09-13-2020, 04:56 PM
Spent the week installing flooring in the Nebraska City house. Went up there planning to demo the closest/wall between the two bedrooms, hang a new kitchen/back door, install some trim, finish wiring the garage, AND install the flooring everywhere but the bedrooms. I DID demo the closets/wall... so a truckload of plaster/lath to the dump... but the flooring took waaaay longer than I expected. Even with periodic help from LOML.
Anyhoo... 3/4 3" natural red oak Mullican flooring. No effort to match color/grain anywhere... just put it down. That's what Jean wanted. I had 20+ cartons of floor up there, and four or five longish pieces had unmanageable 'bends' on the tongue edge. Cut those up for inside the pantry. Maybe 5% of minor 'bowing' on the groove edge on anything over about 4', but only two or three pieces that were too much for the nailer to close up. Very, very little bowing along the end-to-end length. Handful of pieces that were machined a wee bit shy of 3". Enough to be noticeable if you don't catch them before nailing. Overall... perhaps a bit better than what I expected. Plenty of short pieces, to be sure.
Had one jam with the Freeman flooring nailer due to operator loading issues
, and a couple of misfires when I got too close to the wall and didn't hit the plunger right. Review of this affordable nailer... worth every penny, and probaby twice that. I simply can't imagine doing this with a hammer like the old days. Same for the poor bastage who nailed lath all day.
And if anybody knows how to fix that crooked storage door on the range, lemme know. I didn't see anything that jumped out as obvious.
Anyhoo... 3/4 3" natural red oak Mullican flooring. No effort to match color/grain anywhere... just put it down. That's what Jean wanted. I had 20+ cartons of floor up there, and four or five longish pieces had unmanageable 'bends' on the tongue edge. Cut those up for inside the pantry. Maybe 5% of minor 'bowing' on the groove edge on anything over about 4', but only two or three pieces that were too much for the nailer to close up. Very, very little bowing along the end-to-end length. Handful of pieces that were machined a wee bit shy of 3". Enough to be noticeable if you don't catch them before nailing. Overall... perhaps a bit better than what I expected. Plenty of short pieces, to be sure.
Had one jam with the Freeman flooring nailer due to operator loading issues
, and a couple of misfires when I got too close to the wall and didn't hit the plunger right. Review of this affordable nailer... worth every penny, and probaby twice that. I simply can't imagine doing this with a hammer like the old days. Same for the poor bastage who nailed lath all day.
And if anybody knows how to fix that crooked storage door on the range, lemme know. I didn't see anything that jumped out as obvious.