Nn

Nirodac

10/09/2006 5:44 AM

Hardwood floors

I'm currently shopping for prefininshed oak flooring, for the
first time.
The samples I've been finding all visually appear to have a
grain, as you would expect, with oak. But when touching the
surface I can feel no grain imprint. Looking at it at an angle
shows no blemish or indent in the surface, it just looks flat
and artifical. Is this a real "clear" finish on real oak or is
it a printed on pattern. Looking at the end grain sort of gives
the impression that it is the real grain, but how do they get it
so damn smooth.


This topic has 3 replies

AW

Andrew Williams

in reply to Nirodac on 10/09/2006 5:44 AM

10/09/2006 8:19 AM

In article <[email protected]>, Nirodac
<[email protected]> wrote:

, but how do they get it
> so damn smooth.


Maybe a clear pore-filler?

DM

Dave Mundt

in reply to Nirodac on 10/09/2006 5:44 AM

26/09/2006 2:54 AM

Greetings and Salutations...

On Sun, 10 Sep 2006 05:44:48 GMT, Nirodac <[email protected]> wrote:

>I'm currently shopping for prefininshed oak flooring, for the
>first time.
>The samples I've been finding all visually appear to have a
>grain, as you would expect, with oak. But when touching the
>surface I can feel no grain imprint. Looking at it at an angle
>shows no blemish or indent in the surface, it just looks flat
>and artifical. Is this a real "clear" finish on real oak or is
>it a printed on pattern. Looking at the end grain sort of gives
>the impression that it is the real grain, but how do they get it
>so damn smooth.

Now...if it is "engineered" flooring, what you are looking
at is, basically, a very good quality photograph of oak planking,
printed on vinyl, and coated with a very strong clear-coat.
It is amazingly hard to tell it from the "real" thing, these
days, as it is very good. Short of taking a pocket knife to
the flooring, one can tell that it is engineered by laying
out the pieces in a box or two...you should find some pieces
that are clones of each other.
I am not entirely sure that it is possible to put enough
pore filler on real oak to make it that smooth, and still have
it look good. The grain is just too rugged.
Regards
Dave Mundt

JB

Joe Bemier

in reply to Nirodac on 10/09/2006 5:44 AM

10/09/2006 6:15 AM

On Sun, 10 Sep 2006 05:44:48 GMT, Nirodac <[email protected]> wrote:

>I'm currently shopping for prefininshed oak flooring, for the
>first time.
>The samples I've been finding all visually appear to have a
>grain, as you would expect, with oak. But when touching the
>surface I can feel no grain imprint. Looking at it at an angle
>shows no blemish or indent in the surface, it just looks flat
>and artifical. Is this a real "clear" finish on real oak or is
>it a printed on pattern. Looking at the end grain sort of gives
>the impression that it is the real grain, but how do they get it
>so damn smooth.


It is the difference between what can be accomplished in a highly
sophisticated and controlled industrial process as compared to
on-site.
I am working on a job currently where they will use Giordano (sp?)
flooring. I had a look at some samples and it is an incredible
product. Somewhere around $15/sq/ft I believe.


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