MM

[email protected] (MyOwnPlanet)

30/08/2004 9:45 AM

Salvaging Hard Maple flooring

Hello ~

After "The Flood" (long story) we obtained some salvaged "Horner" hard
maple gym flooring from a building recycler ($1.65 sq.ft.) It is
currently stacked in my dining room; airing out and acclimating. We
have no plans to make this an elegant masterpiece floor - we have big
teens, cats and an ever-pooping parrot. I mention this, as I wanted to
make it clear how casual we feel about the outcome. Professional
woodfloorers might clutch at their hearts at some of our plans, so I
immediately apologize to those of you that have made woodflooring into
an art.

The wood is in very good condition, the backs of the planks look brand
new. Several layers of the polyurethane are loose and peeling and can
be picked off by hand (sort of like peeling off skin after a sunburn).
Perhaps this is the case because the polyurethane was applied over the
original oil based finish.

We plan on planing the surface off of this wood, laying it, and
finishing it with pure tung oil cut 50% with citrus solvent (non-toxic
for my animals) and finishing off with a few layers of shellac,
buffed.

Your thoughts are welcome. (I promise to keep a stiff upper lip.)

I do have some questions to throw out here.

Now that the wood is IN the house, I have noticed that the wood has a
musty (mildew?) smell to it, since it was salvaged I can't really say
what all it has encountered from the old gym to my house. I live in a
humid climate, north of Seattle.

What I am wondering is:

1. Can this mildew spread to my whole house? So far, my house isn't
prone to mildew.

2. Will wiping each board with a bleach mix, after it is planed, kill
this mildew before installation?

Thank you kindly ~ Lady Planet


This topic has 5 replies

jJ

in reply to [email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) on 30/08/2004 9:45 AM

31/08/2004 5:41 AM

[email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Hello ~
>
> After "The Flood" (long story) we obtained some salvaged "Horner" hard
> maple gym flooring from a building recycler ($1.65 sq.ft.) It is
> currently stacked in my dining room; airing out and acclimating. We
> have no plans to make this an elegant masterpiece floor - we have big
> teens, cats and an ever-pooping parrot. I mention this, as I wanted to
> make it clear how casual we feel about the outcome. Professional
> woodfloorers might clutch at their hearts at some of our plans, so I
> immediately apologize to those of you that have made woodflooring into
> an art.
>
> The wood is in very good condition, the backs of the planks look brand
> new. Several layers of the polyurethane are loose and peeling and can
> be picked off by hand (sort of like peeling off skin after a sunburn).
> Perhaps this is the case because the polyurethane was applied over the
> original oil based finish.
>
> We plan on planing the surface off of this wood, laying it, and
> finishing it with pure tung oil cut 50% with citrus solvent (non-toxic
> for my animals) and finishing off with a few layers of shellac,
> buffed.
>
> Your thoughts are welcome. (I promise to keep a stiff upper lip.)
>
> I do have some questions to throw out here.
>
> Now that the wood is IN the house, I have noticed that the wood has a
> musty (mildew?) smell to it, since it was salvaged I can't really say
> what all it has encountered from the old gym to my house. I live in a
> humid climate, north of Seattle.
>
> What I am wondering is:
>
> 1. Can this mildew spread to my whole house? So far, my house isn't
> prone to mildew.
>
> 2. Will wiping each board with a bleach mix, after it is planed, kill
> this mildew before installation?
>
> Thank you kindly ~ Lady Planet

$1.65 is too high to pay for what you're getting and the work you'll
have to put into it. New isn't that much more. If it were free, then
that's another story. Real Wood floors are made to take abuse. They
can always be refinished down the road. Oil based poly or varathane
will hold up better and it won't kill the animals...well, move the
bird out while you're doing it. I say, do it right the first time.

MM

[email protected] (MyOwnPlanet)

in reply to [email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) on 30/08/2004 9:45 AM

31/08/2004 7:02 AM

Thank you for your thoughts. Honestly.

Unfortunately, I am too poor to buy anything else now. It's a done
deal - can't haul it back, money is gone. (Yeah, I am tree hugger, I
thought I was a being a good girl for re-using resources - I am such a
dumbass.) *sigh*

So it appears that I overpaid, I will now overwork, and I have
introduced gross mildew spores into my house. I can't move the wood
anywhere else until the weekend, so we should be pretty darn
contaminated by that time.

Wow. Life is good.

(In it's usual twisted and agonizing sort of way.)

MH

"Mike Hide"

in reply to [email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) on 30/08/2004 9:45 AM

30/08/2004 9:41 PM

glued up on edge sure does make a great workbench . See mine on my website
....mjh

--
http://members.tripod.com/mikehide2
"MyOwnPlanet" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello ~
>
> After "The Flood" (long story) we obtained some salvaged "Horner" hard
> maple gym flooring from a building recycler ($1.65 sq.ft.) It is
>> 2. Will wiping each board with a bleach mix, after it is planed, kill
> this mildew before installation?
>
> Thank you kindly ~ Lady Planet

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to [email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) on 30/08/2004 9:45 AM

30/08/2004 7:07 PM


"MyOwnPlanet" <[email protected]> wrote in message

> 1. Can this mildew spread to my whole house? So far, my house isn't
> prone to mildew.

Yes

>
> 2. Will wiping each board with a bleach mix, after it is planed, kill
> this mildew before installation?

Don't wait until it is planed. Do it now to avoid spreading it.

dD

[email protected] (David E. Penner)

in reply to [email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) on 30/08/2004 9:45 AM

30/08/2004 3:23 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] (MyOwnPlanet) wrote:



SNIP

>
> Now that the wood is IN the house, I have noticed that the wood has a
> musty (mildew?) smell to it, since it was salvaged I can't really say
> what all it has encountered from the old gym to my house. I live in a
> humid climate, north of Seattle.
>
> What I am wondering is:
>
> 1. Can this mildew spread to my whole house? So far, my house isn't
> prone to mildew.
>
> 2. Will wiping each board with a bleach mix, after it is planed, kill
> this mildew before installation?
>
> Thank you kindly ~ Lady Planet



I picked up some used maple flooring about 6 years ago. It, like yours
smelled--- musty. I tried to use the stuff for small projects over a
period of 2-3 years. Even after 3 years it smelled of mildew. I ended up
giving it to a friend who used it for firewood.

Just my little experience.

david


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