Thin or cracked edges of flooring boards is an indication that the floor has been oversanded.
Edges of wood breaking off on 100 year old floor.
This can be a big pain and very.
Many species of trees don t grow for as long as they would have historically before they are cut down.
The tops of the grooves have worn thin and will break if you sand them again.
Paint can easily fill up your sanding pad which can add more cost and time to the project.
Mike take a 4 x 4 or 6 x 6 post and notch the top to accept 2 2 x 8 s on either side of this post and bolt or nail these together.
Work slowly checking the depth every few passes.
100 year old house floor joist cracks.
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Debris in the finish.
But when a floor has lots of wear and deep scratches it s best to sand down the floor to bare wood and refinish it.
You should end up with what looks like a capital t for support.
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Refinishing 100 year old wood floors.
One floor had multiple coats and i had to sand down the edges using a grinder with a 40 grit pad.
Chris president of frank h.
As the wood expands compression can result as the boards are crushed together deforming the boards at the edges.
Next use a router and or a sharp chisel to carefully pare away wood within the scribed lines to the depth of the original groove g.
Rehaping 100 year old hard wood floors.
Support the floor in the middle of the long portion of the crack.
Mark the ends of the fractured area then measure 11 4 further and mark this measurement across the width of the board f.
However usually high rh is the culprit.
For example you don t see a wide plank pine floor very often.
Further most trees that are used for wood floors today are fast growing and fast to be cut down.
Shows a patching job at a beach cottage that is.
This is when the edges of a board are higher than its center due to moisture which causes the wood to expand.
Wide plank floors are almost always more than 100 years old.
This can occur after water spills onto the floor and is absorbed by the wood.
Finishes enhance the bad as much as the good.
The history of wood flooring begins in colonial america when the first floors were wide thick planks cut from the continent s abundant old growth forests.