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Posted

We are having a renovation and our builders have put in new boards for all the floors - by the time we come to fit the skirting boards (we are fitting thermalskirt), we just realized that the floors are not levelled.

 

On consulting the builder, he said that the job for floor levelling is not part of the job for setting the new floors (?!?!), and that we have to find some other way to level the floors. (i.e we got a massively unhelpful builder)

 

I think some self-levelling compound in that area could work - I know it works for concrete floors, but not sure if this could work on wooden floorboards too? 

 

If we were to find someone to do it, how much should we expect them to charge (the area is around 12m2), and how long would it take to fix this?

 

Thank you!

WhatsApp Image 2025-01-23 at 15.48.34.jpeg

Posted
1 hour ago, tokyotecubate said:

not sure if this could work on wooden floorboards

Yes it works. make sure it sticks by applying PVA first.

I even used it on an ancient tongue and groove floor once and it was fine.   It was a 2 part, vinyl based product which has some flexibility.

 

Just in that corner and zero to about 10mm? easy enough.

 

 

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, tokyotecubate said:

the area is around 12m2

Most domestic floors are far from level, but you wouldn't notice unless trying to play marbles on a hard floor finish*. 

Your skirtings are like a straight edge so are emphasising the gap. Unless you know otherwise about the rest of the room.

It is an easy job, and the better products are self levelling. a general builder can do it.

so you are looking at a half hour for just that corner, or 2 hours for the whole room.

 

* that is a good test, or a golf or other hard ball. 

 

Im interested in the skirting.  It looks quite expensive at £40/m plus the plumbing but I don't know if the whole room needs it.  Any info please?

 

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Posted

Yes absolutely - I came across the product at Grand Design Live, and since we are doing a whole house renovation with heat pump installation, I jumped on the opportunity to use this instead of the traditional radiators - much better for room planning without the wallspace needed for the radiators. 

 

They are now fitted together alongside our heat pump - some companies do offer that as an option ( with add on) rather than the traditional radiators, though not all of them offer that ( I, for one, know that british gas and octopus does not offer that)

 

I have still yet to try it out, will definitely come back for a more detailed review once we have moved in and test-ran it ( which we hope can be done in time before winter is over :D )

  • Thanks 1
Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Andehh said:

Do they provide a bigger surface area then a radiator in a typical room?

Just looked at our lounge out of interest it's about 36m², so we have 36m² UFH. Looking at skirting we have have about 16m linear length of skirting (doors and lots of glazing get in the way). So to match area skirting would need to be very tall.

 

I did try going the skirting route early on in the design, and could not make the numbers work, even for gas without big flow temps, which I was trying to avoid.

 

Plus UFH is so cheap in comparison.

Edited by JohnMo
Posted
22 minutes ago, JohnMo said:

Plus UFH is so cheap in comparison

My thoughts are only for upstairs. I know people say you don't need it, but that would be a risk and psychologically, not controllable.

So UFH in screed on GF certainlyfor cost and function.

 

First floor ufh would require a secondary floor so the cost is higher and carpets unsuitable.

Rads are ugly and use wall space.

Hence skirtings may be viable on all counts.

It shouldn't need to be the same area as ufh either because of heat transfer through aluminium compared to concrete.

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