Thursday, May 25, 2017

What Causes Noisy Wood Flooring

Here is just one of the causes that will create noise on a wood floor.  Anytime there is vertical movement within the wood floor system noise will occur.  When the floor is depressed through walking on, this allows vertical movement, resulting in noise heard, and often results in a concern voiced by the owner to the seller/contractor.

Flooring noise can be of multiple causes however in the attached video shows where the tongue side of the plank is well secured and the groove side is allowed to move vertically.  This is caused from the milling (side match) being misaligned and allowing the wood floor to move.  You will see the groove side of the plank is not resting tight against the subfloor the way it supposed to be.  As you can see in the diagram the space is to be above the tongue, not below the tongue.  The amount of space above the tongue would be per manufacture specification and typically runs between .005" to .015".


The only way to determine this noise condition is through destructive testing, removing a section of the flooring to have 100% identification.

National Wood Floor Consultants takes the extra time during all of our inspections to find the causation of the noise related concerns or any other concern.  



National Wood Floor Consultants
19989 East Bethel Blvd. Cedar, MN
763-413-7897 
www.NWFC.net 

Sunday, January 26, 2014

What’s the Proper Humidity for Wood Floors? 


The question is often asked “What is the proper humidity to keep my wood floors looking good?” The truth is there is no set limit for a “one setting fits all” approach. Much depends on building envelope, window construction style, window treatments, outdoor temperature, etc. Following some very simple rules will help minimize the possibility of window condensation and gapping of your wood floors.
Indoor relative humidity is based off what the current outdoor temperature is and plays a direct relationship on glass condensation. For example, in Minneapolis one may experience an outdoor temperature during the day of 20°F and -10°F at night. This means, based upon the chart below, the interior humidity should fluctuate between 20% and 35% and provide minimal to no window condensation.
Window Condensation
Many factors come in to play that we must pay attention to like glass temperature. To reduce condensation/frost we must always keep in mind the window dewpoint temperature and household life styles. If outdoor temperature is +10° F and indoor humidity is at 30% and indoor room temperature is at 70°F, the glass dewpoint temperature is at 36°F. This simply means if glass temperature is 36°F or below condensation and/or frost will occur. Many things can influence glass temperature. Leaving inside window screens on during the winter or pulling the window treatments closed at night keeps warm air from keeping the glass warm. A set back programmable thermostat and programmed for 60°F at night will cause moisture to condense on windows. If we look at the humidity chart above, the key is to have the indoor humidity follow the outdoor temperature. This can be done manually by setting the humidistat in the morning and the evening or install an outdoor sensor that tells the humidistat the appropriate humidity setting and control it automatically.
Wood Flooring Requirements
The National Wood Flooring Association states the optimal performance for solid wood flooring is when inside relative humidity is kept between 30 to 50%. This doesn’t mean if we keep humidity at 30% shrinkage won’t occur as gapping up the thickness of a dime is likely. These numbers would be considered normal seasonal shrinkage for wood floors. If the relative humidity drops to the high teens (long term) one would expect greater than normal gapping due to wood flooring moisture loss.
How to Minimize Shrinkage and Condensation
The first thing we must understand is the wood requirement (30 TO 50% RH) is more a seasonal concern rather than a daily concern or even hourly. If the indoor humidity drops to 12% for the day or even a few days is not a huge issue as long as the HVAC system has the ability to raise humidity to recommended limits by outdoor temperature. In many cases we are on a 12 hour cycle, humidity ranging from 20 to 35% during January where other months allow for more stable humidity levels without condensation concerns. The greatest problem we see in the wood floor industry is where the homeowner dries out their home during early winter (which is preventable) and when January hits their floor goes under heavy stress with boards gaping splitting, cracking, etc. Think of a rubber band, it can be pulled and released several times without breaking. However, you can stretch and hold the rubber band, then stretch some more until it breaks. Wood fiber reacts the very same way, expanding and contracting to the conditions they are exposed to. When the fibers are stretched due to low humidity conditions they will stretch to a point of fracture. The key is proper humidity control to prevent window condensation and wood shrinkage. There are many new humidification systems that have outdoor sensors to control the amount of indoor humidity based on outdoor temperature along with off-site monitoring.


Thursday, October 17, 2013


Engineered Flooring Requirements

Over the past decade there has been huge controversy over engineered vs. solid wood flooring. Engineered flooring was designed to be more dimensional stable than solid under certain conditions. Most manufacturers have found by maintaining proper relative humidity (typically between 35 to 55%) engineered flooring remains reasonably stable where solid flooring will see side affects like gapping. Engineered will also see side affects but at lesser amounts.

If engineered flooring is exposed to high or low RH conditions one may see irreversible affects like checking, splitting, shear, delamination, dry cupping, etc. When environmental conditions go beyond the caution zone and into the guaranteed to fail zone these side effects will become permanent. Where solid wood flooring will see side affects as well but usually will just have larger gaps between the planks.

Listed below is a chart which helps outline some of the relative humidity boundaries by the flooring manufacturers. Retailers should educate their clients in pre-sale regarding proper relative humidity requirements and the possibility of the effects in the “Guaranteed to Fail” zone.

To download the factory finished performance document click here.




Monday, September 2, 2013

Floor Inspectors Guild of North America


I recently attended the Guild to learn more about engineered construction flooring materials.  Professor Hindman and Professor Loferski from Virginia Tech along with Professor Phil Mitchell with N. Carolina State University led the course.  The course was attended by leading inspectors and manufacturers around the country.  The professors broke down the subject matter(s) into terms that we could understand while providing the wood science behind it.  The subjects taught in this course are listed as follows:
  • Material Properties of Wood vs. Engineered Flooring
  • Mechanical Properties
  • Moisture Content Measurement in Engineered Wood Products
  • Understanding Balanced Construction
  • Failures in Engineered Flooring
  • Radiant Flooring
  • Testing Standards for Engineered Flooring
  • Moisture in Buildings (Building Science)
  • Lab work at Virginia Tech—Microscope Evaluation of Engineered Flooring, Moisture Measurements, Janka testing and bondline testing
This 3 day course provided extended knowledge of wood dynamics and how it relates to in service usage.  It is evident by the course titles they are very in-depth subjects.  One example is Dr. Loferski (as shown below) explained free vs. restrained expansion theories of engineered flooring, modulus of elasticity, advantages of microscopic cell evaluation, plus much, much more.




Cell Evaluation
Understanding Free vs. Restrained Expansion

Free expansion is the movement of solid wood, while the plys of engineered restrict expansion movement.

I give Selva Lee Tucker (course administrator) many thanks for putting this program together and bringing continuing education to another level.  For those who couldn’t make it or those who are thinking of attending the Guild, I would highly recommend the next one.  It was well worth the time and money invested.