ajk1
Structural
- Apr 22, 2011
- 1,791
I am investigationg a recently installed engineered wood laminate flooring in a 30 foot x 90 foot room, on top of the slab-on-grade. The woood laminate has buckled in a few locations. The slab on grade itself has been in place for 45 years. The wood lamiante flooring was installed in about February and the buckling was noticed about 2 weeks ago. Location is toronto Canada. The laminate wood is not adhered to the slab. I suppose if the wood absorbs moisture from any source, it will expand, and if installed tight with no expansion space, it will buckle when force > Euler buckling load. Could the air conditioning be the cause, in that it increases the relative humidity (although it decreases the absolute humidity) when the air is cooled?
Anyone had any experience with this type of wood, its engineering properties and behavious, and what most probably is the cause of the buckling?
Anyone had any experience with this type of wood, its engineering properties and behavious, and what most probably is the cause of the buckling?