Laminate & Engineered Flooring
Floating floor installation, click-lock systems, expansion gaps, underlayments, and specialty tools.
- Explain floating floor principles and why expansion gaps are critical
- Describe laminate click-lock installation tools and techniques
- Compare engineered hardwood properties with solid hardwood
- Identify underlayment types and their applications
- State stagger pattern requirements for floating floors
Leçon 1
Floating Floor Principles & Expansion Gaps
What Is a Floating Floor?
A floating floor is not fastened to the subfloor - it rests on top of an underlayment and is held in place by its own weight and the interlocking connection between boards. Both laminate and many engineered hardwood products use the floating installation method.
Floating Installation
Attachment: None - boards lock to each other
Subfloor types: Concrete, plywood, existing floor
Expansion gap: Required at all perimeters
Underlayment: Always required
Nail-Down Installation
Attachment: Nailed through tongue to subfloor
Subfloor types: Wood subfloor only
Expansion gap: Required at walls
Underlayment: Not typically required
Expansion Gap Requirements
Floating floors expand and contract as a single unit with temperature and humidity changes. An expansion gap must be maintained around the entire perimeter and at all fixed objects. The standard minimum gap is 1/4 to 3/8 inch (varies by manufacturer), with larger gaps for rooms exceeding certain dimensions.
No Expansion Gap = Buckling
A floating floor with insufficient expansion gaps will buckle when it expands. This is the single most common installation defect with laminate and floating engineered floors. Always use spacers during installation.
Transition Zones
Long, continuous runs of floating flooring require transition strips or expansion breaks at doorways and at manufacturer-specified maximum lengths (typically 30 to 40 feet). Without these breaks, the accumulated expansion over a large area exceeds the perimeter gap capacity.
Floating floors are not fastened to the subfloor and require expansion gaps at all perimeters (minimum 1/4 to 3/8 inch). Missing or insufficient expansion gaps cause buckling - the most common floating floor defect.