- 2
- 433 993
TRI WEST
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 15 ต.ค. 2015
How To Replace a Damaged Paradigm Flooring Board
This tutorial will show you how to replace a damaged Paradigm Flooring Board using the UNIFIX tool. The instructor is Scott Parks.
มุมมอง: 433 533
วีดีโอ
Tri-West, LTD. Sample Dept Video
มุมมอง 4669 ปีที่แล้ว
This is a quick video to show the Tri-West sample department. We make all of our own custom samples.
Top! Thank you!
I want to know where I bought the tools
Terrific - I am going to try this!
What's the special pull bar name?
Please zoom in so Is people watching can have a better view of what is going on
Beuty full exilent
Excelente video 👍
Where can I find the UNIFIX tool?
amazon
Practice method.
Great teaching on this. Thank you.
Какая мерзкая речь мор пор кор фор Бор шмор
and when we have walls how do we move the slats?
Show us on a fully installed floor that's been down and moving for a few years.
show it on parquet glued to concrete floor.
Great job I have done it smiler way
Great job, one important detail you ignored was that you should have centered the new board to match the exact location of the old board, to avoid a gap on the board against the wall. In the end one could clearly see the miss alignment of all the boards in the row which had the repair with the remaining boards.
im not sure what your saying.... as long as the end joints are far enough apart throughout the floor and ends covered by trim, it does not matter ... the guy showed a very nice repair i dont think anyone would walk in and say oh wait wait its an 1/8 of an inch different than what it was before.
Thank you sir nice. Appreciate that
Thank you
Does this work with a 'floating floor" that has soft vapor barrier underneath? Or will the movement on wear and tear make the glued end pop up?
Curious if this works on most lvp material or only certain locking systems. Does it work for the New Paradigm conquest?
very nice tutorial.
My hardwood floors are popping up near back door. How do I fix?
I'd watched a couple of videos about how to replace the damaged board before I found this one. This is the best, and I'll tell you why. It's the easiest to understand, and you can see the result at the end. The others fail to show the final result, and/or the sound isn't that good. You helped me a lot! Thank you, sir! 👍
Hola donde se puede conseguir esta herramienta y la cinta adhesiva podrías pasarme los links gracias y saludos Hello, where can you get this tool and the adhesive tape? Could you pass me the links? Thanks and regards
If the original floor installer applied glue dabs on t/g at the start and end of the rows ( to avoid plank end gap problems) , you'll never get this method to work . And most other vp manufacture systems lock up anyway ,preventing the row sliding anyway. This tool is very limited on practicality.
Yeap...
Hold on a second, i originally asked the question how would you tap the boards across to gain access to the damaged board if they perimeter was against the wall surely there wouldn't be a any movement, i was told there should be 5/8 gap around the room, upon watching the video again the installer said it was am lvt waterproof board, this doesn't a gap its not gonna expand, confused about this advice really
Very nice thank you
Well done!
And then you have to deal with air compressor and the nail gun to reinstall the shoe molding.
I noticed you knocked the boards across to gain access to the damaged board how would achieve this is if there is no gap on the around the perimeter of the room
atif mehuddin ,a floating floor should have a quarter inch to 5/8 gap all the way around the perimeter! If not, you may have to remove the shoe mold and basemold. Use an osculating saw to cut a gap at the wall.Then proceed! If there is no expansion around the perimeter,it was installed incorrectly!
If there's is a skirting board around the room then you would only have 10 mm to play with
What if the damage was only the size of a .25 cent piece. Could it be fixed without replacing the board?
With a hole cutter, cut the same size and glue it in with mitre fast
Some wood filler would do the trick.
No
Excellent!
Thank you Scott
Hi there, thanks for tips and tutorial floor repair. Would you please advise me where to get unifix tools.
Google it.
Great video but those aren’t safety glasses 😉
Great presentation! Thank you sir!
Thank you for your video I've just had my flooring I've learnt a lot by watching your video could you please send me the link for this multi-tool so I can buy it I seemed cannot find the one on video
You can probably use the same tool glazers use for picking up glass, the suction device then tap with rubber mallet to move across, you can buy them from eBay for about £15
! , 'u
Where do you get the tool?
Thanks for the video, I liked the double sided tape tool idea.
Hello. Where to buy such a bat?
Wondering how you would repair same floor but cut is going opposite direction because we took out the wall in-between. So going the other direction is uneven cuts.
You can use kool glide seam tape as well as formika and glue. Works better and it's paper thin.
Gracias, fue muy ilustrativo, no hablo ingles pero lo entendí todo sin saber lo que decía.
Great video and product, thank you!
Wow! Very professional! Good job
Great vid would hire 10 out of 10
This needs a real world approach
Really good video. I only thing I would add is to mark the location or seam of the board your replacing on the floor so when you install the new panel you place it back in the exact location so when you tap the peices back into place you dont run short on your ends, But excellent presetation. Thanks for taking the time.
Spotted that as well , was going to mention it until I seen your comment .. You could see the two outside edges of the floor are not flush with rest of boards , meaning the floor boards are in a slightly different position when placed back in .
That would only work if the existing floor was not glued. I have never laid a laminate floor without glue on the groove nor have I seen a floor laid without it.
If you buy good laminate, the joints wil never come apart. You don't need glue.
@@janvanlandeghem9749 this is Luxury vinyl plank, not laminate and doesn't require glue
I would make the unifix tool with a suction cup instead of tape. And I would use a length of the two sided tape along the altered joint... instead of the glue. No drying time. Excellent video.
LVP surface is textured. A suction cup would not stick