Flooring and cabinets
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Flooring and cabinets
I have a dilemma, I’m about to put flooring in the salon (real hardwood). Do I put the floor down then set the galley cabinets on top of the flooring (my inner self tells me to do this).
Or do I install the cabinets and cut the flooring around the cabinets (allowing the flooring to be removed without removing the cabinets if something needs fixing in the “basement”)
Thanks for your thoughts
Or do I install the cabinets and cut the flooring around the cabinets (allowing the flooring to be removed without removing the cabinets if something needs fixing in the “basement”)
Thanks for your thoughts
Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
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Re: Flooring and cabinets
What sq footage of flooring would you save by cabinet first, is cost an issue? How long do you expect the floor to last vs how long do you expect to own the boat. No doubt the lines will be cleaner with cabinets on top of floor vs pieced to fit.
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Re: Flooring and cabinets
I would put the cabinets on a piece of plywood that is the same thickness as the hardwood floor, and then put the hardwood in so that it can be removed to make repairs. That way, the cabinets are the right height, you are not paying hardwood prices or doing the extra work to install where you only need a spacer, and you have the ability to maintain your boat.
If you are worried about how the floor meets the cabinets, you can screw in shoe molding instead of nailing it and then you can remove the flooring without damaging anything, though it will take longer.
If you are worried about how the floor meets the cabinets, you can screw in shoe molding instead of nailing it and then you can remove the flooring without damaging anything, though it will take longer.
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Re: Flooring and cabinets
I'm looking at about 140sq/ft, the cost is not too much of a consideration, I have allowed for about $4-5.00 sq/ft.Away wrote:What sq footage of flooring would you save by cabinet first, is cost an issue? How long do you expect the floor to last vs how long do you expect to own the boat. No doubt the lines will be cleaner with cabinets on top of floor vs pieced to fit.
I plan to own the boat forever, I don't see anyone besides me appreciating the time and cost involved, would like to get about 5 years or so from the floor using it all summer.
Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Re: Flooring and cabinets
This is why I asked! that is a great idea!WayWeGo wrote:I would put the cabinets on a piece of plywood that is the same thickness as the hardwood floor, and then put the hardwood in so that it can be removed to make repairs. That way, the cabinets are the right height, you are not paying hardwood prices or doing the extra work to install where you only need a spacer, and you have the ability to maintain your boat.
If you are worried about how the floor meets the cabinets, you can screw in shoe molding instead of nailing it and then you can remove the flooring without damaging anything, though it will take longer.
Thanks WWG, that is what I will do
Pictures to follow

Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Re: Flooring and cabinets
I like Way We Go's suggestion I only wonder if its even necessary to raise/have the cabinets on the plywood or just have them on the subfloor?
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Re: Flooring and cabinets
There are two reasons for lifting the cabinets to the same height as the floor:
1) You lose almost an inch of counter height if the cabinet is below the flooring.
2) If you have a built in device that is under the countertop and you need to slide it out for repair, the flooring will trap it in place.
Reason #2 is quite commonly seen in homes when someone has their kitchen floor tiled or puts hardwood down over a vinyl floor. The correct way to do this is to remove the cabinets to do the job, but that costs a lot more and many contractors do not tell their customers about this option. It looks good until the dishwasher develops a leak and you have to tear up the floor to remove it.
1) You lose almost an inch of counter height if the cabinet is below the flooring.
2) If you have a built in device that is under the countertop and you need to slide it out for repair, the flooring will trap it in place.
Reason #2 is quite commonly seen in homes when someone has their kitchen floor tiled or puts hardwood down over a vinyl floor. The correct way to do this is to remove the cabinets to do the job, but that costs a lot more and many contractors do not tell their customers about this option. It looks good until the dishwasher develops a leak and you have to tear up the floor to remove it.
1975 F-36 Convertible
Twin Chrysler 440's
Twin Chrysler 440's
Re: Flooring and cabinets
I can completely see the wisdom in this.WayWeGo wrote:There are two reasons for lifting the cabinets to the same height as the floor:
1) You lose almost an inch of counter height if the cabinet is below the flooring.
2) If you have a built in device that is under the countertop and you need to slide it out for repair, the flooring will trap it in place.
Reason #2 is quite commonly seen in homes when someone has their kitchen floor tiled or puts hardwood down over a vinyl floor. The correct way to do this is to remove the cabinets to do the job, but that costs a lot more and many contractors do not tell their customers about this option. It looks good until the dishwasher develops a leak and you have to tear up the floor to remove it.
I raised my cabinets last night with 1/2 plywood, it now is at almost exactly the same height as the flooring
Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Re: Flooring and cabinets
Barrie... This is a big step but choose your flooring carefully. I recommend a sample subjected to my famous bucket and oven environmental testing. No bamboo or something that will buckle if a leak goes undetected for a couple weeks.
Re: Flooring and cabinets
LOL your "famous" bucket and water test..........I've never heard of it//Misty wrote:Barrie... This is a big step but choose your flooring carefully. I recommend a sample subjected to my famous bucket and oven environmental testing. No bamboo or something that will buckle if a leak goes undetected for a couple weeks.
I have coated the 3/4" sub floor with 2 coats of resin to make it waterproof. I hope to use either real wood or a all vinyl locking type laminate.
I believe real wood would survive reasonably well if it got wet.
Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Re: Flooring and cabinets
Harold "dynamite" Payson had a similar technique for materials testing. He'd throw whatever wood he was thinking about in the back of his truck and let the weather beat it for six mos to a year then decide if it was good. A neighbor installed solid bamboo and it all buckled. Oaks can encourage rot colonies. Whatever you choose I know you will install it very well so post pics! Then I sit and stare st my mauve carpeting and think... 

Re: Flooring and cabinets
I almost pulled the trigger on a product called Amtico Teak and Holly. Maybe next year. I did get some samples and it is a vinyl prodcut that really looks like wood. Costs are about $10-14/sq ft. It is pricey but looks way better than the other vinyl teak and holly that I have seen.
I think I will go throw the samples in the back yard and see how they look next spring!. Sounds like a good reliability test
I think I will go throw the samples in the back yard and see how they look next spring!. Sounds like a good reliability test

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2001 Seadoo Challenger 2000
97 Lowe Roughneck 17TC
1948 Alumacraft K14, Evinrude twin 6hp " Still kickin"
Re: Flooring and cabinets
LOL, well I don't have a year or even six monthsMisty wrote:Harold "dynamite" Payson had a similar technique for materials testing. He'd throw whatever wood he was thinking about in the back of his truck and let the weather beat it for six mos to a year then decide if it was good. A neighbor installed solid bamboo and it all buckled. Oaks can encourage rot colonies. Whatever you choose I know you will install it very well so post pics! Then I sit and stare st my mauve carpeting and think...

I haven't heard that about bamboo!! I ended up with a 3/4" thick solid oak flooring. I have to build a "L" shaped booth forward of the galley then I can put the floor down, so maybe next week.
I'm sure you have the nicest mauve carpet anyone has ever seen

Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Re: Flooring and cabinets
I've seen the Amtico on the web, I thought it might be perfect for the aft deck to replace the old teak deck the rotted away. Even at $14/sq ft it would be less expensive and easier to install then real teak.gitchisum wrote:I almost pulled the trigger on a product called Amtico Teak and Holly. Maybe next year. I did get some samples and it is a vinyl prodcut that really looks like wood. Costs are about $10-14/sq ft. It is pricey but looks way better than the other vinyl teak and holly that I have seen.
I think I will go throw the samples in the back yard and see how they look next spring!. Sounds like a good reliability test
Your test wouldn't work for me, I have coyotes in the back yard and they carry away just about anything that's not tied down

Barrie
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"
Aylmer Ontario, Canada
36' Tri-Fly "The Obvious"