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Posted by tbasc@bellsouth.net on July 30, 2006, 8:37 am
This is being done every day in my area and incresing the value of the
houses.
The slight scaring and staining from nails is considered charming.
TB
Alan wrote:
> I had a similar situation. Red Oak hardwood floors hiding under old
> wall to wall carpet. I even had a corner of linoleum at the front
> door. What I did was simply remove all the nail fragments, and
> carefully scraped to remove glue under the lineoleum. Examine the
> amount of cupping on the flooring. If its not too bad and the original
> finish still there, I'd take a bucket of warm water with soap and clean
> the floor. Don't pour water on the floor or otherwise soak the wood
> though. Wipe off excess water as you go, and if necessary, dry with an
> old towel. Ideally, the nail holes aren't all that bad, and you can
> leave well enough alone until you refinish the entire floor.
> Refinishing is a major job that will require careful research
> concerning methods of sanding, filling of holes (such as your nail
> holes and cracks between boards), securing of loose squeaky boards, and
> choice of finish. Because our old finish wasn't really horrible, we
> decided to put off refinishing for awhile. If the finish wears to the
> wood, that's not all bad because when you refinish the flooring, you'll
> be sanding down to the original wood anyway. Just put a throw rug over
> really worn areas to keep the worst dirt from getting ground into the
> grain. I hope this helps.
>
> Zack V. wrote:
> > Hi group,
> >
> > I am ripping some old wall-to-wall carpeting to expose the hardwood floor
> > underneath. (The carpet is shot and I hear hardwood floors are in these
> > days.) The problem is the edges of the carpet are stapled to wooden slats
> > which are nailed down to the floor. The nails are easy enough to pull out.
> > The floor is in good shape and I don't plan to revarnish anytime soon. What
> > is best to use to fill in the nail holes?
> >
> > TIA-ZV
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