Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
on top of concrete. My plan is to put moisture barrier plastic on top
of the concrete, then rubber blocks, then plywood on top of these
blocks, and then finally, nail down the floor planks. From what I'm
reading on the net, the floor needs to be "sprung" with some resilience
so that there is some "give"; otherwise, it's bad for dancing and people
will end up hurting their knees, angles etc after doing many hours of
practice. I have some questions that maybe some folks with experience
in installing hardwood floor can answer.
- To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
install on top of the concrete. I haven't been able to find any info
about these rubber blocks. Any idea where I can get these? what brand?
- To prevent warping from moisture, I am planning to put a moisture
barrier on top of the concrete. Does it make sense to also coat the
plywood and the bottom surface of the wood flooring planks with
something like linseed oil to prevent moisture absorption? or is it not
worth it? anything else that might work better than linseed oil?
- From what I understand, it's best to dance directly on the wood and
so, I don't plan to put any kind of poly finish for the surface of the
floor. But I do want to protect it. I am thinking of adding 2-3 layers
of some kind of protective oil like tung oil that will add beauty to the
wood, fill in the pores to prevent dust getting in them and turning the
wood into a dull, dark gray color. Can anyone recommend any other
finishing options? There is something called dance floor wax but I have
heard many bad things about it.
Thanks for all the help.
-Moe
Your Name Here wrote:
> floor. But I do want to protect it. I am thinking of adding 2-3 layers
> of some kind of protective oil like tung oil that will add beauty to the
That will make it look nice, but will NOT protect the wood from physical wear.
You need a film finish (shellac, poly, varnish, laquer, oil-vanish blends, etc.).
--
************************************
Chris Merrill
[email protected]
(remove the ZZZ to contact me)
************************************
I agree. A carpet underlayment makes more sense.
On Wed, 05 Nov 2003 21:47:07 GMT, "Wilson Lamb"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Blocks=Bumps!
>I'd use a continuous flex layer, like carpet pad.
>I'd also get some cheap mistake paint, usually $3/gal, and put heavy coats
>on both sides of the ply....And seal the membrane around the sides.
>Keep the dehumidifier ready too, just in case!
>Wilson
>"Your Name Here" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
>> on top of concrete. My plan is to put moisture barrier plastic on top
>> of the concrete, then rubber blocks, then plywood on top of these
>> blocks, and then finally, nail down the floor planks. From what I'm
>> reading on the net, the floor needs to be "sprung" with some resilience
>> so that there is some "give"; otherwise, it's bad for dancing and people
>> will end up hurting their knees, angles etc after doing many hours of
>> practice. I have some questions that maybe some folks with experience
>> in installing hardwood floor can answer.
>>
>> - To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
>> install on top of the concrete. I haven't been able to find any info
>> about these rubber blocks. Any idea where I can get these? what brand?
>>
>> - To prevent warping from moisture, I am planning to put a moisture
>> barrier on top of the concrete. Does it make sense to also coat the
>> plywood and the bottom surface of the wood flooring planks with
>> something like linseed oil to prevent moisture absorption? or is it not
>> worth it? anything else that might work better than linseed oil?
>>
>> - From what I understand, it's best to dance directly on the wood and
>> so, I don't plan to put any kind of poly finish for the surface of the
>> floor. But I do want to protect it. I am thinking of adding 2-3 layers
>> of some kind of protective oil like tung oil that will add beauty to the
>> wood, fill in the pores to prevent dust getting in them and turning the
>> wood into a dull, dark gray color. Can anyone recommend any other
>> finishing options? There is something called dance floor wax but I have
>> heard many bad things about it.
>>
>> Thanks for all the help.
>>
>> -Moe
>
On Wed, 5 Nov 2003 16:42:17 -0500, Your Name Here <[email protected]> emerged from the woodpile
and uttered:
>Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
>on top of concrete...
Perhaps talking to someone who fits out squash courts might give you some ideas?
Cheers,
Rob.
Remove all capital letters to get real email address
On Wed, 5 Nov 2003 16:42:17 -0500, Your Name Here
<[email protected]> wrote:
>- To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
>install on top of the concrete.
If you have the height, spring it properly. Traditional way was to
build a "forest" of short stub posts, fasten wooden "springs" to these
(horizontal wooden bars, of ash or maple) and then build a framework
supported on the free ends of the spring bars. Then lay the flooring
over the frame.
Rubber isn't the same thing at all. Blocks are lumpy (and not springy
enough), a sheet layer isn't thick or spring enough. I think some
modern floors have used air springs (thick rubbber balloons).
You definitely need a frame between the springs and the flooring
material, especially with modern thin laminates.
--
Die Gotterspammerung - Junkmail of the Gods
Check with companies that install dance floors for a living, which can be
found in trade magazines, fitness magazines, etc.
You should be able to source thier underdecking, which is designed for
exactly what you are talking about. Dance floors are not like putting in
other types of hardwood floors. You will save yourself headache and
heartache down the road by consulting with professionals upfront.
"Your Name Here" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
> on top of concrete. My plan is to put moisture barrier plastic on top
> of the concrete, then rubber blocks, then plywood on top of these
> blocks, and then finally, nail down the floor planks. From what I'm
> reading on the net, the floor needs to be "sprung" with some resilience
> so that there is some "give"; otherwise, it's bad for dancing and people
> will end up hurting their knees, angles etc after doing many hours of
> practice. I have some questions that maybe some folks with experience
> in installing hardwood floor can answer.
>
> - To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
> install on top of the concrete. I haven't been able to find any info
> about these rubber blocks. Any idea where I can get these? what brand?
>
> - To prevent warping from moisture, I am planning to put a moisture
> barrier on top of the concrete. Does it make sense to also coat the
> plywood and the bottom surface of the wood flooring planks with
> something like linseed oil to prevent moisture absorption? or is it not
> worth it? anything else that might work better than linseed oil?
>
> - From what I understand, it's best to dance directly on the wood and
> so, I don't plan to put any kind of poly finish for the surface of the
> floor. But I do want to protect it. I am thinking of adding 2-3 layers
> of some kind of protective oil like tung oil that will add beauty to the
> wood, fill in the pores to prevent dust getting in them and turning the
> wood into a dull, dark gray color. Can anyone recommend any other
> finishing options? There is something called dance floor wax but I have
> heard many bad things about it.
>
> Thanks for all the help.
>
> -Moe
In article
<[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
> Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
> on top of concrete.
>
> - To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
> install on top of the concrete. I haven't been able to find any info
> about these rubber blocks. Any idea where I can get these? what brand?
>
Contact a local (may take a few tries) fitness/athletic club
manager and find out who does their aerobics room floor.
These will be the folks that can supply materials as well as
answers.
--
Mark
The truth as I perceive it to be.
Your perception may be different.
Triple Z is spam control.
Hi Moe,
You've already had sensible answers to the other points, so I'll just
address the dance floor wax issue. Back in my youth, when people still did
ballroom dancing here in UK, there was a waxy substance called "Slipperene".
It came as a waxy powder which was sprinkled over a dance-floor to allow
your feet to slide better (presumably when you were doing a soft-shoe
shuffle or a palais glide), much in the same way as you might "dress" a
bowling alley lane. It didn't have anything to do with finishing - it was
just to make it easier to do the sorts of dances we did at that time. I
imagine it would cause havoc if you tried break-dancing on it - that might
be why you've heard some bad press about it!
Best of luck with your project,
Cheers,
Frank
"Your Name Here" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
> on top of concrete. My plan is to put moisture barrier plastic on top
> of the concrete, then rubber blocks, then plywood on top of these
> blocks, and then finally, nail down the floor planks. From what I'm
> reading on the net, the floor needs to be "sprung" with some resilience
> so that there is some "give"; otherwise, it's bad for dancing and people
> will end up hurting their knees, angles etc after doing many hours of
> practice. I have some questions that maybe some folks with experience
> in installing hardwood floor can answer.
>
> - To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
> install on top of the concrete. I haven't been able to find any info
> about these rubber blocks. Any idea where I can get these? what brand?
>
> - To prevent warping from moisture, I am planning to put a moisture
> barrier on top of the concrete. Does it make sense to also coat the
> plywood and the bottom surface of the wood flooring planks with
> something like linseed oil to prevent moisture absorption? or is it not
> worth it? anything else that might work better than linseed oil?
>
> - From what I understand, it's best to dance directly on the wood and
> so, I don't plan to put any kind of poly finish for the surface of the
> floor. But I do want to protect it. I am thinking of adding 2-3 layers
> of some kind of protective oil like tung oil that will add beauty to the
> wood, fill in the pores to prevent dust getting in them and turning the
> wood into a dull, dark gray color. Can anyone recommend any other
> finishing options? There is something called dance floor wax but I have
> heard many bad things about it.
>
> Thanks for all the help.
>
> -Moe
Thu, Nov 6, 2003, 12:54am (EST+5) [email protected]
(Frank=A0McVey) says:
<snip> ballroom dancing here in UK, there was a waxy substance called
"Slipperene". It came as a waxy powder which was sprinkled over a
dance-floor <snip>
Square dancing, in my case, in the US, many moons ago, and don't
recall the name of the stuff; but, yep, waxy powder. My grandfather was
an amateur caller, and called often, different places. Never heard of
any problems with it.
JOAT
My aim is to get through life peacefully, with as little interferrnce
from human beings as possible.
Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
Web Page Update 3 Nov 2003.
Some tunes I like.
http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/
===
"T." <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
Thu, Nov 6, 2003, 12:54am (EST+5) [email protected]
(Frank McVey) says:
<snip> ballroom dancing here in UK, there was a waxy substance called
"Slipperene". It came as a waxy powder which was sprinkled over a
dance-floor <snip>
Square dancing, in my case, in the US, many moons ago, and don't
recall the name of the stuff; but, yep, waxy powder. My grandfather was
an amateur caller, and called often, different places. Never heard of
any problems with it.
===
I have problems with it - BIG problems! It makes dancing extremely
difficult (i.e. - way too slippery) for those that are better dancers. The
only people it really helped were the ones who were trying to dance in
athletic shoes. Proper dance attire is leather-soled shoes, and no waxy
powder is, or should be, necessary on a decent wooden dance floor.
"mrdancer" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> "T." <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > Thu, Nov 6, 2003, 4:18pm (EST+5) [email protected] (mrdancer) puts
> > out:
> > I have problems with it <snip> dance in athletic shoes. Proper dance
> > attire <snip> decent wooden dance floor.
> >
> > Ah, not dancing to have fun then. LOL In the Army, in VA, in the
> > early 60s, used to attend weekend dances. In a barn. The farmer would
> > sweep out a part of the barn that had a smooth, concrete floor, live
> > band, refreshments, and we'd have fun. If you went back a bit, out of
> > the light, you'd find the cow stantions, complete with milk cows. I
> > don't think there was a soul there that would have said it wasn't a
> > proper dance floor. And, yeah, I've done ballroom dancing, and with
> > leather sole shoe on;, but, wouldn't say it was a bit more fun than
> > those weekends in a barn. The proper part is enjoying yourself.
>
> I guess it's all in what the OP wants. Almost anything is fine for
> partying, beer-drinking, buckle-polishing dancing, or even line- and
> square-dancing, but it takes a quality dance floor with no additives for
> serious dancing.
>
> Sorry for the rant.... I've just had too many nights of good
> C/W/Cajun/Tejano/Ballroom dancing ended prematurely by athletic-shoe-clad
> folks wanting the floor powdered so they could "slide" properly, or so they
> thought.
And I thought I was the only one who left when they sprinkled that
shit on the floor. If you're wearing proper dance shoes, that stuff
is dangerous.
Fred
Thu, Nov 6, 2003, 4:18pm (EST+5) [email protected] (mrdancer) puts
out:
I have problems with it <snip> dance in athletic shoes. Proper dance
attire <snip> decent wooden dance floor.
Ah, not dancing to have fun then. LOL In the Army, in VA, in the
early 60s, used to attend weekend dances. In a barn. The farmer would
sweep out a part of the barn that had a smooth, concrete floor, live
band, refreshments, and we'd have fun. If you went back a bit, out of
the light, you'd find the cow stantions, complete with milk cows. I
don't think there was a soul there that would have said it wasn't a
proper dance floor. And, yeah, I've done ballroom dancing, and with
leather sole shoe on;, but, wouldn't say it was a bit more fun than
those weekends in a barn. The proper part is enjoying yourself.
JOAT
My aim is to get through life peacefully, with as little interferrnce
from human beings as possible.
Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
Web Page Update 3 Nov 2003.
Some tunes I like.
http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/
"Fred Miner" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "mrdancer" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:<[email protected]>...
> > "T." <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> > > Thu, Nov 6, 2003, 4:18pm (EST+5) [email protected] (mrdancer)
puts
> > > out:
> > > I have problems with it <snip> dance in athletic shoes. Proper dance
> > > attire <snip> decent wooden dance floor.
> > >
> > > Ah, not dancing to have fun then. LOL In the Army, in VA, in the
> > > early 60s, used to attend weekend dances. In a barn. The farmer would
> > > sweep out a part of the barn that had a smooth, concrete floor, live
> > > band, refreshments, and we'd have fun. If you went back a bit, out of
> > > the light, you'd find the cow stantions, complete with milk cows. I
> > > don't think there was a soul there that would have said it wasn't a
> > > proper dance floor. And, yeah, I've done ballroom dancing, and with
> > > leather sole shoe on;, but, wouldn't say it was a bit more fun than
> > > those weekends in a barn. The proper part is enjoying yourself.
> >
> > I guess it's all in what the OP wants. Almost anything is fine for
> > partying, beer-drinking, buckle-polishing dancing, or even line- and
> > square-dancing, but it takes a quality dance floor with no additives for
> > serious dancing.
> >
> > Sorry for the rant.... I've just had too many nights of good
> > C/W/Cajun/Tejano/Ballroom dancing ended prematurely by
athletic-shoe-clad
> > folks wanting the floor powdered so they could "slide" properly, or so
they
> > thought.
>
> And I thought I was the only one who left when they sprinkled that
> shit on the floor. If you're wearing proper dance shoes, that stuff
> is dangerous.
>
> Fred
Yep, gotta get there early, like 7-7:30pm and get your dancing in. By
around 9pm or so, the buckle-polishing, tennis-shoe patrons get tipsy enough
to want to dance and convince the staff that the floor needs powder. That's
when my (dancing) night ends. :(
On Thu, 06 Nov 2003 19:22:00 GMT, "mrdancer" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Sorry for the rant.... I've just had too many nights of good
>C/W/Cajun/Tejano/Ballroom dancing ended prematurely by athletic-shoe-clad
>folks wanting the floor powdered so they could "slide" properly, or so they
>thought.
Here in the UK we use an extra-grip anti-slide additive on our
dancefloors.
Beer.
"T." <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Thu, Nov 6, 2003, 4:18pm (EST+5) [email protected] (mrdancer) puts
> out:
> I have problems with it <snip> dance in athletic shoes. Proper dance
> attire <snip> decent wooden dance floor.
>
> Ah, not dancing to have fun then. LOL In the Army, in VA, in the
> early 60s, used to attend weekend dances. In a barn. The farmer would
> sweep out a part of the barn that had a smooth, concrete floor, live
> band, refreshments, and we'd have fun. If you went back a bit, out of
> the light, you'd find the cow stantions, complete with milk cows. I
> don't think there was a soul there that would have said it wasn't a
> proper dance floor. And, yeah, I've done ballroom dancing, and with
> leather sole shoe on;, but, wouldn't say it was a bit more fun than
> those weekends in a barn. The proper part is enjoying yourself.
I guess it's all in what the OP wants. Almost anything is fine for
partying, beer-drinking, buckle-polishing dancing, or even line- and
square-dancing, but it takes a quality dance floor with no additives for
serious dancing.
Sorry for the rant.... I've just had too many nights of good
C/W/Cajun/Tejano/Ballroom dancing ended prematurely by athletic-shoe-clad
folks wanting the floor powdered so they could "slide" properly, or so they
thought.
Blocks=Bumps!
I'd use a continuous flex layer, like carpet pad.
I'd also get some cheap mistake paint, usually $3/gal, and put heavy coats
on both sides of the ply....And seal the membrane around the sides.
Keep the dehumidifier ready too, just in case!
Wilson
"Your Name Here" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello. I am planning to install a hardwood dance floor in my basement
> on top of concrete. My plan is to put moisture barrier plastic on top
> of the concrete, then rubber blocks, then plywood on top of these
> blocks, and then finally, nail down the floor planks. From what I'm
> reading on the net, the floor needs to be "sprung" with some resilience
> so that there is some "give"; otherwise, it's bad for dancing and people
> will end up hurting their knees, angles etc after doing many hours of
> practice. I have some questions that maybe some folks with experience
> in installing hardwood floor can answer.
>
> - To make the floor sprung, I can get some rubber blocks that can be
> install on top of the concrete. I haven't been able to find any info
> about these rubber blocks. Any idea where I can get these? what brand?
>
> - To prevent warping from moisture, I am planning to put a moisture
> barrier on top of the concrete. Does it make sense to also coat the
> plywood and the bottom surface of the wood flooring planks with
> something like linseed oil to prevent moisture absorption? or is it not
> worth it? anything else that might work better than linseed oil?
>
> - From what I understand, it's best to dance directly on the wood and
> so, I don't plan to put any kind of poly finish for the surface of the
> floor. But I do want to protect it. I am thinking of adding 2-3 layers
> of some kind of protective oil like tung oil that will add beauty to the
> wood, fill in the pores to prevent dust getting in them and turning the
> wood into a dull, dark gray color. Can anyone recommend any other
> finishing options? There is something called dance floor wax but I have
> heard many bad things about it.
>
> Thanks for all the help.
>
> -Moe