Why you should let your flooring acclimatise

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RogerS

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Just taken delivery of some rather nice oak flooring destined for my study.

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It came bundled in plastic sheeting and straight out of the plastic, the moisture content (using my Wagner meter) was around 5%. That was two days ago. It is now up to 7%. If I ever doubted waiting for wood to acclimatise.....
 

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I can vouch for this. I laid a real oak floor having just slit the plastic and left the packs for a week or so. Then went to the Alps for a motorbike trip. Half way through the week wife phoned to tell my the floor was about 3" high in the centre. By the time I got back home it was about 6" high. I had to cut about an inch off the edges to settle it down.

And before you ask I had left a good expansion gap.

Will never do that again. The Fein was a godsend. Cannot think of another tool that would have sorted it.

Mick
 
I had to cut an expansion gap round our floor a while ago, it started to buckle in the middle as the person who put it in did not leave an expansion gap. Had to do it with a dremel and a chisel as it is all i had. Took a while but it sorted it out
 
I've now completed 4 rooms downstairs with solid oak flooring, I leave mine to acclimatise for about 6 weeks before I start to lay. Luckily I've not had any lifting, so it does pay to wait awhile before laying.
 

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