I am going to replace an old carpet with laminate downstairs. The plan is to put some insulation under the laminate as otherwise the floor will be really cold. I will end up with the following layers:
Laminate 10 or 12mm thick
Celotex TB4025 insulation -- 25mm thick (would love to have more but can't sacrifice too much ceiling height and don't want to change external doors)
Damp Proof Membrane
Concrete floor
endecotp advised me in another thread that that one is supposed to put tongue and groove chipboard over Celotex, but my hope is that good thick laminate is strong enough to distribute the load. My very informal reasoning is as follows. Celotex has compression strength >120kPa. If my laminate can distribute a point load across 200x200mm square (just an assumption) then it will hold 4800 N -- probably enough for domestic use. At this load, 25mm Celotex will compress by 10%, i.e. 2.5mm which is OK for laminate.
Do you think this makes sense? Also, is Celotex designed to be compressed regularly (as opposed to being compressed once and stay like that forever)? I found that XPS boards are significantly stronger but they are more expensive and have higher thermal conductivity.
Any thoughts would be appreciated!
Laminate 10 or 12mm thick
Celotex TB4025 insulation -- 25mm thick (would love to have more but can't sacrifice too much ceiling height and don't want to change external doors)
Damp Proof Membrane
Concrete floor
endecotp advised me in another thread that that one is supposed to put tongue and groove chipboard over Celotex, but my hope is that good thick laminate is strong enough to distribute the load. My very informal reasoning is as follows. Celotex has compression strength >120kPa. If my laminate can distribute a point load across 200x200mm square (just an assumption) then it will hold 4800 N -- probably enough for domestic use. At this load, 25mm Celotex will compress by 10%, i.e. 2.5mm which is OK for laminate.
Do you think this makes sense? Also, is Celotex designed to be compressed regularly (as opposed to being compressed once and stay like that forever)? I found that XPS boards are significantly stronger but they are more expensive and have higher thermal conductivity.
Any thoughts would be appreciated!