Today's
Sponsors:


BetterVacuumcups.com

Biesse America

Biewer Lumber

Binks

Black Bros. Co.

Blackhawk Machinery

Briquetting Solutions by Sunomi LLC

Brown Wood Products Co.

Business Management Solutions

Byrd Tool

C.R. Onsrud

Cab Parts

Cabinet Door Service Co.

Cabinet Pro

CabinetCRUNCHER Cutlist & 3D Cabinet Design Software

Cabinetmakers Association

CADCABINETS.COM

CADCode

Cag Lumber

Cantek America

Carolina Woodworking Consultants

Carter Products

Carving Technologies

Castle

Catskill Timber Industries

Charles G.G. Schmidt Co.

Chicago Dowel Company, Inc.

Clear Lake Lumber

CNC Parts Dept.

1-800-Cabinets.com

2Sand.com

3M Corporation

A O M Spray Equipment

Abrasive Resource

Accu-Router, Inc.

AceCo Precision Wood Tooling

Activa

Air Handling Systems

Alan McIlvain Company

Algoma Lumber Co.

All Star Adhesives

Alliance Millsoft

Allied Machinery Inc.

AllRout

Amana Tool

Ameitech South

American Fabric Filter Co.

American Institute of Building Design

American National Woodworking Knife

American Rotary Converters

Andreou Machinery

ANEST IWATA USA, Inc.

Antique Beams and Boards

Antique Building Materials

Anver Corporation

Apollo Sprayers Inc.

Arbor Processing Inc.

Architectural Elements

ArtCam

ATEMAG

Atlantic Machinery Corp.

Auton Motorized Systems

AWFS

B.H. Davis Company

Bailey's Inc.

Baker Products

Banks Hardwoods

Barn Detail

Barn Door Lumber

BC Wood Specialties Group

BeamsRUS

Beaver Tools

Benz Incorporated

Best Cabinets




Troubleshooting Wood Flooring Shrinkage       Moisture change is always the culprit when wood shrinks. Here, pros a case of gapped-out wood flooring. July 28, 2006

Question
I am looking for info on kempas, which some customer friends recently installed as flooring. The flooring was pre-finished and has shrunk over a period of 6 months or so since installation. The gaps between the 3 5/8" planks are now up to 1/8" wide. I suspect that the lumber was improperly dried to begin with, partly due to the very slow way in which the shrinkage gradually appeared. This home is humidity controlled, so I doubt that extreme ambient dryness is the problem. Does anyone here have experience in the drying of kempas or related woods? Does my analysis make sense to you? The wood was stored inside the home for several weeks prior to installation, so I'd think that any moisture picked up in shipping would have had ample opportunity to dissipate. I am thinking that the wood may have been dried too quickly and case hardened, causing the remaining moisture to seep out very slowly. Or could kempas be a wood which suffers exceptionally large dimensional swings due to moisture changes? I'd like to discover the root of the problem so that its solution can be addressed successfully.

Forum Responses
(Sawing and Drying Forum)
From contributor H:
Is there radiant heat in the floor? Storing the flooring on site is no good if it is all stored in one pile in one place. Had a similar problem with Jatoba pre-finished and radiant heat. One client stored his floor in one room in one pile for a month. It shrunk over the winter and tightened up in summer. Another client spread his flooring out in open bundles throughout out the home for a few weeks before installation. It never moved noticeably. Is there vapor barrier under the floor? Is it installed over wafer/osb/type subfloor?



From the original questioner:
There is no radiant heat – it's a standard gas furnace. The subfloor has no vapor barrier but it is over a finished and heated basement area, not crawl space. The subfloor is plywood.


From Professor Gene Wengert, forum technical advisor:
It is not casehardening, as casehardening does not affect moisture movement. Absolutely. Positively. Wood only shrinks over a time period for one reason and that reason is that it is losing moisture. So, the wood was too wet at the time of installation for the home's RH. It seems likely that the wood was not properly dried. It is easy to check. Measure the width of the flooring strips now. The amount they are smaller than the original size is then used to calculate the percent shrinkage. For each 1% size change, add about 4% MC to the present MC value. (This is a rough estimate; we would make more precise calculations if we were going to court.) So, with 1/8" shrinkage and 3-5/8" widths, that is 3%, so the wood was 12% MC wetter than it is now and now it is likely around 7% MC, so that gives me 19% MC at the time of manufacture. If this is indeed true, then it is more than just bad drying; it is likely no kiln drying at all.

Would you like to add information to this article?
Interested in writing or submitting an article?
Have a question about this article?


Have you reviewed the related Knowledge Base areas below?
  • KnowledgeBase: Knowledge Base

  • KnowledgeBase: Primary Processing

  • KnowledgeBase: Primary Processing: General

  • KnowledgeBase: Wood Engineering

  • KnowledgeBase: Wood Engineering: Wood Properties




    Would you like to add information to this article? ... Click Here

    If you have a question regarding a Knowledge Base article, your best chance at uncovering an answer is to search the entire Knowledge Base for related articles or to post your question at the appropriate WOODWEB Forum. Before posting your message, be sure to
    review our Forum Guidelines.

    Questions entered in the Knowledge Base Article comment form will not generate responses! A list of WOODWEB Forums can be found at WOODWEB's Site Map.

    When you post your question at the Forum, be sure to include references to the Knowledge Base article that inspired your question. The more information you provide with your question, the better your chances are of receiving responses.

    Return to beginning of article.



    Refer a Friend || Read This Important Information || Site Map || Privacy Policy || Site User Agreement

    Letters, questions or comments? E-Mail us and let us know what you think. Be sure to review our Frequently Asked Questions page.

    Contact us to discuss advertising or to report problems with this site.

    To report a problem, send an e-mail to our Webmaster

    Copyright © 1996-2009 - WOODWEB ® Inc.
    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any manner without permission of the Editor.
    Review WOODWEB's Copyright Policy.

    The editors, writers, and staff at WOODWEB try to promote safe practices. What is safe for one woodworker under certain conditions may not be safe for others in different circumstances. Readers should undertake the use of materials and methods discussed at WOODWEB after considerate evaluation, and at their own risk.

    WOODWEB, Inc.
    RR4 Box 265A
    Montrose, PA 18801

    Contact WOODWEB













  •   Home » Knowledge Base » Knowledge Base Article