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Originally Posted by fredd500 I was going to place a couple of the old laminate floor planks on the floor against the wall, put the skirting on top of that, fix, then remove the laminate planks leaving a plank height between the skirting and floor. Not much and not accurate, but a small gap to assist the carpet fitters. If they don't want to use it, the gap probably won't be any taller than the grippers anyway.
The only reason I thought of this is due to finding a small gap when we removed the existing floor. If the old laminate floor had been done properly, the skirting would have sat on top of the laminate, but it wasn't (the laminate was butted up against the skirting with no expansion gap either). This made me assume the skirting was down before the laminate and therefore the gap was intentional. I assumed (perhaps incorrectly) that the gap was a standard that all new builds and refurbs have. Perhaps not.
Thanks all for your help. My gut feeling is to do as I am thinking. Just hope the carpet fitters agree with it!! |
I've had lots of new skirting laid over the past few months, it all went straight down on the floor, no gap. I think this is pretty much standard but if you want to leave a small gap I can't see this causing any problems. A decent carpet fitter will be able to work with it either way, they would put down gripper anyway so they will get a tight fit whether there's a gap or not. Once the carpet's down you wouldn't be able to tell anyway.
FWIW, there are two ways of doing laminate flooring properly. One would be to take off all the skirting, put laminate down, then redo skirting, but if you are just doing the floor this very often isn't done as you'd potentially end up having to redecorate the whole room. The other way would be to lay the laminate up to the skirting (leaving an expansion gap), then put beading around the edges (attached to the skirting not the laminate) to hide the gap.