The family and I currently live in an older wood-framed home circa WWII era (it was once on-base officers housing that was moved into town after the war). Over the past few months, a problem has been brewing in the bathroom which all began with a small water leak in the wall behind the lavatory. The leak was repaired but the floor in the bathroom just behind the toilet had become water-logged (fiberboard subflooring from a previous shady contractor) and the flange on the toilet was cracked. I removed the toilet and repaired it as best I could but the problem continued and now the bathroom floor is soft and cracks have appeared in the vinyl sheet flooring.
Heres the plan:
After removing the toilet and vanity I will tear the floor down to the beams and see what condition everything is in. If there is water damage on the beams (i suspect one or more may be sagging slightly) I will sister on 2x6" beams using construction glue and 3-1/2" screws (with pilot holes and in a staggered pattern to prevent cracks). I intend to use a hydraulic car jack and some bricks/lengths of 2x4s to carefully bring the damaged beams back into level before reinforcing. I will probably replace all the cross-members under the toilet with CCA treated 2x6s as well.
The flooring material I intend to use is two layers of 3/4" CCA treated plywood (construction glued to the beams and between the layers and nailed in place). The beams are 13" apart on center (odd I know) so the floor thickness should be sufficient. Once the demo and re-flooring is done, I will fill any anomalies in the flooring with wood-filler, sand smooth, clean thoroughly and put down vinyl tiles to complete the job.
I have done some floor repair and framing in the past but this will be the most in-depth repair I have done. I guess I have a few of questions about the job..
Are there any foreseeable problems with my plan?
Are the vinyl adhesive backed-tiles going to adhere to the treated plywood?
We have a 3-year old son. Using CCA (copper, cyanide, arsenic) treated plywood flooring, are there any health concerns for our son once it is covered with vinyl tiles?
Sorry for the wall-o-text and thanks for any tips/advice you might have! P.S. The forum seems to ignore formatting on this post. Whats the deal?
Heres the plan:
After removing the toilet and vanity I will tear the floor down to the beams and see what condition everything is in. If there is water damage on the beams (i suspect one or more may be sagging slightly) I will sister on 2x6" beams using construction glue and 3-1/2" screws (with pilot holes and in a staggered pattern to prevent cracks). I intend to use a hydraulic car jack and some bricks/lengths of 2x4s to carefully bring the damaged beams back into level before reinforcing. I will probably replace all the cross-members under the toilet with CCA treated 2x6s as well.
The flooring material I intend to use is two layers of 3/4" CCA treated plywood (construction glued to the beams and between the layers and nailed in place). The beams are 13" apart on center (odd I know) so the floor thickness should be sufficient. Once the demo and re-flooring is done, I will fill any anomalies in the flooring with wood-filler, sand smooth, clean thoroughly and put down vinyl tiles to complete the job.
I have done some floor repair and framing in the past but this will be the most in-depth repair I have done. I guess I have a few of questions about the job..
Are there any foreseeable problems with my plan?
Are the vinyl adhesive backed-tiles going to adhere to the treated plywood?
We have a 3-year old son. Using CCA (copper, cyanide, arsenic) treated plywood flooring, are there any health concerns for our son once it is covered with vinyl tiles?
Sorry for the wall-o-text and thanks for any tips/advice you might have! P.S. The forum seems to ignore formatting on this post. Whats the deal?
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