Hardwood Flooring
Hardwood Flooring Overview
Today's hardwood flooring comes in a wide variety of wood species. Besides
the popular and well known North American hardwoods (like oak, maple and ash)
many companies now offer a variety of exotic hardwood species from all over
the World. Exotic hardwoods offer unique and unusual visual character and
give homeowners the chance to better express their personal decorating tastes
with a more unique wood appearance.
Homeowners looking to use hardwood floors in their homes have the option of
purchasing three different types of wood flooring. Although the end results
may look the same there are distinct advantages for using each type under
different applications.
Solid Hardwood Floors:
are a solid piece of hardwood cut into wood planks that are generally 3/4" thick. (Above ground level areas only, not recommended for concrete slabs.)
Engineered Hardwood Floors:
are several plies of wood that a glued and laminated together to form a wood plank. Range in thickness from 1/4" to just over a half inch. (Can be installed almost anywhere in the home, including over dry concrete slabs.) Click here to read about installing Mannington's engineered hardwood floor, hand-scraped hickory plank.
Longstrip Hardwood Floors:
are really an engineered construction but with a long and wider plank. This allows the top layer to splice 2-3 rows of thin hardwood strips into one plank. Longstrip planks can be glued-down, stapled or floated over a wide variety of sub-floors and used almost anywhere in the home, including dry basements.
Exotic Hardwood Floors:
are used to described hardwood species from around the World. these hardwoods are not found in North America and come from Australia, Africa, Brasil and the Far East. Exotic hardwoods offer unique wood graining and colorations. Most exotic floors are available in engineered wood construction but some are available in solid hardwood planks as well.
Hardwood Types Once installed it is extremely difficult to tell these three different wood flooring construction types apart. Both the engineered and the longstrip have several thin layers (plies) of wood that are glued together. By gluing the plies together you get better dimensional stability within the plank itself, which allows these floors to be used on job sites that have a higher percentage of moisture content than normal. This includes basements and over concrete slabs where solid strip wood floors are considered off limits.
Another choice you have to make is whether to want a pre-finished or an unfinished hardwood floor that has to be finished in your home. The pre-finished floors offer a wider variety of wood species and saves hours of labor and cleanup. While the unfinished wood floors allow you to have a really custom, job-site finish and a completely smooth, uniform surface. You also get an extended factory finish warranty with pre-finished floors, but not with most job-site finished flooring.