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Old 06-18-2013, 05:24 PM
cmac2012's Avatar
cmac2012 cmac2012 is offline
Renaissances Dude
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Redwood City, CA
Posts: 34,106
Squeaky floor abatement product that works

Friends, are you troubled by squeaky floors? Well-el-ell, try the amazing "Squeak-no-More" system. One of my clients is a single college professor who is building his empire in part on renting out rooms in his house. He's a character, a likeable guy from Italy. He has a new tenant in the large semi-apt. on his basement floor. He likes the guy, wants to keep him but the fellow has been complaining about loud squeaks in the hardwood floor above his unit. One spot in the main route of foot traffic was particularly bad.

My client found the product in a web search and asked if I could make it work. I'm happy to say I did get it to work, as it makes me look good. Wasn't that hard to use. It's an ingenious system. Uses square drive 3" screws, the bottom inch has 7 threads per inch, the next inch has 8 threads per inch, and the top inch starts with a score all around just above the second batch of threads with bare shank above that. It has a hard plastic collar device that you run the screw through, at least when you're above a joist. You pre-drill a 1/8th hole, when the 7 TPI section hits the joist, it wants to move faster than the 8 TPI section which by then is in the floor board. This draws the two together, and shortly after the 8 TPI section enters the joist somewhat, locking the two together, the screw head reaches the stop in the collar which makes the thread snap at the scored part about a quarter inch below the surface. Looks just like another nail hole to fill.

It worked especially well on my client's floor as it's the older face nailed style. In a T&G set up, you'd have holes where there been none but oh well, it's that or the squeak. Good filling will make them disappear well enough. I use the wax crayon like filler sticks as no sanding is needed.

It also worked on the sections with no joist - the face nailed rows were every 8 inches - half above a joist and half not. You use a different technique for those, a jig tells you when you're at the proper height and you then snap it off by wiggling it back and forth. Doesn't have sufficient grab to snap the head off with torque. Finding the joists is a big part of making this work.

Also works under carpet, some extra techniques used to keep the drill and screw from grabbing and twisting the carpet. You just wrap them in scotch tape which stays intact until it hits the wood.
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Last edited by cmac2012; 06-18-2013 at 06:32 PM. Reason: batch not bath
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