It is radiant heat.
Gluing hardwood flooring to concrete with radiant heat.
Doing so may cause damage to the radiant heat tubes and be a big expense if the heating system has to be repaired.
At least not in any convenient kind of way.
With radiant heat systems it s not just the responsibility of the hardwood floor professional to be on top of their game.
It is also the responsibility of the general contractor plumber and hvac systems professional to put care into the installation of a radiant heat system so that all flooring substrates perform well and look great for years.
It s also a great option if you choose to incorporate a radiant heat system don t forget the vapor retarder in contrast gluing hardwood to concrete provides you with a very permanent solution.
As hardwood was peaking in popularity in the 1960s high mass radiant heat was also becoming a household name.
Some installers will say it is safe to install widths up to 3 inches but smaller widths will have less overall movement in response to the radiant heating.
Since concrete flooring is homogeneous concrete alone is a poor choice for radiant heating.
I guess we would also need a vapour barrier.
Is that floor plus underlay too thick to experience the heat.
The cut and thickness of the wear layer lamina peeled sliced or sawn may also affect how the floor performs over radiant heat.
Radiant systems require layered flooring so that the tubing can be hidden under the top layer.
Heated hardwood flooring is the single most effective luxury upgrade for your home.
With launstein hardwood floors you can enjoy the beauty of natural wood with the comfort of radiant heat.
Composition concrete and wood are very different types of materials.
14 years later still in good shape and seems to keep house warm and comfortable.
Engineered flooring with a less stable wear layer species such as hickory beech and maple are not normally best suited over radiant heat unless otherwise suggested by the flooring manufacturer.
I do not recommend gluing down any flooring directly to the exposed radiant heat piping.
A floating engineered wood flooring installation on concrete can be an excellent choice if your subfloor is below grade.
The radiant heat that emits through the slab can wreak havoc on hardwood flooring pieces that are greater than 2 25 inches wide.
But hardwood and high mass radiant heat were not compatible.
We were told the only way to go was a wood engineered floor glued down.
And there were many reasons for this.
Also my neighbor glued his laminate over the radiant heat so there are no gaps during heating season is that a good solution.
We will be laying 12mm laminate plus the 2mm under layer on concrete.
We wanted a wood floor and spent a lot of time talking to flooring experts.
In 1973 it has a concrete slab foundation with radiant heat water runs thru copper tubing within slab.