Experienced professional installers of hardwood flooring will find themselves right at

home installing bamboo hardwood flooring. Although every installer has a style of his own, guidelines for installing bamboo hardwood flooring are the same as those recommended for installing hardwood flooring in general.

Those recommendations have been developed over several years by The National Wood Flooring Association  (NWFA), The National Oak Flooring Manufacturers Association (NOFMA) and The Hardwood Council. Another good source of installing and finishing information can be found on-line at
Wood Floors Online.

   

Some Installation Basics

Designers, architects, builders or homeowners in a position of overseeing an installation by professional installers should keep in mind some simple "rules" that apply in the laying of any hardwood floor.
 
Make sure the sub floor is dry, level and free of squeaks. Measure the
  moisture content of the sub floor in several locations.
Unpack the flooring and let it age in the room for a week to ten days.
All wood flooring, including bamboo, displays some slight color
  variation board to board. Unpack and lay out ahead of the installer (called "racking") four or five cartons of flooring so that color variations can be mixed in a random pattern and not consolidated in a single area.
Begin laying the floor from the end of the room that is the aesthetic
  focal point. This way, the partial board that has to be top nailed or other corrections due to the actual geometry of the room, occur at the visually "unimportant" end of the room.
   
Make certain that sufficient expansion space is left at the perimeter of the installation. In climate areas where
  the humidity of the room varies seasonally very little, a minimum expansion space of .25 inches is recommended. In areas where humidity variation is high from season to season, as in the south-central United States, an expansion space of .75 inches is suggested. The bamboo hardwood flooring behaves in a similar fashion to other hardwoods; your local professional installer should be your "expert" source on this as well as other installation and finishing questions.
 
The end joints of the floor boards should be randomly
  positioned one to another to avoid visually symmetrical patterns like "stair casing".
   
   
Some Finishing Suggestions  
   
We recommend three sandings. A 60 grit sanding,
  followed by 100 grit polishing and then a "buffing" with 150.
   
In finishing the floor, we have had good success with a solvent-based polyurethane from Bona Kemie; one
  sealer coat followed by a buffing to smooth the grain and then two top coats. A water-based urethane is often preferred because the odor during installation is minimum. However, our experience with the solvent-based coatings for all types of floors is better from a wear standpoint.
   
For those non-professionals who want to acquire more solid oversight-skills for flooring installation and
  finishing techniques, we recommend reviewing "Hardwood Floors. Laying, Sanding and Finishing" by Don Bollinger. This is an excellent, clearly-written, illustrated resource for layman and professional alike from the Fine Homebuilding series published by The Taunton Press in Connecticut.
 
 
 
   


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