Sawdust=manglitter
Established Member
I'm slowly but surely doing up my house (when the misses can drag me out of the workshop that is), and I'll be making my own solid oak skirting boards for the living room.
I've removed the old 4" skirting and I've laid the new solid oak floor, but my quandary is that I currently have heating pipes which used to be tacked to the top of the old skirting, so these pipes are now approx 80-90mm above the top of the new flooring. So I've been um-ing and ar-ing whether I should compromise on the look and install short 80mm-ish oak skirting boards with the pipes on top... or whether it's sensible to rout a rebate to the back of the skirting to house the heating pipes and make them a nice height? (dont want the aggro or cost of channeling into the walls or having to change the plumbing in any way to hide the pipes)
I've already got enough kiln dried 6x1" Oak planks which are long enough, but what i'm wondering is whether routing a rebate to the back to house the pipes will crack and warp the oak over time due to the fluctuating heat from the pipes?? Has anyone got any experience doing this themselves? Would you get some sort of lagging to go around the pipes for some limited protection?
Any advice or experience would be gratefully received
I've removed the old 4" skirting and I've laid the new solid oak floor, but my quandary is that I currently have heating pipes which used to be tacked to the top of the old skirting, so these pipes are now approx 80-90mm above the top of the new flooring. So I've been um-ing and ar-ing whether I should compromise on the look and install short 80mm-ish oak skirting boards with the pipes on top... or whether it's sensible to rout a rebate to the back of the skirting to house the heating pipes and make them a nice height? (dont want the aggro or cost of channeling into the walls or having to change the plumbing in any way to hide the pipes)
I've already got enough kiln dried 6x1" Oak planks which are long enough, but what i'm wondering is whether routing a rebate to the back to house the pipes will crack and warp the oak over time due to the fluctuating heat from the pipes?? Has anyone got any experience doing this themselves? Would you get some sort of lagging to go around the pipes for some limited protection?
Any advice or experience would be gratefully received