How to Fix Squeaky Hardwood Floors - 6 BETTER DIY Ways!

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
  • There's more than one way to fix squeaky wood floors and this video will show you 6 ways you can fix floor squeaks the DIY way in minutes for cheap! Soundproofguide.com
    In time all hardwood floors will eventually begin squeaking, this is due to movement of the wood from expanding and retracting due to heat and cold and humidity. All of this will make your floor begin to creak. No matter what your background is, you'll be able to fix creaking wood floors in no time!
    Here are some of the soundproofing material I recommend. These are affiliate links that gives me a commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for supporting my Channel!
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    Full articles with more details and links!
    soundproofguide.com/how-to-fi...
    These links will show you how to soundproof a door using many different types of products. From changing a hollow core door to a solid core door to use mass loaded vinyl to make it not better soundproof but it also works better for sound deadening a room.
    Bear in mind that some of the links in this video are affiliate links, and if you go through them to make a purchase, I will earn a commission. Keep in mind that I link these companies and their products because of their quality and not because of the commission I receive from your purchases. The decision is yours, and whether or not you decide to buy something is completely up to you.
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational,​ or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
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Комментарии • 69

  • @soundproofguide
    @soundproofguide  Год назад

    More Information and Links on this topic! - soundproofguide.com/how-to-fix-squeaky-floors-9-ways-you-can-do-it/

  • @gerritjongkind8538
    @gerritjongkind8538 6 месяцев назад

    Helpfull. Thanks. Greetings from Amsterdam.

  • @willberger96
    @willberger96 Год назад +1

    Great video! Thanks!

  • @AlexSolomovich
    @AlexSolomovich 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks a lot, for a year I didn’t know how to fix that quick right before my fridge (a very popular area to step in 😊) your method with shim worked.

  • @amylambert2365
    @amylambert2365 Год назад +2

    Drilling into floors might be dangerous, right? Do you have to worry about electricity lines - gas lines? Thanks for tips. Luckily I can try from under the floor - no ceiling.

  • @Chiroman527
    @Chiroman527 28 дней назад

    THX for the video, good info. In my case in a ranch house, I have a known deflection in the floor (LR to DR area). The deflection was NOT discovered by my home inspector when I bought the house 38 years ago. After the purchase, a friend of mine (a House Contractor) who felt the deflection when he was helping me move boxes into the house. In fact, he scolded me for not having him inspect the house - He was Right!!. Whejn we went into the basement which was an abortion of a finished area, there was wood paneling on a separating wall that spit the basement down the middle, running along the wood main beam. When we took the paneling down.... we discovered a Sears Screw Jack had been inserted under the main beam in that affected area. The main beam was actually 4, 2X8s placed together (they were not Bolted together as best we could determine). The one end of this "beam" rested on a steel lally column . However, on of the clad together beams was NOT sitting on the column. After taking down the crap celeotex ceiling, it was further discovered that 2 of the cross beams running form the edge of the main beam to the basement wall were "Cupped", slightly warped. That stayed that way for some years. Then circa 2007-8 I had the basement finished - all new sheetrock walls, and Ceilings , constructed a pantry closet, laundry room/area, separate boiler room and Playroom (now my Mancave). I had a House painter /contractor look at it soon after that. He had recommended shoring up the main beam, take it out and insert a new Steel I beam. But upon some further eval, that would have hoisted the house up - which would have created more problems with cracking the walls (Plaster) igniting a nightmare. The basement contractor, simply inserted 2, 8 X 8 Pressure treated Landscaping Ties, 1 at the area of the deflection and 1 toward the end of the house. He banged those ties in under the subflooring to the concrete basement floor. When he did so, The whole house Shook! But no damage to any walls. He had experience as Greek Contractor who repaired many Old Houses. However, I do not recall if he did any correcting of the Cupped cross beams? Now the finished flooring above as described above have begun to squeak. I'm going to try the nailing method because I can see that some of the oak hardwood boards are Moving - must have loos as described here.

  • @iceicebabys
    @iceicebabys Месяц назад

    Hello. Thanks for the tips. How do you know where your floor joists are? My entire floor squeaks :(

  • @baysidelad1
    @baysidelad1 Год назад +19

    My experience was:
    1) Graphite or talcum powder DOES NOT WORK! Floorboards that are tight together means the graphite can't get between the floorboards and stop the squeaking.
    2) WD40 works! Step up and down on the floorboards that are rubbing against each other and leave the WD40 overnight.....it eventually gets between the floorboards.
    3) I have no access underneath, so drilling a hole in the floorboards and squeezing a wood glue into the cavity with (as an example), a meat syringe fills the void and stops the squeaking.

    • @randomrazr
      @randomrazr Год назад +3

      ur house now smells like wd40

    • @baysidelad1
      @baysidelad1 Год назад +3

      @@randomrazr for maybe 24 hrs there is a slight smell, but it goes away pretty quickly

    • @johnkim1656
      @johnkim1656 Год назад +1

      @@baysidelad1 sqeaks still gone after months?

    • @baysidelad1
      @baysidelad1 Год назад +1

      @@johnkim1656 needs a quick touch up every 3-4 months

    • @robertreed1199
      @robertreed1199 Год назад

      @@baysidelad1 so you touch it up yet?

  • @MrDbz9001
    @MrDbz9001 Год назад +1

    Can you use expanding foam instead of construction glue? Will it cause a wedge ?

    • @soundproofguide
      @soundproofguide  Год назад +1

      The problem with foam is that it doesn't get very hard after expanding. It will fill the gap but not enough to make it stop squeaking for good.

  • @CdA_Native
    @CdA_Native Год назад +7

    I have a new home (well, 2 years old!) and out of the 1850 sq ft...... about 1500 of it has noisy subflooring, and the rest has squeeky vinyl plank flooring! I won't tell you the builder, but it rhymes with KB Homes. I like your idea of the 2x4 at 6:01 in your video and wonder if putting construction glue on the top side of the 2x4 would help as well? And regarding the idea of using just the glue at 6:49, that sounds like a quicker fix for my problem, otherwise I'll need about 100 pcs of 2x4! And why would a new home have such noisy flooring? I checked and about 50% of the sub floor nails missed the floor joists!

    • @blondyagace
      @blondyagace 7 месяцев назад

      It is a common mistake. They should have used screws instead of nails for the ground.

    • @charlym9550
      @charlym9550 5 месяцев назад +1

      If your home is that new you should have warranty. Contact the builder and try your luck

  • @jean-pierredoucet8328
    @jean-pierredoucet8328 Год назад

    Ton presentation est tres bien!

  • @gangstaBJK
    @gangstaBJK Год назад +2

    The screwing method looks like it makes sense the most. But i am afraid to try it. Is there a possibility of any wires or pipes running through the floor?

    • @soundproofguide
      @soundproofguide  Год назад

      You definitely can have wires and pipe going through the floor. It all depends how the builder places those wires and pipes in between floors.

  • @christophermahoney7143
    @christophermahoney7143 2 года назад +1

    I have been unable to use the tapping method to actually locate the joists underneath due to the carpet on top and the proximity to the side walls in the hallway. It is between floors in multiple locations, so going through from underneath would require removing ceiling sheetrock. Any suggestions?

    • @soundproofguide
      @soundproofguide  2 года назад

      Have you tried a stud finder? That might work in locating the joist and the screwing down through the carpet. It works great if you have thick bushy carpet that would hide the small hole a screw would leave. works actually better on carpet than hardwood floors. I will have a couple more followup videos on squeaks from carpeted and also laminated floors since the methods are a bit different than hardwood floors. Great question!

    • @christophermahoney7143
      @christophermahoney7143 2 года назад

      @@soundproofguide I've tried 2 different ones so far. But I think the reason they are being blocked is the plywood going across the joists is triggering it to read as the entire thing is a stud.
      I can wait for the follow up videos. I've been looking around for weeks and everyone just suggests tapping with a hammer and listening to the change in sound. The carpet is negating it in my case. I just don't feel confident enough to start drilling in multiple places on a low confidence tap.

    • @scottbholmer
      @scottbholmer Год назад

      I took the floor base trim off and buried several long screws into the base plate. It tightened everything up and squeaks disappeared.

  • @kurtgally526
    @kurtgally526 2 месяца назад

    Can you use baking soda instead of baby powder?

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Год назад

    How about pulling on the nails that perturde into the basement living space ?? All with just one tool pull down and bend over the nail heads and you are done. Thanks for the other ideas. Will use one on my sisters house. Peace vf

  • @lakhiranighosh8883
    @lakhiranighosh8883 2 года назад +2

    Hello Sir. I am a mechanical workshop of steel fabrication nature. There is a continuous noise of cutting, grinding & shearing. The workshop is in open area and the shed is covered will brick wall. My concern is the noises emitting out of it which causes disturbances to the neighbour. What is the best way to soundproof my workshop so that the inner noises of the workshop doesn't come out of the shed Or it can be reduced to maximum level. Kindly help me out.

    • @radicalgreek99
      @radicalgreek99 Год назад

      You can use dense foam insulation and soundproof panels.

    • @lakhiranighosh8883
      @lakhiranighosh8883 Год назад +1

      @@radicalgreek99 Should I use it at inner wall?

    • @kvil1537
      @kvil1537 Год назад

      @@lakhiranighosh8883 Yeah, like mass-loaded vinyl is dense enough to reduce noise transfer. Acoustic/foam panels will only make it sound better inside the room to you, AFAIK.

    • @lakhiranighosh8883
      @lakhiranighosh8883 Год назад

      @@kvil1537 Thank you so much. Will install MLV in the inner walls of the workshop

  • @annawoodford7121
    @annawoodford7121 Год назад +4

    How to stop LAMINATED WOOD FLOOR FROM SQUEAKING

  • @virginiaisforlovers24
    @virginiaisforlovers24 Год назад

    Could you provide that nails info?

  • @IDMtv
    @IDMtv Год назад

    What about flour if u don’t have baby powder?

  • @wyd-astro9943
    @wyd-astro9943 Год назад +2

    But why do my floor creaks on its own without steeping on it

  • @raynolin5751
    @raynolin5751 7 дней назад

    😊

  • @Michelle-tx3mg
    @Michelle-tx3mg Год назад +2

    So if there is carpet would thicker padding help. My neighbor above me keeps me up all night with the squeeking🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @tammyowens7776
    @tammyowens7776 2 месяца назад

    no plywood subfloor in my 70 yr old house, screwed down nearly every single piece of wood floring to the beams and thick floor boards with snap off screws, whole floor is ruined, and still noisy as heck. i hate hate hardwood floors. i feel I have no solutions. even covering it with click flooring isn't going to quiet it down.

    • @GeorgeCostandi
      @GeorgeCostandi Месяц назад

      Same issue like mine.. have you found a solution?

  • @McPhailHunt
    @McPhailHunt 10 месяцев назад

    Shims will eventually pop out unless you restrain them somehow.

  • @tammyowens7776
    @tammyowens7776 3 месяца назад

    my floors are terribly noisy, and I cant use anything from above because all of that powder will fall right onto our tv and Funiture in the basement. we have no sheeting, plywood or 'subfloor', what we have in our old house is wide oak angled main floorboards, with hardwood flooring right over top. so when we look up at the floor from the basement we can see the hardwood strips. we think the people who built this house was pinching pennies and they did a lot of things that short changed the quality of the house. we have no clue how to quiet them down, or to prevent dirt from contently falling into the basement living area without spending thousands of dollars on ceiling tiles.

    • @soundproofguide
      @soundproofguide  3 месяца назад

      Can you seal the crack between the hardwood strips with caulking? Of course you’d do it from the basement but you could use acoustical sealant since it won’t crack when it dries up.

  • @apbtbulldogs8826
    @apbtbulldogs8826 Год назад +41

    Never take advice from a guy who calls screws, nails.

    • @Theboys12345
      @Theboys12345 Год назад +1

      Lol

    • @doosteto
      @doosteto Год назад +19

      The problem is that in construction almost everyone thinks that he knows better than the other guys and his way is the best way. You sound like one of those guys. The guy has a good presentation, give some credit to the guy….

    • @shittylib749
      @shittylib749 Год назад +5

      @@doosteto The problem is people are lazy and don’t want to learn the proper names for tools and hardware. You’re probably the guy that calls a driver a drill and vice versa. Stick to the accounting gig and leave the heavy lifting for the men. 😎

    • @shittylib749
      @shittylib749 Год назад +1

      “Hey Mehdi, go and grab me a handful of those T-20 3” screws, will ya’?”
      Mehdi comes back with a handful of nails. 🤡

    • @mosaicmonk4380
      @mosaicmonk4380 Год назад

      @@shittylib749lol agreed

  • @truthseekerKJV
    @truthseekerKJV 5 дней назад

    WD-40 has toxic fumes that should never be used on wood floors.

  • @duanemeichels9375
    @duanemeichels9375 19 дней назад

    never use graphite its a filthy messy stuff.

  • @Eiight8
    @Eiight8 Год назад

    Squeaky squeaky

  • @jrros9828
    @jrros9828 Год назад +2

    wow this guy talks way to much get to the point

    • @deannaweeks-he7yo
      @deannaweeks-he7yo Месяц назад

      Well, you don’t know how to use proper grammar. 🤷‍♀️
      Instead of being a bully, maybe just skip the video turd!

  • @truthseekerKJV
    @truthseekerKJV 9 месяцев назад

    Temporary fixes are a waste of time. Using graphite, wd-40, or powder will only work for a short time, but will not fix the problem.

  • @Thatoneguywhosucksatlife.
    @Thatoneguywhosucksatlife. 2 месяца назад

    Is the link in the description?

  • @berhanuwosenu3196
    @berhanuwosenu3196 Год назад

    😊