I am new to the forum and get to start by admitting I made a rather basic mistake when replacing my kitchen flooring. I am replacing vinyl squares with engineered 5/8" wood floor and ended up removing a significant amount of plywod subflooring down to the joist due to dry rot. The existing subfloor was composed of 2 layers of plywood - a 1/2 " layer on the bottom and a 5/8" layer on top. When I added the first layer back, I ran the layer parallel to the joists, thinking I would run the second layer perpendicular for more strength. After talking with a friend last night, he mentioned that plywood should always be run perpindicular based on the structure of the plywood. I had noticed that even though the new plywood was screwed in to the joists, it didn't appear to be quite as supportive as the old good wood run in the other direction.
I believe that since I will be putting 5/8" plywood in the right direction along with the click lock 5/8" flooring on top, I should still have plenty of support in the right direction. Even though its only 5 or so sheets, I would prefer not to have to take it up and replace it - several sheets had tricky cuts to fit in bay windows and around walls, door frames, etc. I also have some concerns that it may not meet building codes as is.
Appreciate any feedback
I believe that since I will be putting 5/8" plywood in the right direction along with the click lock 5/8" flooring on top, I should still have plenty of support in the right direction. Even though its only 5 or so sheets, I would prefer not to have to take it up and replace it - several sheets had tricky cuts to fit in bay windows and around walls, door frames, etc. I also have some concerns that it may not meet building codes as is.
Appreciate any feedback
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