in the centre over about 30 years, the floor has quite a spring in it if you bounce up and down in the centre.
I know the real answer is to replace the joists or one suggestion has been to jack the floor up from downstairs and strengthen it with steel plates tied into the walls and bolted to the exisiting joists (sandwiching the joists with the plates and bolted at 400 mm intervals).
The trouble is that battens are attached to the joists which the plasterboard is pinned too which gives me very little room to put anything worthwhile in.
I'm loathed to take the floor out as obsviously it means massive work to replace the joists and ceiling and we don't have that much time and I don't have that much experience to be honest although if I had enough time I'm sure I could do most of the work.
The pitch pine is also very wide, no t&g and not in very good condition (many have split across the full length of the board).
I'm confident that the floors not going to collapse or anything as its been like this for as long as the previous owners can remember. And once it has a decent floor down over the joists I'm sure it'll add alot of strength.