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deep.BTUz wrote:Anyone have any experience sealing exposed brick? My kitchen is that way, and I love the look, but am not into the dust. The problem is that most sealed exposed brick I've seen, while functional, doesn't look great. It gives it an almost plastic appearance. Is that just inevitable, or are there different techniques you can use that yield different aesthetic results?

elisha wiesner wrote:Good luck. Heavy duty oven cleaner can work but honestly it's probably angle grinder time.
Even if you manage to remove it, it will have seeped into the concrete and stained it.

Jim wrote:MrFood wrote:
So, had some builders do some work in the bathroom. Asked them to lay the nice T&G flooring which I'd approximately cut to size and oiled already for the job - and the spastics screwed the things down. Hundreds of huge, badly aligned screws running up and down the bathroom now.
Anyway - there's no way I'm gonna replace these so, is there an effective way of hiding all the screws? I mean, I know I can fill over them but is it just gonna look even worse? Is there a better solution?
I'll throw in some more ideas, there have already been some good ones.
1. Fine sawdust mixed with Lacquer Sealer, thin wood glue, or if you can find something called Wood Flour Cement. Sand down a piece of scrap wood with 100 grit sandpaper. Collect the dust, mix it in small amounts and fill the floor. Sand off any excess and re-oil. Color match will be almost exact.
2. Wood Plugs - Like the suggestions before, but instead of a dowel, use premade hardwood plugs. See http://www.chicagohardwoodflooring.com/floor-plugs for reference. They come in a variety of sizes, and are tapered to stay in the hole. Use a contrasting color wood like American Walnut for a "Ships Plank" look.
Good Luck!


floog wrote:Jim wrote:MrFood wrote:
So, had some builders do some work in the bathroom. Asked them to lay the nice T&G flooring which I'd approximately cut to size and oiled already for the job - and the spastics screwed the things down. Hundreds of huge, badly aligned screws running up and down the bathroom now.
Anyway - there's no way I'm gonna replace these so, is there an effective way of hiding all the screws? I mean, I know I can fill over them but is it just gonna look even worse? Is there a better solution?
I'll throw in some more ideas, there have already been some good ones.
1. Fine sawdust mixed with Lacquer Sealer, thin wood glue, or if you can find something called Wood Flour Cement. Sand down a piece of scrap wood with 100 grit sandpaper. Collect the dust, mix it in small amounts and fill the floor. Sand off any excess and re-oil. Color match will be almost exact.
2. Wood Plugs - Like the suggestions before, but instead of a dowel, use premade hardwood plugs. See http://www.chicagohardwoodflooring.com/floor-plugs for reference. They come in a variety of sizes, and are tapered to stay in the hole. Use a contrasting color wood like American Walnut for a "Ships Plank" look.
Good Luck!
Hi Mr F - I know you've had plenty of advice on this, so I'm coming late. All the previous ideas are good, and it's just up to you to choose the approach you like. Jim's sawdust + glue mix has worked well for friends.
What I would say is that the screws might not be a bad thing. If much of the bathroom plumbing is above ground, then no problems. But if the plumbing is underneath the floor then screws make the pipework easily accessible for any changes, investigations or repairs. In our house, with three children and a wife with hair like Aslan, pipes are always getting blocked or stuff lost and poked where it shouldn't be. If we want to move a toilet or sink, which we will do in the next couple of years, then it does makes things just that bit neater.
I had horrible experiences with cut nails mentioned above. Very secure sure, but split the wood and difficult to get up without levering and cutting the wood when we needed access.
Good luck with the work.





EmpireStateTroopers wrote:deep.BTUz wrote:
Anyone have any experience painting wood floors? I know it's allegedly resale suicide, but I don't really care. They're not that great of floors to start with. I like the gloss look (see below). Are these realistic? Are they going to be an upkeep nightmare?
I used this 'corpoxy' industrial floor coating at the cafe in an area that regularly gets wet (painted onto freshly laid plywood) and it's holding up fine. Not sure how well it works on sealed wood, but if you sand it down first you should be fine.


















scott wrote:Dunno, from what I've been reading screws are superior to nails when it comes to wood flooring. Probably the reason they used nails all along was they were fast and easy, not because they were the best. Nails in wood floors = creaky floors down the road from what I've read anyway. And one of the solutions is to upgrade to screws. So you could be happy you have screws.

John Houlihan wrote:scott wrote:Dunno, from what I've been reading screws are superior to nails when it comes to wood flooring. Probably the reason they used nails all along was they were fast and easy, not because they were the best. Nails in wood floors = creaky floors down the road from what I've read anyway. And one of the solutions is to upgrade to screws. So you could be happy you have screws.
Screwing your wood floor down is stupid. A properly laid, nailed, wood floor should last you about, oh I don't know, 300 years with negligible creakage.
iembalm wrote:Reverse Cleavage Drow Queen/Bugbear ownage
Boombats wrote:One can only truly see shit from the inside of the bowl.


MrFood wrote:Just to give some settlement to the debate: I installed a floor in the living room with a porta-nailer (the weird angled clout nail gun thing) and it is beautiful, flat, free of creaks and best of all - THOUSANDS OF SCREWS ARE NOWHERE TO BE SEEN. You have to go to the bathroom if you want to see that.
But, agreed - should I need to get to pipe work under the bathroom floor the screws have made it a damn site easier. But as I've had an entire, brand new bathroom suite and boiler and plumbing system installed within the last two years I have precisely NO PLANS to go ripping that floor up in the next... Ever.

John Houlihan wrote:scott wrote:Dunno, from what I've been reading screws are superior to nails when it comes to wood flooring. Probably the reason they used nails all along was they were fast and easy, not because they were the best. Nails in wood floors = creaky floors down the road from what I've read anyway. And one of the solutions is to upgrade to screws. So you could be happy you have screws.
Screwing your wood floor down is stupid. A properly laid, nailed, wood floor should last you about, oh I don't know, 300 years with negligible creakage.

scott wrote:John Houlihan wrote:scott wrote:Dunno, from what I've been reading screws are superior to nails when it comes to wood flooring. Probably the reason they used nails all along was they were fast and easy, not because they were the best. Nails in wood floors = creaky floors down the road from what I've read anyway. And one of the solutions is to upgrade to screws. So you could be happy you have screws.
Screwing your wood floor down is stupid. A properly laid, nailed, wood floor should last you about, oh I don't know, 300 years with negligible creakage.
300 years eh? Well then it's safe for me to say of the numerous apartments I've lived in, in Chicago and DC and VA, that none of them had a properly done floor. I can't recall a single 50, 75, 100 year old floor that didn't creak. But then again you know what they say, back in the old days they didn't know what they were doin and they cut corners left and right cause shit wasn't built to last.
I'm not questioning whether you know more about this stuff than I do. I'm sure you do. All I was offering up is what I've read on some websites, and in a DIY home repair book I got for Christmas. I couldn't tell you if any of them are wrong or right. Cheers.




scott wrote:Dunno, from what I've been reading screws are superior to nails when it comes to wood flooring. Probably the reason they used nails all along was they were fast and easy, not because they were the best. Nails in wood floors = creaky floors down the road from what I've read anyway. And one of the solutions is to upgrade to screws. So you could be happy you have screws.
Sabol wrote:
black taj wrote:Most floors squeak because the sub floor moves. Screw the sub floor, and nail the wood floor.
EmpireStateTroopers wrote:Staples suck and often lead to creaks. Cleats do not. Rent a cleat nailer.
deep.BTUz wrote:

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