Hello,
we will be covering most of our house (about 250 m² (2700 sq ft)) with design/vinyl flooring.
We talked to two professionals and, of course, received two different opinions:
One clearly recommends a floating installation with a click system.
The other strongly favors fully gluing it down.
Neither of them could really explain convincingly why “their” method is better.
So the question is: what would you recommend?
Thanks and best regards
cybergnom
we will be covering most of our house (about 250 m² (2700 sq ft)) with design/vinyl flooring.
We talked to two professionals and, of course, received two different opinions:
One clearly recommends a floating installation with a click system.
The other strongly favors fully gluing it down.
Neither of them could really explain convincingly why “their” method is better.
So the question is: what would you recommend?
Thanks and best regards
cybergnom
You can see this very clearly with vinyl flooring, even when it is glued down. Just let the sun beat down on it from the south side... The adhesive cannot withstand it, and the floor buckles. I have seen this with my own eyes, and every experienced floor installer knows how much vinyl expands or contracts. When you glue it down, the stress has to go somewhere...
C
cybergnom9 Mar 2018 14:42So obviously, there is no clear consensus here either.
We are installing underfloor heating throughout the entire house and have chosen a Joka Classic.
We are installing underfloor heating throughout the entire house and have chosen a Joka Classic.
KingSong schrieb:
I would definitely not glue vinyl flooring onto underfloor heating! That causes so many problems... Vinyl flooring expands and contracts much more than wood, and if you add sunlight exposure in summer, a wavy floor is almost guaranteed!Complete nonsense, absolutely not trueKingSong schrieb:
You can clearly see this with vinyl flooring, even when it is glued down. Just let the sun bake it on the south side... The adhesive can’t hold up and it warps... Seen it with my own eyes, and every experienced flooring installer knows how much vinyl expands or contracts. If you glue it down, the stress has to go somewhere...Sorry, that’s nonsense. I have installed vinyl flooring glued down in several houses over the years—without any problems. Every flooring professional has always recommended gluing it, especially where we had underfloor heating.
KingSong schrieb:
I would definitely not glue vinyl flooring over underfloor heating! That causes so much trouble... Vinyl expands and contracts much more than wood, and when you add sunlight exposure during summer, a wavy floor is practically guaranteed!So, two specialist stores actually recommended gluing it down to us. Especially because of the underfloor heating, as the heat transfer is supposedly better with glued flooring. Plus, you can easily replace a single plank if something happens.I'm not sure, but is it allowed to install click flooring in large rooms in one continuous area? I vaguely remember that with click systems, there’s a limit on the surface area. But again, I haven’t researched this thoroughly.
We’ve already installed click flooring nicely; I imagine that gluing it won’t be more complicated. Click laminate is definitely easier to install with the locking system. Maybe it was just the manufacturer [emoji848] Although it wasn’t a cheap floor.
Well, we’ll see how the gluing goes and if any waves appear.
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