Forum Discussion
- 77rollalongExplorerWe did ours with the fake hard wood flooring, but for the bathroom area we found a vinyl flooring that came in strips about 4 feet long by 6 inches with a self stick back with a sub base you put down also in vinyl, so it ended up being a floating floor, was easy to cut with tin snips, and just left a gap at the edges for 1/4 round.
- rambleonroseExplorer IISo my little old RV is currently gutted and awaiting for warmer weather to seal the roof, then to start on the floor. We have been planning on doing vinyl sheeting, since we're trying to do this on a budget. Then I saw this post.
We're in upstate NY, so there's definitely a wide swing in temps, and expansion/contraction will definitely be there. Since it's a remodel, most of the larger floor items are staying put (fridge, one cabinet) - it's a smaller RV, and a fairly small space the flooring would be going on, so I'm wondering if there's a way to swing doing the sheeting still, instead of the more expensive plank. Glue all over? Leave slightly larger gap/space on the edges, covered with a wider trim? Any tricks or wisdom you could pass on? - valhalla360Navigator
Harvard wrote:
This happened to a 10 year old TT that we purchased used. At the time we purchased same the vinyl floor did not show any signs of cracks. So it survived many cold winters up until we had it for one winter. Near as I can tell our problem was we had it on jacks during the winter which must have stressed the vinyl and when it turned cold ... whamo.... anyway, that's my theory.
How warped was the floor when on jacks? Any curvature enough to damage the flooring, it likely destroying the frame and walls. - blownstang01ExplorerNot sure what I'm going to replace it with yet. I guess we have been lucky as this is the original flooring, 2006 model.
- HarvardExplorerThis happened to a 10 year old TT that we purchased used. At the time we purchased same the vinyl floor did not show any signs of cracks. So it survived many cold winters up until we had it for one winter. Near as I can tell our problem was we had it on jacks during the winter which must have stressed the vinyl and when it turned cold ... whamo.... anyway, that's my theory.
- ron_dittmerExplorer IIOh, that is a downer.
I have seen house-hold laminate flooring used often in interior restorations. Obviously you will want to install the product in warm weather so it is pre-expanded....in case it changes with temperature. Shrinking laminate flooring should not be an issue. If it does shrink, you would just see a small gap along the edges. But reuse your base shoe and you will never see a gap. Just be sure to attach the base shoe to the cabinetry, not to the floor to allow the floor to move under it as temperatures change.
Laminate flooring is a floating floor by design. You lay down a thin foam base underlayment and then lay the floor over it without any type of attachment. It just lays there. The interlocking features will keep it together. If it gets air born in a bad bump, the thin foam pad will keep it quiet.
It must work because it is common practice. - MitchF150Explorer III...
- valhalla360NavigatorWhen new, it's fairly stretchy but after a few years, the plasticizers evaporate off (that's what give you that new car smell) leaving it more brittle...eventually the combination of brittleness and an very cold day causing it to shrink will stretch it more than it can take and a split will start.
Yours is only unusual in the sense that typically it's only a few inches near a corner and that relieves enough stretch that it doesn't split any further. - trigleyExplorerYes it is the cold. If they glue down the entire vinyl floor it is usually OK but the manufacturers like to save time and money by only gluing the edges. Not uncommon here with units imported from the U. S. Ours was a factory order in 2008 and we specified full glue down. It got through the first 10 winters OK. Hope it has survived the latest cold spell.
- RICK-ards_RedExplorerYes we had the exact thing happen, I would have guessed it was our trailer. Our warranty had just expired by a month or two, went back to the dealer and it had happened to another trailer as well so the warranty covered it. It was our lucky day....should have bought a lottery ticket that day!
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