In the early 90s, I worked in a stamping factory in Detroit that used 6x8 end-cut blocks for flooring. They were indestructible, holding 150 ton molds. Probably 80 years old then. We had the floor cleaned and sealed - ended up being the most beautiful floor I've ever seen.
Жаль труд, через пол года будет напрастным, дерево расширяется и сужается зимой и летом на каждые 100мм 1мм дыхания, следовательно на 3000мм это будет 30мм, все порвёт и треснет, потом встанет дыбом, это я как опытный столяр заявляю.
@@pudovkin_mebel ну, во-первых, скорее всего, использовались сухие бруски, а не естественной влажности, а во-вторых, они ведь всё это склеили клеем с опилками, так что теперь это, считай, монолит, главное по краям оставить зазоры на расширение.
Yes in my living room, it's actually intended for wood workshops, where you can drive with heavy carts on it. In Germany we call it Stirnholz Parkett, and it's very resistant
@@MrJimme2003 In the ones Ive seen, concrete but they use endgrain lengths of wood that are like 12 inches deep. Great for machine shops because you can drop something expensive and it wont break. when the floor gets damaged just rip the section out and replace
@@BloopTube what about machine oils and coolant? Id imagine this would soften up the wood very quickly, but obviously if it works I am missing something. Also I assume the larger machines would need large metal foot pads so that they don't sink into the wood over time and warp the bed of the machine.
It was used for high traffic areas like workshops and such for over a century. It's usually much thicker, so it takes quite some time to deteriorate even if it's not taken good care of. It's warmer than concrete or stone floor and things don't break that easily when they drop down on it. It doesn't get as slippery as woodflooring that's layed lengthwise bc the softer part of the rings wears down quicker and gives kind of a rippled texture. There were horse stables with this kind of flooring!
@@nagel133 when your foundation shifts, everything will crack eventually (except for carpet, which is going to look shitty in a workshop or stable for other reasons 🤷🏼♀️
Yes, this kind of floor is easy to find in Argentina. We call it "parquet" As I read the comments, some say it is common in Europe, too... So that's probably where we inherit it from (architecture in my country is mainly of French, Italian and Spanish styles)
US parquet looks nothing like that. This is gorgeous and so is our style of parquet. Matter of taste to pattern but this is stunning. The only negative is the raised floor. Unless basement, we do everything at level
Yes. My grandfather was a carpenter. His workshop flor was made from 10 x 10 x 20 cm wood blogs. Even in winter time the floor was well insulated. And it was looking stunning.
Endgrain is remarkably strong, because the entire length of the fibers are taking the compression, rather than just one spot along the side--wood has better compression strength when approached from the endgrain than it does from along the grain. Additionally, experiments with wooden cutting boards have shown that wood can actually absorb and--after about half an hour--terminate bacteria, etc...but that endgrain cutting surfaces do it better than along the grain. Butchers throughout time knew that endgrain chopping blocks kept their meat cleaving efforts healthier and fresher for a very long time, but up until the late 1990s or early 2000s when the studies were done, nobody knew why. So while technically that plastic cutting board is more sterile if you clean it right away...if you don't *really* clean into the gouges left by all that cleaning, any bacteria trapped in there with food particles can fester and grow...but the grain of wood is a death trap. When you clean a cutting board right away, the uppermost surfaces that get swabbed to try to detect bacterial presence may show bacteria on a wooden surface and none on a plastic surface...but it's not swabbing into the cuts and scratches. Plastic cuts do not reseal, so they remain exposed and can harbor colonies. But funny enough, both side grain and end grain does close back up...and both destroy the bacteria after half an hour or so (faster for end grain). This seeming disparity *right after* a board is used is why people think plastic is 'better" for a cutting surface. It's good, but it's not *perfect.* Same with wood: it is *also* still good good, even if it isn't perfect. Now, for a commercial kitchen requiring a cutting surface to be constantly in use, yeah, go with plastic or whatever. The main advantage is that you can wash it with a sterilizing agent (weak solution of bleach, etc), and then wipe it off X number of seconds later to rinse away any lingering residues. But if you're cooking at home, with time (and washings) between uses? Don't be afraid of wood! (Or bamboo, which is technically a grass, but still holds the same properties.)
Thank you for all these details ! I am interested because I was searching information about food spoon in wood, to cook . I was wondering it is really a good idea, because I see that the wood has cracks, and it seems to be good places for bacteria to grow! (Sorry, english is not my first language)
I worked at Ford Twin Cities Assembly in the late '70's and we had end grain flooring throughout the plant. That plant was opened in 1925 and operated until 2011.
@dazenguile4215 like chick's truck, sometimes they put a sticker of the plant of manufacture (newer Expeditions and Navigators will have a Kentucky Truck Plant sticker), but all cars have the assembly location on the original MSRP sticker, my Fusion was made in Hermosillo, Mexico
It didn't used to get that humid in Germany. Might change with climate change. Our neighbor has this in their house (kitchen) and it keeps cracking. They have filled the cracks a couple of times already.
We used oak board ends for the clubhouse of apartments we built. Installed similar to this, underlayment, ends of oak pieces, sanding, cork dust for grout, three days of staining and sealing and it is tough as nails.
Yes, the Denver Art Museum. I was involved in the construction of that building in the early 2000s and had to take special consideration, installing sliding door tracks to accommodate the thickness of the floor
I sold the Worthwood end grain flooring for the Denver Art Museum. Look up Oregon Lumber Co. Worthwood solid end grain flooring if anyone is interested in this flooring.
It's actually common in machine shops. They are usually about 3.5 inches thick. Machine shops use this because if you drop a die section or a cutting tool on a concrete floor. It will be damaged. Also the wood will absorb oils and not be slippery like concrete.
WWII era buildings now warehouses that could have been for anything in the day, had 6"X6"X6" end grain red oak floors. Had to have been 80,000 square feet.
I have seen many floors in my time. This appears to be yet another floor that I have now seen. Truly one of the all-time floors. You know, I wanted to be a marine biologist when I was a kid. Funny how time slips away from you.
I see that you have started appreciating the comments... No one asks you to appreciate everything, but sometimes you show that you care about your followers (even if you don't, and it is normal), but with kindness, you show a little respect and keep your followers👍🌹
Sure are thirsty, especially underneath where he didn't seal. It might even swell enough to buckle the floor plates and warp the wall. Cracks in the plaster ? Mabye. Who cares, looks like shit.
The process is utterly brutal on the back. You can only do this for about ten years, twenty for the real beasts. Any longer and the second half of your life really sucks, especially if you’re still doing this in your 40’s. This is strictly a young man’s job unless longevity ain’t your jam.
I love this. Dont care what anyone says ,I'd have this in every room. With dogs, grandkids, and their friends and people that are messy. Oh yeah, perfect and beautiful
My grandpa owned a machine shop... He took railroad ties on end and placed them into the ground, on end... If one gets damaged you pull it out and slide in a new one... Problem is he built in 1930's and those boards were available then😅. But it looked kinda similar... Only super dark from the creosote of the timbers.... But i will always remember the smell of that old shop... Diesel, dirt, and machine oil... Man i miss that ol man...
Similar feelings dude. Grandpa was a man's man and was so capable. Hands like huge rouge gloves and wrinkles deeper than I have seen on most but I remember hugging him and I miss it.
Unless you hardcore seal the surface with a few layers of epoxy, the vertical cut of this wood will suck stains like nobody's business. This is due to the intact sclerenchyma structure of the wood, which is the trees natural transport system for water and nutrients.
Доброго вечера Я скажу своё слово. Мне очень нравится ваша работа. Это называется Паркетный пол. Но что в этом самое главное. Из какой древесины, делают паркет. Если вы делаете ,из, крепкой древесины. То это работа на долго хватит. Насколько я знаю,самое хорошее древесина,это дубовая. А Ещё,сосна и Ель. Из сосны и Ели, мебель для Интерьера, производят, В мебельных предприятиях. Куханые гарнитуры,спальные гарнитуры. Кухонные уголочки,стулья столы Из древесины,. Из сосны Ели,качественные, и прочные. Дай Бог Вам. Всем производителям.професоаналам. Мебельных Предприятий. Желаю Вам крепкого здоровья счастья успехов и долголетия. Всех земных благ Вам. С уважением к Вам Рита Мелик Магамедовна.☀️☀️☀️🌏🌏🌏⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 .
My apartment in Germany had a floor like that - brand new construction. While beautiful, it was porous and easily scratched. Thankfully I kept my security deposit but it was a challenge! 😅
Depends on a wood. Mine is harder and looks very good. At my parents house, we had a floor that got scratched and deformed by dalmatians nails... Maybe we should have use some glass like rockhard finish on it. It looks terrible to this day :D
I've seen this in a few yoga studios and in shops. The shops i understood were because of dropping tooling and the ease of replacement of damaged sections. As well as the surface being porous, soaks up the oils and prevents slips. Seemed to work pretty good compared to all these epoxy or rubber toppers that rot or crumble.
Когда мой отец работал в столярке он заказывал обрезки на дрова. Собственно показанное в видео это обрезки склеек щитов мебельных. Я тоже подобный пол делал. В общем со временем они расклеятся и начнут вываливаться по одному кубику. У паркета не просто так же шип-паз есть.
Такой пол в торец делают в расчёт на сильный износ и проходимость в помещении. Думаю если доска сухая и есть люфт с припуском на расширение будет очень долго служить
@@caym4nz109 В том то и дело что думать можно всякое. А вот знать может не каждый, вернее знать может не только лишь каждый , мало кто вообще может это знать. :)) Нет там никакого расчета на износ. Обычная паркетина дубовая веками лежит, наверняка вообще есть паркет который износился или изнасиловался. И вообще там дело не в зазорах расширении или клеях. Вся суть в том что это по сути кубики 40х40х20 склеенные, пусть даже и на микрошип. Они начнут расклеиваться между собой и вываливаться. У меня например лежал больший кубик 80х80х30. Они сыпятся в геометрической прогрессии. И только потом и заботы что ходить и пяткой вбивать их назад.
@@rachelspear938it looks like you could make them easily if you have a chopsaw/mitersaw/tablesaw. Cut framing framing lumber pieces in equal increments and join them together with wood glue and cut joints or use dowels… I’m sure there’s a video or two out there you could learn from. Otherwise call a flooring company and ask them how if they know where to get end grain flooring material
Decoupling membrane, wood tiles, sealer. The only issue I see is did you really leave space for expansion? It should expand a lot with those thick pieces. Looks damn good
Yes, an end grain floor. They've been around for hundreds of years. In London we used to do the streets with wood end grain. Really common in old workshops.
In the USA it’s 99% plank wood flooring and so little parquet and I’ve never seen an end grain floor since I’ve been in the trades since the 90’s. Nice to see this work being done in other areas.
It's called parquetry flooring and has been around for centuries. It's not used much anymore as it is very labour intensive but can be found in old building...and new one like this.
Where I'm from parquet is common as long as home is bit more expensive, as it's overall more long lasting flooring. And it just look good. Though mostly it's bought in easy to assemble and already finished blocks that you put together like lego. Just all the other floor types.
...really-really nice work done here, folks. That's a lot of work that went into this beautiful floor. Respect to you and your entire crew on this project. This was some absolutely beautiful work done here in this video. Thank you for sharing this fine work with RUclips. Please be well. 🤔
Yup in a machine shop that was inside an automotive R&D building in Michigan. But somewhere before I worked there there was a coat of black paint overtop of it. I’d like to know why they painted over it.
“What kind of floor you want bro?”
“Cutting board”
Bowling Alley
@@mastabasfr 😂
Same
Say no more
😂 точно 👏
In the early 90s, I worked in a stamping factory in Detroit that used 6x8 end-cut blocks for flooring. They were indestructible, holding 150 ton molds. Probably 80 years old then. We had the floor cleaned and sealed - ended up being the most beautiful floor I've ever seen.
😅
Wow! Oak or pine?
😊
确实,这一种承载力是最强的。并且不会翘起来。
In the sixties my dad a carpenter had a workshop floor like this. The blocks where fluid to the concrete floor with melted tar!
На вилео так все быстро и красиво. А в жизне тяжелый труд. Молодцы ребята 💪
I😅
Такой кропотливый труд 👍 и такая красота получилась на многие годы 👍🌞
Жаль труд, через пол года будет напрастным, дерево расширяется и сужается зимой и летом на каждые 100мм 1мм дыхания, следовательно на 3000мм это будет 30мм, все порвёт и треснет, потом встанет дыбом, это я как опытный столяр заявляю.
@@pudovkin_mebel ну, во-первых, скорее всего, использовались сухие бруски, а не естественной влажности, а во-вторых, они ведь всё это склеили клеем с опилками, так что теперь это, считай, монолит, главное по краям оставить зазоры на расширение.
@@pudovkin_mebelдвери и рамы из дерево не путойте с паркетом
Я вам как отделочник со стажем более 20 лет говорю
Yes in my living room, it's actually intended for wood workshops, where you can drive with heavy carts on it.
In Germany we call it Stirnholz Parkett, and it's very resistant
I got a question about it. When used in shops and workshops what is under it as a foundation? Is there a slab or are they just straight to the ground?
@@MrJimme2003 In the ones Ive seen, concrete but they use endgrain lengths of wood that are like 12 inches deep. Great for machine shops because you can drop something expensive and it wont break. when the floor gets damaged just rip the section out and replace
Ah, so its not supposed to look good. That makes sense that its just fuction over form.
@@RinnzuRosendale it looks much better when it's done with the large square blocks rather than as a cutting board type of thing
@@BloopTube what about machine oils and coolant? Id imagine this would soften up the wood very quickly, but obviously if it works I am missing something. Also I assume the larger machines would need large metal foot pads so that they don't sink into the wood over time and warp the bed of the machine.
It was used for high traffic areas like workshops and such for over a century. It's usually much thicker, so it takes quite some time to deteriorate even if it's not taken good care of. It's warmer than concrete or stone floor and things don't break that easily when they drop down on it. It doesn't get as slippery as woodflooring that's layed lengthwise bc the softer part of the rings wears down quicker and gives kind of a rippled texture. There were horse stables with this kind of flooring!
Love it.
cept when your foundation starts to shift, its gonna look like crap with cracks running throughout it
@@nagel133I was wondering the same thing🤔
Thanks for the explanation.
@@nagel133 when your foundation shifts, everything will crack eventually (except for carpet, which is going to look shitty in a workshop or stable for other reasons 🤷🏼♀️
I appreciate these floors way more now. This is hard work and essentially an art form.
Way too much work for something that looks cheap and nasty
@@StevenGardy Not everything is for everbody.
@@StevenGardyIt doesn’t look either of those things. It’s built to last.
Самый надежный и качественный пол , я так думаю , как строитель. Ребята молодцы.
И дорогой, а раньше помню в сталинках это было обыденное. А сейчас паркетчика найти хорошего это проблема.
Cool thing about these, is because theyre so thick, you can sand and refinish the floor hundreds of times.
Now pass the pipe!
End grain floors are gorgeous and strong as hell! Loved them
This type of floor was common in junior high wood shops back in the 60's and 70's in southern California.
Yes, this kind of floor is easy to find in Argentina. We call it "parquet"
As I read the comments, some say it is common in Europe, too... So that's probably where we inherit it from (architecture in my country is mainly of French, Italian and Spanish styles)
Hirnholz Parkett
US parquet looks nothing like that. This is gorgeous and so is our style of parquet. Matter of taste to pattern but this is stunning. The only negative is the raised floor. Unless basement, we do everything at level
Yes. My grandfather was a carpenter. His workshop flor was made from 10 x 10 x 20 cm wood blogs. Even in winter time the floor was well insulated. And it was looking stunning.
А при изменении влажности в помещении с 23% до 70% он не встанет горбом?
Sus
My father's a wood and brick head Mistry.... Watching him making anything out of wood at his working site was a pure joy during my childhood!
Fabulous, and I'll take it for my counter tops as well! I love butcher block❣️
Cork underlay ... lessens the noise and an ideal substrate for the block work flooring. And if it gets scratched, just rub it down and seal again!! ❤
Endgrain is remarkably strong, because the entire length of the fibers are taking the compression, rather than just one spot along the side--wood has better compression strength when approached from the endgrain than it does from along the grain.
Additionally, experiments with wooden cutting boards have shown that wood can actually absorb and--after about half an hour--terminate bacteria, etc...but that endgrain cutting surfaces do it better than along the grain.
Butchers throughout time knew that endgrain chopping blocks kept their meat cleaving efforts healthier and fresher for a very long time, but up until the late 1990s or early 2000s when the studies were done, nobody knew why.
So while technically that plastic cutting board is more sterile if you clean it right away...if you don't *really* clean into the gouges left by all that cleaning, any bacteria trapped in there with food particles can fester and grow...but the grain of wood is a death trap.
When you clean a cutting board right away, the uppermost surfaces that get swabbed to try to detect bacterial presence may show bacteria on a wooden surface and none on a plastic surface...but it's not swabbing into the cuts and scratches. Plastic cuts do not reseal, so they remain exposed and can harbor colonies. But funny enough, both side grain and end grain does close back up...and both destroy the bacteria after half an hour or so (faster for end grain).
This seeming disparity *right after* a board is used is why people think plastic is 'better" for a cutting surface. It's good, but it's not *perfect.* Same with wood: it is *also* still good good, even if it isn't perfect. Now, for a commercial kitchen requiring a cutting surface to be constantly in use, yeah, go with plastic or whatever. The main advantage is that you can wash it with a sterilizing agent (weak solution of bleach, etc), and then wipe it off X number of seconds later to rinse away any lingering residues.
But if you're cooking at home, with time (and washings) between uses? Don't be afraid of wood! (Or bamboo, which is technically a grass, but still holds the same properties.)
My heart...❤ Where are you 😂😂
Top informational comment thank you
Thank you for all these details ! I am interested because I was searching information about food spoon in wood, to cook . I was wondering it is really a good idea, because I see that the wood has cracks, and it seems to be good places for bacteria to grow! (Sorry, english is not my first language)
👍🙏💓
@@Textemple Dang It!!! You BEAT Me to It!!! LMAO!!!
I worked at Ford Twin Cities Assembly in the late '70's and we had end grain flooring throughout the plant. That plant was opened in 1925 and operated until 2011.
My truck is from that plant❤
@@Fuglychickhow the hell do you know where your truck came from? didn’t know that was a thing people knew 😂 that’s cool
@@dazenguile4215 It has a sticker on it Says “ Quality is our tradition, made in the Twin Cities assembly plant .
@dazenguile4215 like chick's truck, sometimes they put a sticker of the plant of manufacture (newer Expeditions and Navigators will have a Kentucky Truck Plant sticker), but all cars have the assembly location on the original MSRP sticker, my Fusion was made in Hermosillo, Mexico
@@kvr22_ I also have the original MSRP sticker. 🤣 it has a special edition paint job the original truck was blue
Wow! I love watching true artists who are as adept at their craft as this fellow! I kept thinking, ‘His knees are Herculean!’
Absolutely beautiful!…real wood and not laminated!!!😊😊😊
Back in the day, they put this in horse stables, because horses can walk this floor with and without horseshoes.
That is the biggest cutting board I have ever seen
Cutting Floored
it ugly
That’s all I could think too
Underrated comment 😂😂
😂
You are right,it is BEAUTIFUL!!
Yes, in all Russian houses in my childhood we had wooden floors. We still have oak floor. It's called "parket"
This is pretty common in Germany. You can use lower quality wood pieces since you only see the endgrain instead of the whole plank.
How does it handle humidity? All I can imagine is that thing swells up every summer.
It didn't used to get that humid in Germany. Might change with climate change.
Our neighbor has this in their house (kitchen) and it keeps cracking. They have filled the cracks a couple of times already.
Doesnt Matter If properly sealed
Ich hab so was noch nie gesehen
На мой взгляд отвратительно смотрится. Пёстро.
We used oak board ends for the clubhouse of apartments we built. Installed similar to this, underlayment, ends of oak pieces, sanding, cork dust for grout, three days of staining and sealing and it is tough as nails.
Absolutely beautiful 😊 you don’t see people doing the handcrafted wood work like the past. That’s why things don’t last as long!
True 😊💚🤝
That’s gorgeous really well done.
I saw this in an old, old post office in DC a long time ago.
It was beautiful!
Many old wood workshops in Germany looked like that. Is better for your joints and keeps the chisels sharp if you drop them 👍
In Germany, this is caled "Parkett".
@@benjaminhampel8640Sogar "Stäbchenparkett", oder?
Hirnholz pflaster to be correct. But it's a kind of parkett not to mistaken for dielenböden 😉
@@felixb.3420 Bei Stäbchenparkett sind ie einzelnen Stücke noch kleiner.
Thanks for the Erklärungen. 😉👍🏼
Such WORK!! We just do NOT appreciate the hordes of folks who do such demanding, precise, and beautiful work.
WOW!! A lot of work going into the finished job, fantastic 😍
Yes, the Denver Art Museum. I was involved in the construction of that building in the early 2000s and had to take special consideration, installing sliding door tracks to accommodate the thickness of the floor
I sold the Worthwood end grain flooring for the Denver Art Museum. Look up Oregon Lumber Co. Worthwood solid end grain flooring if anyone is interested in this flooring.
❤
It's actually common in machine shops. They are usually about 3.5 inches thick. Machine shops use this because if you drop a die section or a cutting tool on a concrete floor. It will be damaged. Also the wood will absorb oils and not be slippery like concrete.
You can buy stuff for concrete surface hardening.
@@nitrous888 the TOOL will break on concrete, not the floor!
@nitrous888 the concrete getting damaged is not the problem. Damaging a die section or chipping a $400 carbide end mill is the problem
WWII era buildings now warehouses that could have been for anything in the day, had 6"X6"X6" end grain red oak floors. Had to have been 80,000 square feet.
Wood also absorbs vibrations from machines like mills and other heavy stuff
Not only is this wood very expensive, but the labor is probably 5x the cost of the wood!
Here in the Philippines its common sometimes we use wood parquet.We used wax or varnish for a shiny look.🤗
Yes. About 500,000 sqr ft . It was common in Eaton Axle plants. If a part green or hardened was dropped the heat tooth would not be damaged.
I have seen many floors in my time. This appears to be yet another floor that I have now seen. Truly one of the all-time floors. You know, I wanted to be a marine biologist when I was a kid. Funny how time slips away from you.
hilarious
You can still do it 😢
Ahhh marine biologist the job where you pay to work
@@metagen77sad but true. Best part is you pay to probably live in a boat in Alaska for 6 months
I also wanted to be a marine biologist. I had a date the other day and she seems very nice but I can't really see it going anywhere.
This is so pretty!
I see that you have started appreciating the comments... No one asks you to appreciate everything, but sometimes you show that you care about your followers (even if you don't, and it is normal), but with kindness, you show a little respect and keep your followers👍🌹
As a carpenter, it looks awesome.
Might want that much wood on a floor that has excellent humidity control. End grains are thirsty.
Glued on one side, sealed on the other. Not sure much moisture is getting though.
@@Bigrignohio Water finds a way.
Sure are thirsty, especially underneath where he didn't seal. It might even swell enough to buckle the floor plates and warp the wall. Cracks in the plaster ? Mabye. Who cares, looks like shit.
@@lizliz7075 Sure are salty for someone who has no idea. Between the glue and the underfloor membrane that direction will be fine.
@@silascz3535 So very true.
Its a to chaotic for me to find it beautiful. I do love to see the making process! ❤
Totally agree !!
The process is utterly brutal on the back. You can only do this for about ten years, twenty for the real beasts. Any longer and the second half of your life really sucks, especially if you’re still doing this in your 40’s. This is strictly a young man’s job unless longevity ain’t your jam.
I call that parquet flooring. Had it in our last house. Lovely!
I love this. Dont care what anyone says ,I'd have this in every room. With dogs, grandkids, and their friends and people that are messy. Oh yeah, perfect and beautiful
My grandpa owned a machine shop... He took railroad ties on end and placed them into the ground, on end... If one gets damaged you pull it out and slide in a new one... Problem is he built in 1930's and those boards were available then😅. But it looked kinda similar... Only super dark from the creosote of the timbers.... But i will always remember the smell of that old shop... Diesel, dirt, and machine oil... Man i miss that ol man...
How do you pull 8 feet of tie out of the ground?😂
Similar feelings dude. Grandpa was a man's man and was so capable. Hands like huge rouge gloves and wrinkles deeper than I have seen on most but I remember hugging him and I miss it.
@@hogi99 overhead crane
Hydrocarbons out the yin yang 😅
What do you mean on end? Vertically? Or was it like this video layed long ways? That would be a hell of a good floor
Unless you hardcore seal the surface with a few layers of epoxy, the vertical cut of this wood will suck stains like nobody's business.
This is due to the intact sclerenchyma structure of the wood, which is the trees natural transport system for water and nutrients.
Доброго вечера
Я скажу своё слово.
Мне очень нравится ваша работа.
Это называется Паркетный пол.
Но что в этом самое главное.
Из какой древесины, делают паркет.
Если вы делаете ,из, крепкой древесины.
То это работа на долго хватит.
Насколько я знаю,самое хорошее древесина,это дубовая.
А Ещё,сосна и Ель.
Из сосны и Ели, мебель
для Интерьера, производят,
В мебельных предприятиях.
Куханые гарнитуры,спальные гарнитуры.
Кухонные уголочки,стулья столы
Из древесины,.
Из сосны Ели,качественные, и прочные.
Дай Бог Вам. Всем производителям.професоаналам.
Мебельных Предприятий.
Желаю Вам крепкого здоровья счастья успехов и долголетия.
Всех земных благ Вам.
С уважением к Вам Рита Мелик Магамедовна.☀️☀️☀️🌏🌏🌏⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
.
Look a bit like an old design but seem incredibly sturdy ! I like it
My apartment in Germany had a floor like that - brand new construction. While beautiful, it was porous and easily scratched. Thankfully I kept my security deposit but it was a challenge! 😅
Depends on a wood. Mine is harder and looks very good. At my parents house, we had a floor that got scratched and deformed by dalmatians nails... Maybe we should have use some glass like rockhard finish on it. It looks terrible to this day :D
@szaka9395 ... simply **SAND** and *Refinish* with more durable Polyurethane or something even more appropriate...
I've seen this in a few yoga studios and in shops. The shops i understood were because of dropping tooling and the ease of replacement of damaged sections. As well as the surface being porous, soaks up the oils and prevents slips.
Seemed to work pretty good compared to all these epoxy or rubber toppers that rot or crumble.
You read a few comments and then made this bullshit up 😂
@@anon556 bro don't bully the AI
and it doesn't wear down as fast or splinter or dent as easily as horizontal grain.
That’s gorgeous!
Amazing work! Beautiful floor.
really nice floor! it looks awsome and is sturdy as hell, that's how houses and interior should be built😄
Your storytelling abilities are unmatched.
Oh my gosh that looks so beautiful!
Gorgeous! Love it
Когда мой отец работал в столярке он заказывал обрезки на дрова. Собственно показанное в видео это обрезки склеек щитов мебельных. Я тоже подобный пол делал. В общем со временем они расклеятся и начнут вываливаться по одному кубику. У паркета не просто так же шип-паз есть.
Ну, это от клея зависит и изначальной сухости дерева
Такой пол в торец делают в расчёт на сильный износ и проходимость в помещении. Думаю если доска сухая и есть люфт с припуском на расширение будет очень долго служить
@@caym4nz109 В том то и дело что думать можно всякое.
А вот знать может не каждый, вернее знать может не только лишь каждый , мало кто вообще может это знать. :))
Нет там никакого расчета на износ. Обычная паркетина дубовая веками лежит, наверняка вообще есть паркет который износился или изнасиловался.
И вообще там дело не в зазорах расширении или клеях. Вся суть в том что это по сути кубики 40х40х20 склеенные, пусть даже и на микрошип. Они начнут расклеиваться между собой и вываливаться. У меня например лежал больший кубик 80х80х30. Они сыпятся в геометрической прогрессии. И только потом и заботы что ходить и пяткой вбивать их назад.
@@SanyTaaaRя как дилетант задам вопрос.
А что если пролить образовавшиеся трещины клеем типа ПВА, а потом отциклевать?
А в начале видео что приклеивают к бетонному полу? Обычно фанеру используют, а здесь какой-то рулон
Excelente trabajo 😃👏 saludos desde México 🇲🇽🌹😘♥️
Holaaa, disculpa como se llama ese tipo de piso
Did a floor like that at my parents house. Cut pieces of 2×4s. Was lots of work. Thanks Birger Juell. RIP you and Ann.
Truly stunning!
Excellent flooring, especially if you drop tools etc, you’ll be surprised how much shock they can absorb. Your feet notice it as well!
i saw this in the late 90s.. in the scool wood workshop, carpentry school, it called endgrain floor..its awesome
Endgame floor hehe
ScHool taught you well! Jk!
Where do you find the endgrain wood pieces like that?
@@rachelspear938it looks like you could make them easily if you have a chopsaw/mitersaw/tablesaw. Cut framing framing lumber pieces in equal increments and join them together with wood glue and cut joints or use dowels… I’m sure there’s a video or two out there you could learn from. Otherwise call a flooring company and ask them how if they know where to get end grain flooring material
@@rachelspear938 comes free in every tree in the world 😅
Decoupling membrane, wood tiles, sealer. The only issue I see is did you really leave space for expansion? It should expand a lot with those thick pieces. Looks damn good
A lot of hard work for a beautiful floor! ❤
I thought that carpet stuff at first was the flooring! 😅😅😅
Thought it might be a cork underlayment? Maybe a waterproof/treated membrane?
Yes, an end grain floor. They've been around for hundreds of years. In London we used to do the streets with wood end grain. Really common in old workshops.
streets? hue?
termite heaven
@@victorhopper6774the pieces were soaked in chemical preservatives that have since been outlawed. The wood would last for decades.
I reaspect the craftmanship that went into this project
Brew-TEE-full! Beautiful work!!
In the USA it’s 99% plank wood flooring and so little parquet and I’ve never seen an end grain floor since I’ve been in the trades since the 90’s. Nice to see this work being done in other areas.
Торцевая разделочная доска во весь пол :)
С языка снял.
Опередили😅
Very skilled people
Well done mate
питерский вариант полов
В глазах рябит от такой "красоты"
Beautiful and lots of work to get this finish.😊
Unique! Looks AWESOME!
it's called parquet flooring... great way for mills to rid of scap lumber. It can be purchased in large sheets joined with a fabric backing.
Not sure if i would classify it as parquet
Not parquet...parquet is assembled pieces of wood into tiles that are 5/16" to 3/4' thick.
@@GaisSacredCreations well parquet is more about a pattern than a thickness
Not.
Why the fabric backing though?
It's called parquetry flooring and has been around for centuries. It's not used much anymore as it is very labour intensive but can be found in old building...and new one like this.
Where I'm from parquet is common as long as home is bit more expensive, as it's overall more long lasting flooring. And it just look good. Though mostly it's bought in easy to assemble and already finished blocks that you put together like lego. Just all the other floor types.
It looks like off cuts glued together pretty much as they do kitchen chopping boards instead of a parquet, which is cut specifically for that purpose
Beautiful work!
I have seen such a floor. Beautiful work!
Одно наслаждение смотреть на такую проделанную работу молодцы 👏
Саасибо 😊🤝
好个球、耗时耗料
смотреть будем через год)))
хотя, придут и зашпаклюют засаленный пол по новой))
@@baltasavr сала не будет а вот трещин мильярд
Дорого, не практично,не довговічно. 😮
Amazing work..
Perfect finish
Allot of work, but when you are finished--- its gorgeous!
Demasiado bonito, impecable, muy buena idea y fácil de reemplazar 👏👏👏👏👍los felicito
Absolutely impressive great work I wish I could afford that
Definitely would not put in that much work for that kind of floor.
Wdym it's stunning @Visceral.
Doesn’t look that hard… this video showed a lot, can do it yourself I’m sure.
You can just do a floating floor for pretty cheap, repair is 100% cheaper
@@stewpittt Doable, just time consuming.
Может это хорошее покрытие, но на вид "сделано из отходов"
Оно и продержится не долго.
Отшлифовал. покрыл лаком и на 30 лет мин забыл.
Looks amazing, I just prefer the wider wood.
Absolutely wonderful!
...really-really nice work done here, folks. That's a lot of work that went into this beautiful floor. Respect to you and your entire crew on this project. This was some absolutely beautiful work done here in this video. Thank you for sharing this fine work with RUclips. Please be well. 🤔
It looks like shit
Too much effort for what essentially looks like a laminate floor anyway ....
Beautifully, correctly and efficiently done. Thank God for the trades and skilled workers 🎉🎉🎉😊
Exquisite work!!!!
😮какая красота получилась❤ и долговечность, можно несколько раз циклевать!😊
Amazing, and you make it look so easy 😁
factories used to have wood floors with the end grain up like this. it's super comfortable on your feet.
It's beautiful!
Gorgeous!!
Never seen this, really like this kind of interior design ideas.
Butcher block style 😂
Thats what I see too, a massive butchers block.
Yup in a machine shop that was inside an automotive R&D building in Michigan. But somewhere before I worked there there was a coat of black paint overtop of it.
I’d like to know why they painted over it.
Beautiful work ❤
Bro you deserve every single penny for that job.
I think it's gorgeous..... Would love to see it used in a log cabin with cherry ceilings
These types of flowers are amazing and trust me you save on house energy consumption.
Beautiful craftsmanship