by Tdarcos » Fri Nov 09, 2012 2:53 pm
There is another thing to remember. With today's engineered flooring - sometimes it's simulated wood or uses a composite like a sawdust compressed into something like OSB, then stained to look like solid wood - you can only sand it a certain number of times before you're supposed to replace the boards. With the older hardwoods, as long as you made the floor even you could sand it until you ground it out and nothing was left, over six or eight sandings, if done evenly you could get away with taking off a half an inch to an inch or more.
Today, I think you can only sand these floors 3 or 4 times. And probably less if you don't know what you're doing, like the previous homeowner.
There is another thing to remember. With today's engineered flooring - sometimes it's simulated wood or uses a composite like a sawdust compressed into something like OSB, then stained to look like solid wood - you can only sand it a certain number of times before you're supposed to replace the boards. With the older hardwoods, as long as you made the floor even you could sand it until you ground it out and nothing was left, over six or eight sandings, if done evenly you could get away with taking off a half an inch to an inch or more.
Today, I think you can only sand these floors 3 or 4 times. And probably less if you don't know what you're doing, like the previous homeowner.