Vinyl Flooring Types
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Popular types of vinyl flooring include plank, sheet and peel and stick. With everything from realistic wood-look embossed planks to ceramic-look tiles, you can buy vinyl flooring in a wide range of colors and designs. It is resistant to moisture and endures daily wear and tear. It works well in rooms with a lot of foot traffic.
- Vinyl plank flooring has the richness, deep texture and look of real hardwood flooring without the high cost.
- Vinyl sheet flooring works well in large spaces and is easy to maintain.
- Peel and stick vinyl flooring tiles are removable and quick and easy to install, making them one the best vinyl flooring choices for small spaces. They have adhesive backing so you can place them easily with no extra materials or tools.
Tip: Choose sheet vinyl for installing in large spaces and use tiles for bathroom vinyl flooring or other smaller rooms.
Vinyl flooring planks are all the same length, unlike random-length hardwood planks. This can lead to eye-catching, and not in a good way, weird joint patterns. Hence the question: “How do I stagger vinyl plank flooring?”
Get this wrong, and your floor will look like an amateur installed it. Get the vinyl plank flooring layout right and your friends won’t believe you did it yourself.
Below, you will see what tools and supplies you will need for this process as well as the typical prices for each item. We will also break down step-by-step what you will need to do in order to properly stagger your vinyl flooring. It’s not just the LVT staggered pattern that counts. Staggering vinyl flooring also keeps the structural integrity of the floor intact, reducing the risk of issues such as plank bowing, separating or warping.
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Hardwood Floor Installation
The average total cost ranges from $9 to $20 per square foot.
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Carpet Installation
The average total cost for carpet ranges from $5.67 to over $21 per square foot, depending on the quality.
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Laminate Floor Installation
The average total cost for laminate flooring is between $3 to $13 per square foot.
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Tools:
- Utility knife: $7-$12
- Replacement blades: $3-$6 per pack
- Tape measure: $5-$15
- Straight edge or T-square: $12-$25
- Spacers: $3-$5 per pack of 200
- Safety gloves: $4-$10
Supplies:
- Vinyl plank flooring: $1.30-$4.19 per sq. ft.
Step-by-step procedure
We’ll split this process into two phases, prepping your planks and then installing the correct pattern. The essential tip to staggering your vinyl plank flooring is to ensure that the end of each plank is at least 6 to 8 inches away from the closest seam in the row before. This will create a random stagger pattern, which is what you want.
Preparation before staggering flooring planks
Without these crucial steps, a bit of the shine will be taken off your vinyl plank flooring patterns.
- Measure the width of the room and divide that number by the width of the planks you are using. This will give you the number of full rows of vinyl planks you will need. There’s an example in the next point that will help you get your head around this concept, if it isn’t yet.
- Calculate the width of the final row. If it is less than the width of a normal plank, cut the planks for your first row so that they are the same width as the last row. This will make your floor symmetrical. Here’s the example: Let’s say you’re working with 5” planks, and your floor is 154” across. 154/5 = 30 remainder 4. Your floor will have 30 full planks with 4” left over. Therefore, rip your first row of planks to be 2” wide. The last row will be 2” too wide as well – nicely balanced.
- Take your planks out of their packages in the room you’ll be doing the flooring. Mix up the planks from the various packages. Why? If the boxes contain planks from different “runs” of the flooring, and likely they are, they might have slight color differences. Mixing them will avoid having all lighter Chestnut Brown on one side and noticeably darker Chestnut Brown on the other.
Also, read the installation material that comes with the flooring. It will remind you to do things like use 1/4-inch spacers between planks and walls.
Steps for staggering vinyl plank flooring
- Lay a full plank to begin row one. Remember to do the handy calculation described above.
- Ensure that the plank at the end of row one is no less than 6 inches in length. If it is less than 6 inches, cut off enough from the first plank of the row so that the last piece is longer than 6 inches, the minimum needed for structural strength. Repeat this for every row as needed.
- For row two, score and snap the first plank in half. Its end should be at least 6 to 8 inches apart from the closest seam in row one. This will stagger the seams between the adjacent rows in a random way. That’s what you’re after.
- To start row 3, cut a full-width plank to the length of the trimmed, ripped piece at the end of row 1. Repeat steps #2-3 to complete row three.
- Use the cutoff plank from the end of row two to begin row four. Repeat steps #2-3 to complete row four.
- Continue this pattern until your staggered vinyl floor is finished.
That’s the general idea. But eyeball the first piece of each new row. Even lay out all the pieces before snapping them in place. Will the joints look randomly placed? That’s good. If they look too uniform, you’ve got an H-joint or Step/Lightning problem – which can be solved by following the information below.
Before getting specific, the general solution is to cut the first plank of the next row at a length 2-3 inches different than any first plank in a row yet – as long as it is at least 6 inches.
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Additional info to know
- The “H” problem: When the seams of the first row line up with the seams of the third, this forms an H-joint. This pattern doesn’t provide a natural look to your flooring and can unnecessarily attract the viewer’s eyes.
- The “Step” or Lightning problem: The same applies to a step-pattern in the flooring. To avoid these, use your cutoff planks to begin every other row. The different lengths of each cutoff should allow the seams to fall in random order. If after a few rows you run out of cutoffs, eye the previous two rows and cut the next row’s first plank so that the seams won’t be too close together.
- A rule of thumb: For 5-inch wide planks, have a minimum of 6 inches between adjacent row seams. For planks wider than 5 inches, you can raise the minimum to 8-10 inches. However, going over 10 inches can make it difficult to avoid H-joints.
- Make sure to change your utility knife blade if it becomes dull. A dulled blade can create jagged edges on the vinyl planks.