Our house was flooded last year. I wanted cork again. No-one wanted to lay it. I was offered "floating cork" .... Which IMO it competelly ****house. I simply don't like floating floors. No-one wants to lay floors properly anymore though. Cork goes down, has numerous coats of laquer over the top. THis means it IS water tight. We have had it layed through "wet areas" etc... Even though apparently this can't be done (it CAN if it isn't the floating crap). The cork is/was brilliant.... absolutely fantastic. The only down side is it is easily marked.
The only issue I have with the bamboo that has replaced it is ....... It's again floating ****. Its all about ease of installation. Now if they fitted the bamboo properly ...ie: glue the boards down. Then coated them with many coats of laquer. It would be absolutely fabulous. However now we are stuck with "floating" ****. So you can't get it wet. As obviously, it's not sealed, so the water will go straight into all the cracks and sit underneath the boards where it will never dry out.
The bamboo is way noisier, and nowhere near as nice as cork IMO. It does look fantastic though. And as a flooring product is brilliant. THey just need to install it properly so it's sealed. Apparently each board has 11 layers of laquer (or something crazy like that). So each board looks spectacular. But sealing each board like this is just dumb unless you seal the floor as an entirety once installed (so water can't get beneath it).
The guy who installed our floors did an absolutely spectacular job. He rebated it under all the of skirting boards and door frames.
seeya,
Shane L.
Proper cars--
'92 Range Rover 3.8V8 ... 5spd manual
'85 Series II CX2500 GTi Turbo I :burnrubber:
'63 ID19 x 2 :wheelchair:
'72 DS21 ie 5spd pallas
Modern Junk:
'07 Poogoe 407 HDi 6spd manual :zzz:
'11 Poogoe RCZ HDI 6spd manual
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