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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Ask Mike Holmes: Can I Adjust My New Flooring From the Basement?

A few months ago, HGTV Canada asked its Facebook users to submit questions for Mike Holmes to answer on their website. The sixth question in their series was a question about adjusting a floor from the basement. Mike's answer? If you have to fix your floor from the basement, there's an issue with structure.


From HGTV Canada:
Ask Mike Holmes: Can I Adjust My New Flooring from The Basement?
Posted by HGTV.ca Editorial Team Tuesday, October 15, 2013 4:23 PM EDT

Another Tuesday, another new episode of Holmes Makes it Right at 9pm, and another fan question answered by Mike Holmes! This is the sixth in our series of responses:

mike-holmes-q-a

HGTV Canada Facebook fan, Susan MacIntyre asked, “Mike we put laminate flooring down and the floors are not even just on the north side of the house...out about 3 inches. My question is, can we adjust the floor from the basement? Only the north side?”

HMIR_FanQuestionAnsweredFlooring

Mike Holmes replied, “Adjusting your floor from the basement means that the problem has to do with structure. But if it was a structure issue, three inches out is a lot. You would start to see cracks in your walls; your doors would jam or open on their own; your windows would stick. So the problem is probably in the subfloor. You have to pull up your flooring and check what’s happening underneath. The way floors are built is first you have your floor joists—2 x 8s, 16 inches on centre. That’s minimum code. Then over your floor joists is your sheathing. According to minimum code there should be at least ⅝ inches of OSB (oriented strand board) sheathing on top of your floor joists—plywood is best, particleboard is unacceptable.

If you’re not the original homeowner, the floors could have been replaced a couple times. For whatever reason, previous contractors might have built up the sheathing on the north side of your home. Maybe they didn’t get rid of the old sheathing and just installed the new boards on top. The only way to know for sure—and to fix the problem—is by pulling up flooring and checking the subfloor.”

Check back next week for more tips from the pro, and don’t forget to tune in for all-new episodes of Holmes Makes it Right, Tuesdays at 9PM ET.

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