Wood Floor's
Acclimation,
Material Storing, Loading, and Wood Floor
Products at the Jobsite
The point of
acclimating wood flooring before installing it
is to allow the moisture content of the wood to
adjust to "normal living conditions" at the
site--that is, the temperature and humidity
conditions that will typically be experienced
once the structure is occupied.
Thus, it does no
good at all - in fact, it is likely harmful-to
store wood flooring at the jobsite under
conditions that don't reflect those normal
environmental conditions.
The wood flooring
industry has done a good job in recent years
communicating the message that wood flooring is
a dynamic material subject to changes in
dimension as a result of changes in humidity in
the surrounding environment. That has led to
increasing awareness of the need to acclimate
wood flooring before installation.
Unfortunately, some installers have heard the
message as, "Leaving wood flooring at the
jobsite for two weeks will properly acclimate
the wood, no matter what the conditions are."
In truth, some wood
flooring may already be at the proper moisture
content when it's delivered. To allow it to sit
at the jobsite under excessively humid
conditions will only cause the flooring to
absorb unwanted moisture.
So, the key message is not that acclimation is
good, and that's all you need to know. Rather,
installers need to understand the dynamics of
water and wood and make educated judgments about
when and how much acclimation is required. To do
so requires knowing what the moisture content of
the flooring is at the time of delivery and what
its expected moisture content will be "in use."
Wood at the
warehouse
Once milled, the flooring should be stored in
dry, well-ventilated warehouses before shipment
to jobsites. These are some recommended
guidelines for handling and storing hardwood
flooring:
-
Unloading:
Flooring should be unloaded in good, dry
weather, never in the rain.
-
Warehousing:
Flooring should be stored in an enclosed,
well-ventilated building and located in
areas where similar fine millwork is stored.
The storage area within the building should
be clean and dry. The stacks of flooring
should have good air circulation and no
water drainage nearby.
-
Preventing
condensation: When air in a building is more
humid than outside air, moisture may form on
the underside of the non-insulated roof and
affect flooring. Insulation in the roof or
walls can prevent condensation.
A covered area can
also provide protection, although this is not a
guarantee in a damp season or environment. If
this is not possible, all top pallets should be
covered with polyethylene film or other
water-proof covering.
The storage building
should ideally have controlled humidity.
Continual dry heat may dry flooring below its
desirable moisture content, which could result
in buckled floors if flooring is installed
without proper acclimation. Conversely, storage
in a damp area can introduce unwanted moisture
and expansion in the flooring, which could
result in unacceptable cracks between boards if
flooring is installed without proper
acclimation.
Wood at the jobsite
Before wood is delivered, the jobsite must be
checked to determine if it is ready. Wood should
not be delivered if jobsite
moisture conditions
are
excessive. Otherwise, one will absorb moisture
from the other.
The structure should
be fully enclosed, with doors and windows in
place, and interior climate controls should be
operating for at least 48 hours to stabilize the
moisture conditions of the interior. Once at the
jobsite, the wood should be set indoors and
spread over the subfloor. About four days should
pass before an installation is started. Moisture
contents of both the flooring and the subfloor
must be checked and recorded before any work
begins.
If flooring is
delivered on a damp day or during rain, the
boards will absorb moisture. If installed in
this condition, the flooring will shrink a few
months later and show cracks.
Wood flooring should NOT be delivered to
the jobsite until plastering and painting are
completed and dried. Moisture evaporates from
damp walls into the air within the house, and
some of it will be absorbed by the flooring.
Another condition
that causes flooring to pick up moisture during
construction is less obvious, but more common:
If the heating or air conditioning is not
operating from the time the floor is installed
until the house occupied, the humidity may be
higher than it would be if the house were
occupied.
Only after getting
satisfactory moisture measurements from the
concrete slab and the subfloor, and only after
wood has acclimatized to the jobsite, is the
installer ready to install. When installation is
completed, good practice calls for a delay of
one or more weeks for further acclimation before
beginning the sanding and finishing part of the
job.