This is more of a 'What do you think' type query, but I've been giving it some serious consideration, for both the upstairs floor, and the downstairs floor.
Each is about 120m², so about 240 M² in total. But I don't need to be committed to doing both. I could do one or other. I don't have a timeframe, so I'm not committed to any finish date. Even after starting there's still loads of other stuff to do. So it could be a start and stop, as required, type of mission.
First off, I can get green oak offcuts for less than £50 per m³. These off cuts are from a saw mill, and are the rounded off bits of the trees after being squared off. So they come in various lengths, widths and thicknesses. Some are already square edged, or just one edge, or both waney edge. But about every third piece, I could get a useful piece of timber out of it. I normally use it in the wood burner, after seasoning, so any 'waste' won't go to waste. I could lay it, and leave it loose for a year, before fixing it, without any problems.
I have the tools, I have a decent cast iron table saw, router table, hand held router, planer/thicknesser, plus other stuff.
Currently the upstairs joists run across the long length of the building, about 40mm apart, so the floorboards would run across the narrow width. I could easily lay a chipboard floor under the oak flooring, to increase my options.
For upstairs, I was thinking of random lengths of floor boarding. I would probably settle on a predetermined width, but i could easily have several predetermined widths.
I could have square edged or router a tongue and groove in the edges. I could do that on the router table, or set up a decent piece of timber to clamp the boards to, and use the hand held router, with the spacer guide..
For the downstairs, it will be a recently laid concrete floor, with WUH. I was thinking of a parquet type floor, in a herringbone pattern.
What do people think about the time and effort involved?
Sure, I could buy ready to use boards, sawn pine boards, tiles, etc.
But I'm thinking about cost and effort versus eventual finish of the floor(s).
Edit: I meant less than £50 per M³, not per M². I've corrected it now.
Each is about 120m², so about 240 M² in total. But I don't need to be committed to doing both. I could do one or other. I don't have a timeframe, so I'm not committed to any finish date. Even after starting there's still loads of other stuff to do. So it could be a start and stop, as required, type of mission.
First off, I can get green oak offcuts for less than £50 per m³. These off cuts are from a saw mill, and are the rounded off bits of the trees after being squared off. So they come in various lengths, widths and thicknesses. Some are already square edged, or just one edge, or both waney edge. But about every third piece, I could get a useful piece of timber out of it. I normally use it in the wood burner, after seasoning, so any 'waste' won't go to waste. I could lay it, and leave it loose for a year, before fixing it, without any problems.
I have the tools, I have a decent cast iron table saw, router table, hand held router, planer/thicknesser, plus other stuff.
Currently the upstairs joists run across the long length of the building, about 40mm apart, so the floorboards would run across the narrow width. I could easily lay a chipboard floor under the oak flooring, to increase my options.
For upstairs, I was thinking of random lengths of floor boarding. I would probably settle on a predetermined width, but i could easily have several predetermined widths.
I could have square edged or router a tongue and groove in the edges. I could do that on the router table, or set up a decent piece of timber to clamp the boards to, and use the hand held router, with the spacer guide..
For the downstairs, it will be a recently laid concrete floor, with WUH. I was thinking of a parquet type floor, in a herringbone pattern.
What do people think about the time and effort involved?
Sure, I could buy ready to use boards, sawn pine boards, tiles, etc.
But I'm thinking about cost and effort versus eventual finish of the floor(s).
Edit: I meant less than £50 per M³, not per M². I've corrected it now.
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