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Wood You Like natural Wooden Flooring
  Knowledge base -> Floor Types

Wood You Like - How to recognise all wood floor types
 

Professional Help, Tips & Advice - that's a big difference!

Wooden Flooring types:

Wooden floors can be divided in three main groups:

Solid T&G Floorboards

These boards are made out of the same material (Oak, Maple etc) with Tongue and Groove on all four sides (although some manufacturers/saw-mills still create them only on the two long sides).
Several wooden strips glued together (2- or 3-strip) or a plank composed out of two or three layers of the same material are also part of this group and are usual called 'composed floorboards'.

Solid boards come either unfinished, where you can choose your own kind of finish (i.e. lacquer, varnish, HardWaxOil or several layers of hard wax), or pre-finished. Some unfinished floors need sanding with 100 or even 80 grit abrasives before the finish can be applied.
Wood You Like's unfinished floors normally come filled and sanded.
Most solid boards have bevelled edges on the long sides, some even on all four sides.

The maximum width of a solid board is 10 times the thickness of the board (i.e. 20mm thick is maximum 200mm wide); wider and there is a higher risk of cupping.
A solid board can be installed

  • floating (glueing the T&G) if the area is not wider than 5 - 6 meters and done by a professional floor fitter who knows what he/she is doing
  • glued down using flexible adhesive and a correct notched trowel - as long as your concrete/creed floor is sound and level (the weakest link is the quality of the concrete/screed!)
  • or nailed down directly on joist (if the thickness of the board is 18 or thicker and the joists are not further apart than 35 - 40 cm heart to heart). If using this latter method make sure you are supplied long enough planks because one plank must connect with minimal three joists.

Solid boards can be installed in all rooms/areas were there is no risk of excessive moist (e.g. bathrooms, en-suites, utility-rooms or kitchens) or rapid changes in temperature (conservatories).
Wood You Like doesn't recommend Solid floorboards to be installed on underfloor heating.

See our Solid T&G Floorboard pre-finished and unfinished range.

Related article(s):

"Solid Offers - beware of the 'short end of the stick'
What most 'Solid Offers' really are
Should I sand down cupped floors?
Installing wood floors on joists
Installing Solid Oak in various rooms
Filling large knots

Wood-Engineered Floors

This type of floor has a Solid Wood top layer with a (crossed) backing of one or two other types of material, like pine, MDF, HDF, OSB, cork or plywood. Some manufactures have started to introduce the click-system, but most still come with Tongue and Groove on all four sides.
The thickness of the Solid top layer ranges from 0.6mm (what Wood You Like calls 'veneer') to 3.6mm (standard on most products) to even 6mm (like the Duoplank boards).

(Wood-Engineered flooring is sometimes also called Laminated Flooring. Wood You Like is promoting the name Wood-Engineered to prevent confusion with the Melamine Laminate flooring which has only a photo-copy of wood (or marble or slate for that matter) impregnated with a transparent Melamine resin, core of MDF and a Melamine plastic bottom layer.)

The 'standard' Wood-Engineered board is a 2- or 3-strip, but more and more manufacturers have introduced the full plank with bevelled edges that, once installed has the same appearance as a solid plank.
Most Wood-Engineered floors come pre-finished lacquered or varnished, but the demand in the U.K. for oil-finish is on the increase. Some manufacturers even supply unfinished Wood-Engineered full planks.

Wood-Engineered floors can be installed

  • floating (glueing the T&G) if the area is not wider than 10 - 11 meter
  • glued down using flexible adhesive and a correct notched trowel - as long as your concrete/creed floor is sound and level (the weakest link is the quality of the concrete/screed!)
  • or nailed down directly on joists (if the thickness of the board is 18 or thicker and the joists are not further apart than 35 - 40 cm heart to heart). If using this latter method make sure you are supplied long enough boards because one board must connect with minimal three joists.

Wood-Engineered floors can be installed in all rooms/areas, most of them also in kitchens, utility-rooms and conservatories because of the increase stability of the (crossed) backing. Wood You Like doesn't recommend W-E with MDF backing to be used in bathrooms/en-suites.
Most of the Wood-Engineered floors are suitable for installing on underfloor heating.

Visit our showroom at Brenchley Mews, Charing (Kent, U.K.) where we can show you over 117 different wooden flooring types, including many wood-engineered floors.
Or see our on-line shop for all our the different Wood-Engineered Flooring range.

Related Articles:

Wood Floor finishes: Oil or Lacquer?
Case-study: Duoplank on Underfloor Heating
How to glue Tongue & Groove boards correctly

Parquet Flooring.

Originally this name is given to unfinished Solid planks/strips/tiles without T&G, which are either glued and nailed on a plywood or chipboard subfloor or glued directly on a concrete/screed underfloor (like mosaic tiles, herringbone or other patterns). The planks/strips/tiles are 6 to 10mm thick and are known in The Netherlands and Belgium as Overlay floors.

After installing the floor is sanded three (or more) times, first with abrasive grit 40, then with grit 80 (and the sand-dust collected). Between the second and the third sanding the collected sand-dust is mixed with a special wood-filler and 'plastered' onto the floor to fill every gap/nail hole. After the third sanding (with grit 100 or 120) the oil-finish is applied. If you plan to apply a lacquer/varnish finish sand a 4th time with grit 150.

It is possible to use bevelled planks but then the filling of the nail holes is done plank-by-plank or even hole by hole.
Usually the pattern/tile floors come with borders in a different pattern and a small strip of a different wood (like very dark Wenge) to accentuate the floor.

Related article(s)

Ranges: from Basic Oak to real Bespoke
Floor sanding, tips and best tools
Always, always, always - read the instructions!
To kit or not to kit?
Traditional Herringbone woodblock floor on concrete
Discovering an OakParquet floor - how to restore
How to restore a Parquet floor - what to be aware of

Wood Floor Guides:

"7 Easy Steps to Repair/Restore Your Parquet Floor"

"3 Easy Steps to Clean and Maintain Your Parquet Floor"

Miss-use of Parquet term.

Where in the mainland of Europe Parquet (Parket) means wooden flooring (any wooden flooring, from solid, wood-engineered to wood block design patterns like herringbone) in the UK the term Parquet is commonly used to describe the latter: wood blocks/strips in any design pattern (see above)
We have noticed however that some manufacturers and retailers use the term Parquet in the UK to promote the 3-strip Wood-Engineered (or 3-strip Wood-Veneer) flooring, which does lead to disappointed customers expecting a real (solid) ‘old-fashioned’ parquet floor instead of the T&G (or click) boards they are in fact purchasing.

Parquet flooring is labour intensive, but still one of the most stable flooring you can have.
In our Charing showroom you can see, feel, admire various large samples of Design Parquet patterns
See our range in parquet flooring in our on-line showroom.

Novel alternative for 'overlay flooring'.
To reduce the labour time and costs some Dutch and Belgium manufacturers have introduced a Wood-Engineered plank with 6mm Solid top layer on several types of 15mm thick backings. Some use OSB or pine, but most use water-resistant plywood.

Wood You Like Duoplank or Super6 - Mutiplank Oak load-bearing wood-engineered floorboard

One other advantage of the Duoplank is its load bearing capacity. Meaning it can be installed directly onto joists, is more capable of 'handling' some unevenness or slight sloops in concrete/screed floors.

Professional Help, Tips & Advice - that's a big difference!

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Solid T&G floors

Wood-Engineered

Parquet Flooring

Wood You Like Solid Oak Rustic floorboards

 

 

 

 

 

Wood You Like Real Wood Engineered Floorboards

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quick links:

Solid T&G floors

Wood-Engineered

Parquet Flooring

Wood You Like Double Herringbone in Oak Rustic

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quick links:

Solid T&G floors

Wood-Engineered

Parquet Flooring

           
   
   
Wood You Like Ltd, Brenchley Mews, School Road, Charing, Ashford, Kent TN27 0JW, UK 01233 - 713725
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