Good video, nice job! A little hint, use a little flat bar instead of a screw driver for removing baseboards, they are a lot easier and less chance of marking up a drywalled wall. Cheers from Canada. ;)
All advice is welcome, thank you! Although I have been lucky with the flathead method, a flat bar makes a lot more sense!! Cheers from Northern Maine :)
@@kylehoyt3499 a traditional flat bar will chew up the baseboard. I am referring to the thin flat bar that does not have indentations for pulling nails, and is very thin but wide enough to distribute the load. It's about 8" long with a 1" return. It's a great tool, perfect for removing baseboards.
Glad it was helpful! When we did this floor there was maybe one video on glue down LVP. I’m no pro but figured I would make something to maybe help someone:)
TayMarie!! You made it look so effortlessly easy. I was toiling between vinyl or laminate flooring and whether I should DIY it or get a professional. Watching you and listening to the simple instructions helped me to make a clear choice. Bonus! I'm now a new subscriber! Thank you for the video.
We love this flooring type! Im going to throw some tips your way incase you officially decide on vinyl! Regardless if you choose the click lock or the glue down, vinyl floors have something called a wear layer. A wear layer is essentially the top layer of the plank - the thicker the layer the more durable it will be. This is often an overlooked component on this type of floor, hence why I’m sharing with you! If you are putting this floor in a more heavily trafficked area, your wear layer is extra important! Sometimes you will see a 6mil and 12mil wear layer floor marked at the same price. A 12mil plank literally has twice the wear layer as the 6mil, essentially making it TWICE as durable! I apologize if you already knew all this, I just want you to get the most out of the floor you choose! The home improvement world can occasionally be a slimy place and I hate seeing people overpay for lower quality products! I’m so happy you found this video helpful and I’m positive you can do this! You can always post back here (new comment, UA-cam does not give notifications on follow up comments) if you run into any issues and I will try my best to help! Also, welcome to our little channel :)
I have been shopping around for replacing our existing vinyl flooring which was also glued but the labor costs are ridiculous. After watching your video I feel it’s worth giving it a try. Thanks for the inspiration and making it so easy to understand. Cheers from California
My girlfriend sent me this video as she is looking to do this in her rental. I have to say this video is extremely well done. Amazing job! This vid definitely makes people have confidence to tackle it on their own. I know you gave her a ton of confidence and you did an awesome job! Thank you!
This comment made my day! Thank you and I’m so happy to have helped in any way! She can definitely do it! Feel free to ask more questions if you or her come across anything you need help with 😊
Aww thank you! I was so surprised how little there was on UA-cam for glue down vinyl planks! So…I figured after doing a few floors myself I would share what I learned! I’m so happy to hear you found it helpful! Have a wonderful weekend :)
Great video , and nice job on the floor. I have wood paneling walls in my 50 yr old house , So I got some marble look 12x36 vinyl tiles , Cheers from Southern Alberta
One more question, did you you or should a person tape or do any prep on the joints of the plywood subfloor so they don’t appear in vinyl flooring later
I just picked out these planks for my kitchen and living room I wasn’t that sure but after Watching your video I love them you did a great job thanks for sharing 👍🏽😊
Your video is the most informative and most helpful out of thousand videos I have been watching for days/weeks/months! Do you also have any plan for Carpet to LVP diy???
I’m so happy you found my video helpful :) I have been working as a chainsaw carver up here in Maine, but when the weather gets too cold to carve outside I will start picking up some more DIY projects around the house again! If you run into any questions though I would be happy to help if I can! My boyfriend and I did soooo much research on flooring types before we choose to go with the glue down LVP.
Nice work. Like the basic of it all and I might go that route next time. I'm doing some of the laminate flooring planks and it's been a pain. But I'm removing old tiles and demolition also. If I ever take the new ones up I'm going this way for sure.
It was so easy to install and has been holding up well in both our bathroom and kitchen! Seems to do well in high moisture areas! We are very impressed with it so far! Hope the rest of your flooring install goes smoothly! :)
We did these floors in two houses, the rental (the one in this video) and our house. The rental floors look just as good as the day we put them down! We put them over laminated flooring which some people made a stink about but they have held up great to heavy traffic! Our house we applied them directly to the plywood subfloor, since they are glued down they expand and contract with the floor. There is some gapping in the humid summer months but it's almost invisible to the naked eye, you have to be looking for them. Maybe 1/16", hairline gaps, close up around fall. Hope that answers your question!
@@TayMarie23 That’s perfect. Thanks for the quick response. I was planning to do something similar on top of my existing sheet vinyl floor. But just putting my feelers out there first.
Haha sometime you have to use what you got! I didn’t have a cat paw at the time or many tools in general since we were brand spanking new home owners at the time of this video! 😂 For the chalk lines I couldn’t get an accurate diagonal measurement for the room due to the awkward layout with the kitchen and spiral staircase, so I measured 12 inches square off the wall in several places, pulled the line, and snapped it in a median of the measurements. Did the trick and gave us a pretty straight floor throughout!
Thanks for the video. Well done! How many square feet did the 647 glue cover? I have about 360 sq.ft. Is one gallon enough? Barely enough? More than enough? Thanks!
I believe it's 300-400 square feet per 1 gallon pail for the 647 PlumPro. You should be good with one pail as long as you apply evenly. Could always grab a second to have with the plan to return if not needed. Highly recommend applying with a smaller 4"-6" thin roller, the larger roller seemed to suck up a lot of the glue and made it harder to apply. It's great stuff, 2 years later and our floors are going great, not a single plank has popped up :)
Hey it’s me again, can you tell me the name of the glue product that you applied with a roller. All I can find and have ever used is a notched trowel on product
Of course! I’m glad I was able to help! If you run into any hiccups along the way feel free to comment back here and I will try my best to help you out! Good luck friend :)
It's held up great over the linoleum the last few years! We put the same flood down in our home directly onto the subfloor and it's held up better over the linoleum since it dosent expand and contract with the weather!
Question - I'm about to install this same floor, but in one area I will have to slide a heavy bed back and forth at least once a month to change the bedding, do you think sliding furniture over this floor will cause it to move/create gaps? Do you have any experience with sliding furniture over it and how it affects it? thank you! Your results looks AMAZING!!! great video, thanks!
We have a very large sectional couch on this exact floor that we move monthly for cleaning, the floor has held up well underneath but we do have thick felt pads on each of the couches legs. This floor, like most vinyl or laminate floors, is scratch resistant but definitely not scratch proof. I would definitely look into some sort of projection for the legs of the bed, but that would go with any floor you install :)
What if you have to reinstall this in a small area and when you pull it up you realize they laid it over two other vinyl planks. How do you make that area if the floor level? Can you use more glue?
Sounds like you have a bit of a mess on your hands! We ran into a similar issue in our bathroom. Under the sheet laminate flooring was 1/4” ply, and under the 1/4” ply was another layer of sheet laminate flooring glued down to the true sub floor. We ripped it all out, scraped the old glue, pulled out around 200 staples, and put down the new LVP planks. If it’s just a small area I’m guessing you can just reapply the planks you pulled up. Depending on the glue type used you might be able to just put the new planks down or you might have to scrape the existing glue off then apply new glue and planks. When it comes time to redo a large area it might be best to rip everything up down to the subfloor.
It’s not my nail gun but it’s one I often borrow from my boyfriend’s mom and I LOVE it! Super easy to use and the battery lasts a very long time, like weeks with light use! I believe it’s the “Ryobi 18V ONE+ Cordless AirStrike”. You can get it at Homedepot for around $150!
If I lifted a board today 2 years later it would still be tacky! The glue goes on wet and dries to a super tacky material. So if we ever need to replace a plank we would just rip one up and replace the individual damaged plank.
@@TayMarie23 that’s wild, I never would have thought that, I figured it dried totally after a few hrs. I done my kitchen and notched troweled the glue, it’s been there for 15+ years. I’m getting ready to do 500 sq ft more in a couple rooms. Thx again for a great video, God Bless.
@@TayMarie23 I read a comment on Reddit that people find God with projects like these, I agree as this has diy project has been absolutely hell and I definitely need god to help me out.
I am really concerned about the idea of gluing plank floor atop existing linoleum. However, if the old linoleum was well-glued to a good sub floor, the linoleum gloss removed /abraded. and well-cleaned for the plank floor to adhere to., it might be a good idea in that it might provide a waterproof vapor barrier under your new plank floor.....plus save on the work/cost of removing the old linoleum.I will have to do a bunch of research on this! P.S . A 'cats paw' tool and a sturdy putting knife are THE way to remove molding (and many other things!)
It’s been a year and the floor is holding up surprisingly well with our tenants! Haha and yes a cats paw would work much better, sometimes you gotta make what you have work though 😂
You would need to do a thin set coat of some sorts to fill the grout lines in to be flush with the tiles, otherwise you would end up with tile print indents overtime as the floor settles. If you fill in the grout then absolutely, just make sure the adhesive you get is rated for concrete/tile. I believe the Henny glue we used is rated to go over almost all floor types!
Im so annoyed that my sub floor isnt like yours lol. Its uneven concrete and i cannot afford 30+ bags to self level it to have lvt. I dont really want laminate tbh. Any suggestions?
What sort of living space is it that it had a concrete floor? You could always paint or epoxy it? Do some sort of tile? The mortar might help level the uneveness to some extent. I definitely would not do laminated over an uneven floor, you will see everything through it.
@@TayMarie23 Its a downstairs hallway kitchen wc and living room. Its concrete but just cracked and bumpy. Do you have any experience with dryback lvt underlay im thinking to use?
For glue down LVP, the entire plank needs contact with glue. So yes, it’s the entire floor! Then you have the click lock LVP, those don’t require any glue and lock together. The click lock is a floating floor while the glue down is not! Hope this helps :)
They are pretty thin. The specifications for these specific planks where “2 mm T x 6 in. W x 48 in. L, wear layer thickness is 12 mil”. I could be wrong but I believe 2mm is the thickness, I don’t know if that includes the wear layers or not…?
There are some great videos out there on proper methods where you measure the diagonal of the room and find your square straight line from that! We did not do that because of the shape of the room and where the kitchen cabinets were located made it hard to get an accurate diagonal measurement. So instead we just took several measurements off of the two walls that ran parallel with how we wanted to lay our floor. Then we took an average of those measurements and snapped our line. I hope that makes sense 😂 There are some great videos out there, just search “how to lay a floor strait” it can be any flooring type too, the methods will be pretty much the same :)
You will have to double check with the specific adhesive you choose but to my knowledge tile is an acceptable subfloor as long as the tiles and the grout are in okay shape. You can’t lay VP over loose or badly cracked tiles unless they are repaired first! You would just need to skim coat the surface with some sort of thin set and fill in the grout lines so they are level with the tile. Otherwise, as the floor settles, it could potentially mold into the grout lines and look bad. But as long as you even the surface first, it should come out great! Hope this helps :)
Yes absolutely! The prep will be very similar to the prep in this video. The only thing that may be just a little harder is making sure your floor is level and flat. If there are bumps or high spots they may need to be ground down. If there are any low spots that’s a simple fix with some self leveling underlayment! What’s most important is the adhesive you choose - make sure concrete is listed as an accepted subfloor…most do so that shouldn’t be an issue:) The product we used (Henry 647 PlumPro) works great with concrete! Hope this helps!
For the trim? Just use any type of pry bar! A hammer is probably a good thing to have around the house in general though, you can get one for $4 at Walmart :)
People shit on these things but I put these down in my mom’s kitchen 20 something years ago and they still look almost exactly the same - which is a little but shitty but the same shitty as 20 years ago!
If I could afford a hardwood floor I wouldn’t hesitate to get one installed…but some of us just can’t do that, and that’s okay! I think LPV is a great alternative! People need to stop comparing it to real hardwood, because it’s not hardwood and it never will be! Don’t get me wrong there are some UGLY patterns and colors that these vinyl planks and tiles come in. There are also some very low quality products out there too! But as long as you avoid those and do a little due diligence, there are plenty of really great durable options! I think most of bad rep around vinyl plank floors came from the surge of house flippers using them almost every time. A lot of the flipper use the worst of the worst, so it has dragged down lots of people’s opinions of this flooring type! When we were looking at houses to buy we saw some awful installs!
Lol there isn't exactly much good royalty free music 😂 I have no idea what music is in this video because its been like 2 years since I made it, I'm sure it's awful hahaha!
Thank you for the advice! The laminate was glued down (poorly but glued). We did not want to glue strait to the subfloor with this being a rental and not knowing how well this floor would hold up, so going over the laminate seemed like a good idea, that’s all :) I’m no pro though, so I appreciate the advice, I’ll be doing another floor soon and will look into alternatives 👍🏻
This is not teaching someone how to do anything. The entire video is.. if you know what your doing (you already know this) an if your trying to learn nothing is explained. “Then you do this”… how???
Honestly man…I was just putting a floor in and figured I’d make a video because it might help someone since it was a little confusing the first time we did it 😂 Don’t get all worked up about it, there are many more videos you can watch on how to do this, just watch those! Sorry I couldn’t help more! 👍🏻
Indeed! They sure benefited Kamala "Knee Pads" Harris! The more she was down on her knee pads the faster she ascended. (Ask her boss, Willie Brown). Unfortunately she has no other qualifications to be there.....illiterate and criminal as Dementia Joe and dumb as a cackling loon!
Great video for a beginner like me. Thanks for your tutorial. You have gained a new subscriber and I look forward to future videos!
Good video, nice job! A little hint, use a little flat bar instead of a screw driver for removing baseboards, they are a lot easier and less chance of marking up a drywalled wall. Cheers from Canada. ;)
All advice is welcome, thank you! Although I have been lucky with the flathead method, a flat bar makes a lot more sense!!
Cheers from Northern Maine :)
The flat bar will chew up your base board. Stick to what you're doing.
@@kylehoyt3499 a traditional flat bar will chew up the baseboard. I am referring to the thin flat bar that does not have indentations for pulling nails, and is very thin but wide enough to distribute the load. It's about 8" long with a 1" return. It's a great tool, perfect for removing baseboards.
But how did you measure for straight lines?
I appreciate how you put the products you used, very helpful video 😊
Glad it was helpful! When we did this floor there was maybe one video on glue down LVP. I’m no pro but figured I would make something to maybe help someone:)
TayMarie!! You made it look so effortlessly easy. I was toiling between vinyl or laminate flooring and whether I should DIY it or get a professional. Watching you and listening to the simple instructions helped me to make a clear choice. Bonus! I'm now a new subscriber! Thank you for the video.
We love this flooring type! Im going to throw some tips your way incase you officially decide on vinyl!
Regardless if you choose the click lock or the glue down, vinyl floors have something called a wear layer. A wear layer is essentially the top layer of the plank - the thicker the layer the more durable it will be. This is often an overlooked component on this type of floor, hence why I’m sharing with you! If you are putting this floor in a more heavily trafficked area, your wear layer is extra important! Sometimes you will see a 6mil and 12mil wear layer floor marked at the same price. A 12mil plank literally has twice the wear layer as the 6mil, essentially making it TWICE as durable!
I apologize if you already knew all this, I just want you to get the most out of the floor you choose! The home improvement world can occasionally be a slimy place and I hate seeing people overpay for lower quality products!
I’m so happy you found this video helpful and I’m positive you can do this! You can always post back here (new comment, UA-cam does not give notifications on follow up comments) if you run into any issues and I will try my best to help! Also, welcome to our little channel :)
You have been so helpful 🎉. Thank you
I have been shopping around for replacing our existing vinyl flooring which was also glued but the labor costs are ridiculous. After watching your video I feel it’s worth giving it a try. Thanks for the inspiration and making it so easy to understand. Cheers from California
I appreciate that! Happy I was able to help! Best of luck and never hesitate to reach out with more questions 😁
My girlfriend sent me this video as she is looking to do this in her rental. I have to say this video is extremely well done. Amazing job! This vid definitely makes people have confidence to tackle it on their own. I know you gave her a ton of confidence and you did an awesome job! Thank you!
This comment made my day! Thank you and I’m so happy to have helped in any way! She can definitely do it! Feel free to ask more questions if you or her come across anything you need help with 😊
Damn girl , you make the work look easy and look fine doing the work!
Thank you :)
Water is cheap bro
You made it so easy. Great DIY presentation.
Aww thank you! I was so surprised how little there was on UA-cam for glue down vinyl planks! So…I figured after doing a few floors myself I would share what I learned! I’m so happy to hear you found it helpful! Have a wonderful weekend :)
Very clean and appealing installation. Bravo TayMarie.
Thank you :)
Great video , and nice job on the floor. I have wood paneling walls in my 50 yr old house , So I got some marble look 12x36 vinyl tiles , Cheers from Southern Alberta
Beautiful work and beautiful teacher.
Thank you! Cheers!
Very well paced, clear directions and pleasant to watch. Thank you
Of course! When we did this floor there weren’t many videos on glue down planks so I figured I’d make one to possibly help someone out 😊
Best video I've seen on LVT 👍
Appreciate that ☺️ Glad I could help a little!
Nice. I think im gonna go for this. What was the previous floor made from? I have an existing vinyl floor and people have said I can't glue over it.
Great job!! Looks incredible!!!
One more question, did you you or should a person tape or do any prep on the joints of the plywood subfloor so they don’t appear in vinyl flooring later
thank you!..for letting us know where to still buy this🙂🎉
Thanks so much for answering all the “why’s”.
Of course! Happy I could help 😉
I just picked out these planks for my kitchen and living room I wasn’t that sure but after Watching your video I love them you did a great job thanks for sharing 👍🏽😊
Of course! Never hesitate to reach out with questions once you are ready to install 😁
Your video is the most informative and most helpful out of thousand videos I have been watching for days/weeks/months! Do you also have any plan for Carpet to LVP diy???
I’m so happy you found my video helpful :)
I have been working as a chainsaw carver up here in Maine, but when the weather gets too cold to carve outside I will start picking up some more DIY projects around the house again! If you run into any questions though I would be happy to help if I can! My boyfriend and I did soooo much research on flooring types before we choose to go with the glue down LVP.
Grab yourself a wonder bar from any hardware store. Less chance to mark up other surfaces. Plus you get a better even pry on the baseboard
Nice work. Like the basic of it all and I might go that route next time. I'm doing some of the laminate flooring planks and it's been a pain. But I'm removing old tiles and demolition also. If I ever take the new ones up I'm going this way for sure.
It was so easy to install and has been holding up well in both our bathroom and kitchen! Seems to do well in high moisture areas! We are very impressed with it so far!
Hope the rest of your flooring install goes smoothly! :)
Going to do this to my garage floor instead of epoxy. Thanks for the inspiration 🙏
Best of luck with your install! Your garage will look awesome! Never hesitate to reach out with questions :)
Looks great! How are the floors holding up after 2 years? Any shrinkage/gaps between planks?
We did these floors in two houses, the rental (the one in this video) and our house. The rental floors look just as good as the day we put them down! We put them over laminated flooring which some people made a stink about but they have held up great to heavy traffic! Our house we applied them directly to the plywood subfloor, since they are glued down they expand and contract with the floor. There is some gapping in the humid summer months but it's almost invisible to the naked eye, you have to be looking for them. Maybe 1/16", hairline gaps, close up around fall. Hope that answers your question!
@@TayMarie23 That’s perfect. Thanks for the quick response. I was planning to do something similar
on top of my existing sheet vinyl floor. But just putting my feelers out there first.
Ok, screw driver for trim removal? How did you measure for chalk lines? Do on and so forth
Haha sometime you have to use what you got! I didn’t have a cat paw at the time or many tools in general since we were brand spanking new home owners at the time of this video! 😂 For the chalk lines I couldn’t get an accurate diagonal measurement for the room due to the awkward layout with the kitchen and spiral staircase, so I measured 12 inches square off the wall in several places, pulled the line, and snapped it in a median of the measurements. Did the trick and gave us a pretty straight floor throughout!
Thanks for the video. Well done! How many square feet did the 647 glue cover? I have about 360 sq.ft. Is one gallon enough? Barely enough? More than enough? Thanks!
I believe it's 300-400 square feet per 1 gallon pail for the 647 PlumPro. You should be good with one pail as long as you apply evenly. Could always grab a second to have with the plan to return if not needed. Highly recommend applying with a smaller 4"-6" thin roller, the larger roller seemed to suck up a lot of the glue and made it harder to apply. It's great stuff, 2 years later and our floors are going great, not a single plank has popped up :)
Hey it’s me again, can you tell me the name of the glue product that you applied with a roller. All I can find and have ever used is a notched trowel on product
Henry 647
Great job! You made it so easy to follow along. I feel confident to do this myself now, thanks!
Of course! I’m glad I was able to help! If you run into any hiccups along the way feel free to comment back here and I will try my best to help you out! Good luck friend :)
Very nice. But, why did you go over an existing vinyl floor? I'd be worried about it not being adhered in spots.
It's held up great over the linoleum the last few years! We put the same flood down in our home directly onto the subfloor and it's held up better over the linoleum since it dosent expand and contract with the weather!
Question - I'm about to install this same floor, but in one area I will have to slide a heavy bed back and forth at least once a month to change the bedding, do you think sliding furniture over this floor will cause it to move/create gaps? Do you have any experience with sliding furniture over it and how it affects it? thank you!
Your results looks AMAZING!!! great video, thanks!
We have a very large sectional couch on this exact floor that we move monthly for cleaning, the floor has held up well underneath but we do have thick felt pads on each of the couches legs. This floor, like most vinyl or laminate floors, is scratch resistant but definitely not scratch proof. I would definitely look into some sort of projection for the legs of the bed, but that would go with any floor you install :)
@@TayMarie23 thats exactly my plan, heavy thick felt pads, glad it's working for your situation. Thank you!
What if you have to reinstall this in a small area and when you pull it up you realize they laid it over two other vinyl planks. How do you make that area if the floor level? Can you use more glue?
Sounds like you have a bit of a mess on your hands! We ran into a similar issue in our bathroom. Under the sheet laminate flooring was 1/4” ply, and under the 1/4” ply was another layer of sheet laminate flooring glued down to the true sub floor. We ripped it all out, scraped the old glue, pulled out around 200 staples, and put down the new LVP planks.
If it’s just a small area I’m guessing you can just reapply the planks you pulled up. Depending on the glue type used you might be able to just put the new planks down or you might have to scrape the existing glue off then apply new glue and planks. When it comes time to redo a large area it might be best to rip everything up down to the subfloor.
Thanks a lot I finally found what I wanted thanks for the link
Happy I could help :) Good luck with your floor!
Can you tell me what type, brand, version of nail gun you were using in this video. I need one of those. Thank you! Awesome video!🌟
It’s not my nail gun but it’s one I often borrow from my boyfriend’s mom and I LOVE it! Super easy to use and the battery lasts a very long time, like weeks with light use! I believe it’s the “Ryobi 18V ONE+ Cordless AirStrike”. You can get it at Homedepot for around $150!
How long does the glue stay tacky, you did a lot of sq ft and applied the glue all at one time? Great video.
If I lifted a board today 2 years later it would still be tacky! The glue goes on wet and dries to a super tacky material. So if we ever need to replace a plank we would just rip one up and replace the individual damaged plank.
@@TayMarie23 that’s wild, I never would have thought that, I figured it dried totally after a few hrs. I done my kitchen and notched troweled the glue, it’s been there for 15+ years. I’m getting ready to do 500 sq ft more in a couple rooms. Thx again for a great video, God Bless.
Does it turn out fine with a roller, it says on my glue use a trowel but a roller would be easier if it works out?
I don’t think all glues are roller compatible, if it says trowel I would probably use one :)
@@TayMarie23 I read a comment on Reddit that people find God with projects like these, I agree as this has diy project has been absolutely hell and I definitely need god to help me out.
You did a damn good job! I will be attempting after work
Best of luck! Reach out if you have any questions! 😁
I am really concerned about the idea of gluing plank floor atop existing linoleum. However, if the old linoleum was well-glued to a good sub floor, the linoleum gloss removed /abraded. and well-cleaned for the plank floor to adhere to., it might be a good idea in that it might provide a waterproof vapor barrier under your new plank floor.....plus save on the work/cost of removing the old linoleum.I will have to do a bunch of research on this!
P.S . A 'cats paw' tool and a sturdy putting knife are THE way to remove molding (and many other things!)
It’s been a year and the floor is holding up surprisingly well with our tenants! Haha and yes a cats paw would work much better, sometimes you gotta make what you have work though 😂
Great! Job! You You gave HOPE !
Haha I’m glad! Best of luck friend ☺️😁
Can this go over title floors?
You would need to do a thin set coat of some sorts to fill the grout lines in to be flush with the tiles, otherwise you would end up with tile print indents overtime as the floor settles. If you fill in the grout then absolutely, just make sure the adhesive you get is rated for concrete/tile. I believe the Henny glue we used is rated to go over almost all floor types!
Where did you get that kind a vinyl plank?
We ordered it from Homedepot, I think most links are below
Im so annoyed that my sub floor isnt like yours lol. Its uneven concrete and i cannot afford 30+ bags to self level it to have lvt. I dont really want laminate tbh. Any suggestions?
What sort of living space is it that it had a concrete floor? You could always paint or epoxy it? Do some sort of tile? The mortar might help level the uneveness to some extent. I definitely would not do laminated over an uneven floor, you will see everything through it.
@@TayMarie23 Its a downstairs hallway kitchen wc and living room. Its concrete but just cracked and bumpy. Do you have any experience with dryback lvt underlay im thinking to use?
Does all the flooring need to be glued down or just the perimeter?
For glue down LVP, the entire plank needs contact with glue. So yes, it’s the entire floor!
Then you have the click lock LVP, those don’t require any glue and lock together. The click lock is a floating floor while the glue down is not! Hope this helps :)
How thick are the planks?
They are pretty thin. The specifications for these specific planks where “2 mm T x 6 in. W x 48 in. L, wear layer thickness is 12 mil”.
I could be wrong but I believe 2mm is the thickness, I don’t know if that includes the wear layers or not…?
@@TayMarie23 thanks mine are 3mm thick
What did u measure off of for ur cholk line
There are some great videos out there on proper methods where you measure the diagonal of the room and find your square straight line from that! We did not do that because of the shape of the room and where the kitchen cabinets were located made it hard to get an accurate diagonal measurement. So instead we just took several measurements off of the two walls that ran parallel with how we wanted to lay our floor. Then we took an average of those measurements and snapped our line. I hope that makes sense 😂 There are some great videos out there, just search “how to lay a floor strait” it can be any flooring type too, the methods will be pretty much the same :)
Wow keren banget. Kakak cantik yang pintar. Semangat dan jaga keselamatan kerja. Hasil kerja bagus
Why thank you! ☺️
Thank you, very helpful.
The spider is why i use 5 mil nitrile gloves when foing any hand work i had a spider that wanted uppies.
Hahaha I have gotten used to the spiders with all the remodeling, always were gloves these days 🤣
Can you glue the VP over ceramic tile.
You will have to double check with the specific adhesive you choose but to my knowledge tile is an acceptable subfloor as long as the tiles and the grout are in okay shape. You can’t lay VP over loose or badly cracked tiles unless they are repaired first! You would just need to skim coat the surface with some sort of thin set and fill in the grout lines so they are level with the tile. Otherwise, as the floor settles, it could potentially mold into the grout lines and look bad. But as long as you even the surface first, it should come out great!
Hope this helps :)
@@TayMarie23 Thank you for your advice.
@@johnnyreeseiii8189 any time :)
🎉which is the good gloue recommended
We used Henry 647 Purple glue! Worked wonderful for us!
After I asked that I see you’ve placed your new floor over linoleum or it appears you did.
Very informative. Have a nice day!
Can you put these down on a concrete floor
Yes absolutely! The prep will be very similar to the prep in this video. The only thing that may be just a little harder is making sure your floor is level and flat. If there are bumps or high spots they may need to be ground down. If there are any low spots that’s a simple fix with some self leveling underlayment!
What’s most important is the adhesive you choose - make sure concrete is listed as an accepted subfloor…most do so that shouldn’t be an issue:) The product we used (Henry 647 PlumPro) works great with concrete! Hope this helps!
Use a trowel to lay the glue.
No, this specific glue is to be rolled on per the instructions. Look it up if you would like, Henry 647. Great stuff, would highly recommend.
What if I don’t have a hammer?
For the trim? Just use any type of pry bar! A hammer is probably a good thing to have around the house in general though, you can get one for $4 at Walmart :)
How do you make a straight line?????
I always wondered how to do that! Subscribe!
Thank you 😊
Helpful, thanks.
People shit on these things but I put these down in my mom’s kitchen 20 something years ago and they still look almost exactly the same - which is a little but shitty but the same shitty as 20 years ago!
If I could afford a hardwood floor I wouldn’t hesitate to get one installed…but some of us just can’t do that, and that’s okay! I think LPV is a great alternative! People need to stop comparing it to real hardwood, because it’s not hardwood and it never will be!
Don’t get me wrong there are some UGLY patterns and colors that these vinyl planks and tiles come in. There are also some very low quality products out there too! But as long as you avoid those and do a little due diligence, there are plenty of really great durable options!
I think most of bad rep around vinyl plank floors came from the surge of house flippers using them almost every time. A lot of the flipper use the worst of the worst, so it has dragged down lots of people’s opinions of this flooring type! When we were looking at houses to buy we saw some awful installs!
I “like” you Tay Marie😀
Miller Cynthia Harris Betty Hall David
Your adorable
🔨🦸♀️👍
Thank you 😊
You should wear knee pads, bad knees will get you in later life if you don’t, look after your knees!
Ditch the intrusive music. Please.
Lol there isn't exactly much good royalty free music 😂 I have no idea what music is in this video because its been like 2 years since I made it, I'm sure it's awful hahaha!
Gluing on top of loose existing flooring, and you DO have loose flooring in this video,is not a good idea.
A recipe for disaster.
Thank you for the advice! The laminate was glued down (poorly but glued). We did not want to glue strait to the subfloor with this being a rental and not knowing how well this floor would hold up, so going over the laminate seemed like a good idea, that’s all :) I’m no pro though, so I appreciate the advice, I’ll be doing another floor soon and will look into alternatives 👍🏻
How long do you have to lay the floor before it goes off
This is not teaching someone how to do anything. The entire video is.. if you know what your doing (you already know this) an if your trying to learn nothing is explained. “Then you do this”… how???
Honestly man…I was just putting a floor in and figured I’d make a video because it might help someone since it was a little confusing the first time we did it 😂 Don’t get all worked up about it, there are many more videos you can watch on how to do this, just watch those! Sorry I couldn’t help more! 👍🏻
knee pads you will thank me
Since it was just this one project I didn’t bother…but if I were to do it again I would definitely agree with you 😂
Indeed! They sure benefited Kamala "Knee Pads" Harris! The more she was down on her knee pads the faster she ascended. (Ask her boss, Willie Brown). Unfortunately she has no other qualifications to be there.....illiterate and criminal as Dementia Joe and dumb as a cackling loon!