Most tongue and groove flooring materials are wood or wood derivatives and fall into one of three types.
Tongue in tongue and groove laminate.
During installation the tongue of one plank fits into the groove of its neighbor.
A floor installation kit the kit easier than buying each piece separately.
How to install tongue and groove laminate flooring 1.
All products are solid wood precision milled and kiln dried.
Unlike hardwood flooring engineered flooring can be.
Stick the blade inside the groove and cut off the bottom from the inside or use a table saw.
The tongue and groove profile uses the method of fitting boards together edge to edge allowing two flat pieces to be joined strongly together to make a single flat surface.
Here s a tip for cutting the groove.
Tongue and groove are often used in conjunction with wood floorboards sheet paneling wainscot and any number of other materials where a tight solid seam is required between separate pieces.
Installation is easy making it a great product for do it yourselfers.
Insert the glued tongue of the new plank into the groove on the existing flooring and drop the plank into place.
Apply a bead of wood glue to all four edges of the new plank.
Floating means that it isn t attached.
Tongues stick out past the finished wood.
In addition to styles made from other laminate products designed to mimic the look of wood cobblestone or tile.
You also have to staple into the tongue side.
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Each plank has two kinds of edges.
Solid wood engineered and laminate.
A moisture barrier pad 3.
Each laminate flooring plank contains a tongue and groove these edges of the board cause your locking system to click together.
The tongue and the groove each run the entire perimeter of the piece on all four sides.
They slip into the grooves which are notches or channels in the planks.
Tongue and groove basics.
Although tongue and groove planks are sometimes beveled along the lengthwise edge like shiplap more often these.
The tongue on laminate flooring is the small flat edge on one side of the board this is the top edge that is going to angle and lock into the bottom side of another board.
The opposite side the bottom side will contain the groove edge which is a larger wider side that contains a lip to hold the boards together when locked.
One tongue fits firmly into the groove of the adjoining board.
The most common shape or form of tongue and groove flooring is the plank which ranges from about 2 1 4 to 6 inches wide and is sold in a variety of lengths to create the attractive staggered look of.