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Laminate Floor Assessment |
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Transition molding to the carpet at the entry
door was hot glued to the laminate and not attached to the sub-floor. Due to
the non-permanent nature of the hot glue and laminate combination, hot
thermoplastic adhesive should only be used for temporary fastening to
plastic laminate. And usually that is for the application of levelers for
plank replacements. Also, note in the picture just right of center where
some carpet was under the molding preventing it from sitting flush on the
sub-floor. |
| The same transition molding as
above was forced under the door jamb on one side compressing the laminate
floor and causing the opposite side of the molding to break loose from it's
tenuous bond to the floor. Note the chipped and splintered door jamb
(someone needs to invest in a new saw blade) and the dislodged door casing.
Sometimes installers in an attempt to avoid scribing a molding around a door
jamb and casing combination will slide the end of the molding under the jamb
to hide the cut end. It will occasionally work if the jamb has enough
clearance. In this case there wasn't enough room and this Mickey-mouse
installation of the molding essentially locked the floor in place and caused
the molding to break loose on the opposite side where it wasn't under the
casing. |
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The client claims the installer filled gaps
between the molding and wall with painter's putty. I'm not sure of the type
of filler product but it feels like it has a putty like consistency. The
problem is the not putty, as it is intended to fill gaps. The problem lies
in it's application. Excessive amount of product is in places an inch
or more above the top of the baseboard molding. At the time of installation
this probably could have been cleaned off without much effort. I tried
cleaning a spot with water and a rag and was able to get some putty residue
off of the new wall paint but had to rub pretty hard. I believe to get it to
look like it should some aggressive scrubbing is going to have to take
place. I'm afraid that this is going to compromise at least the paint and
maybe even the wall texture. I'm recommending less aggressive scrubbing,
touch up paint the wall and replacing the base molding with a similar style
base that is 1/2" to an inch taller. The customer has no objection to this
correction method. |
| Another putty look. |
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An unfilled area of the base in the water closet where the
base was cut short. |
| Opposite side of the same area as above. |
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Base cut short where it meets the shower surround. |
| Base not set to the floor. |
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Old caulking not removed from base of toilet before
resetting. |
| Side view of the toilet. |
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Low spot in the sub floor along an interior wall making for
a 3/8" gap where the silver foil of the underlayment can be seen. I do not
believe approved Wilsonart underlayments have a silver foil. |
| Customer claims installer
installed new kickplate on the vanity cabinet and kickplate is not straight.
It looks like it may be bowed out in the middle and floor was cut to it and
molding applied. If installer agrees to install a kickplate he should make
sure he installs it properly- meaning straight, plumb and level prior to
cutting the floor and applying the finish molding. |
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Corner of the same cabinet pictured above.
Customer claims she wanted solid wood molding stained as close as possible
to match the cabinet. She believes the paper covered wood composite molding
will not hold up in this heavily maintained area. I have to agree, It won't
be long before that corner resembles dog dirt. If it doesn't already. |
| Some funky door jamb and casing cutting in the
vanity area and closet. |
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Someone needs some training on the finer points of making
finish cuts in wood. |
| While this white melamine quarter round
application doesn't look horrible, the customer claims she purchased end cap
to match the floor for the tub and shower. |
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Continuation of above. |
| Looks like debris is caught in the end joint
between two planks in the vanity area. The floor was supposed to be glued
together and a plank replacement rarely looks as good as a new factory edge
installation. |
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Improper stagger in the bedroom, Wilsonart specs call for a
minimum of 10". |
| Another row with inadequate stagger. |
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Another |
| Chipped corner in the bedroom. |
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Another chipped corner. |
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Recommend complete replacement with WilsonArt approved
underlayment. New higher baseboard molding, touch up painting, door jamb
repair, sub floor leveling and new trim installation. Click here for
installation proposal. |