| |
The Flooring Material
All laminate flooring is made
essentially the same way. The top wear layer is cellulose paper impregnated
with clear melamine resins. Just below it is the design layer a photo or
pattern printed on paper and strengthened with resins. The core is usually a
durable fiberboard
The bottom stabilizing layer is made of paper or melamine.
Individual laminate pieces . can look like real wood or stone. There will be
pattern repeats in the floor, though; something you won't find in a flooring
made from natural wood or stone.
|
Planks
Planks are meant to look like a variety of natural materials, including
stone and wood Planks that imitate wood come in a variety of "species,"
colors, and patterns. Plank sizes may vary between manufacturers, but not by
much. They're all about 8 inches wide and about 4 feet long.

|
|
Tiles
Tiles usually mimic other kinds of flooring,
such as ceramic tile or stone.
They can be either individual squares or larger
squares with imitation grout joints. Like planks,
they're fitted tongue-to-groove.
 |
|
Laminate flooring
differs in more than just color and size. There are two distinct
construction methods. With high-pressure lamination, the bottom
and top layers are each heated and pressurized into laminate
structures. These layers are then fused to the core with glue
under heat and pressure. With direct-pressure construction, the
layers are assembled all at once, then filled with hardening
melamine resins using heat and pressure. High-pressure types are
more impact- and dent-resistant. Direct-pressure laminates are
more economical and offer very good quality overall. The packaging
should tell you which kind is inside; if it doesn't call the
manufacturer. |
|
|
If it's not Wood, What
is it?
It's a combination of layers that form a solid, long-lasting flooring
material. Manufacturers have different names for these layers. Some
combine the design and wear layers, but the basics are the same.
 |
|
Still trying to decide if laminate flooring is
for you? The chart below compares laminate with wood and vinyl
flooring.
| |
LAMINATE |
WOOD |
VINYL |
 |
|
Cost (per roughly 400 square feet) |
|
$1,800-$2,800 |
|
$1,800-$2,900 |
|
$300-$1,900 |
 |
|
Durability |
|
Warp-, rip-, scratch-resistant.
Damaged planks replaceable. |
|
Can be refinished.
Lasts indefinitely. |
|
May rip, bend, scratch. Easy to replace. |
 |
|
Impact resistance (for denting and cracking)
|
|
Varies with quality. Resists pressure of at
least 4,250 Ibs. per square inch. Some resist up to 9,000 Ibs. |
|
Varies a lot between
species. Oak is most resistant. White pine dents more easily. |
|
Resists pressure of up to 200 Ibs. per
square inch. |
 |
|
Color |
|
Batches always match. |
|
Varies from tree to
tree; is part of its charm. |
|
Varies from batch to batch. |
 |
|
Stain resistance |
|
High. Made of waterproof resins. |
|
Low. Absorbs water.
Finish is its only protection. |
|
Medium. |
 |
|
UV resistance |
|
High. Won't fade. |
|
Low. May fade or
darken with age. |
|
Low. May fade. |
 |
|
Ease of installation |
|
Easy. Material adapts to some irregularity
in floor |
|
Easy floor
preparation. |
|
Subfloor preparation is difficult.
Irregularities and dirt may show in finish flooring. |
 |
|
Wear layer warranty |
|
Up to 15 years is common. |
|
No warranty, but can
be refinished. |
|
Up to 10 years limited warranty. |
 |
|
|