When replacing a porch floor be sure to use pressure treated pine or other rot resistant wood for both the joists and flooring.
Replacing porch floor boards.
Apply in the solution with a scrub brush.
You might have to remove a couple of courses of siding to make this happen but it s a small price to pay to keep water out of your house.
The new wood porch floor is finished.
Flashing costs about 7 at home centers.
In the video we will show techniques to replace tongue and groove porch boards both in the middle and.
For this repair project we milled interlocking tongue and groove boards from treated lumber to replace the original rotted porch boards.
Use full length flooring boards to preserve the look of the porch.
Part 2 wood front porch progress.
Do not simply cut out the damaged areas and patch the floor.
Part 4 critter proofing and installing the porch boards.
Click the links below to see the rest of the posts in this project.
Cut out the bad pieces so that the splices are offset by at least one joist width and new boards are at least two joist spaces wide.
Slide the flashing up under the house wrap.
Many construction experts say there s no need to factor in a slope for spaced floorboards since the water can drain through easily.
If the existing decking is gray weather the new decking with a solution made from 1 cup of baking soda and 1 gallon of warm water.
Cut replacement deck boards from matching lumber using a circular saw.
Rinse and let dry.
Span that i could tell was the original porch flooring from when the house was built in 1880.
Staggered splices look better and make a stronger deck.
We replaced it with a galvanized steel product designed specifically for deck ledger boards.
Damaged joists are more difficult to replace than flooring so flooring damage should be fixed promptly.
Rotten porch board are a big issue with historic homes.
I decided to replace the entire side of porch flooring with the exception of a roughly 4 ft.
If the porch floor isn t tongue and groove allow at least between new or replacement boards as you lay them to permit water to flow through the decking.
This creates joint lines that look out of place in an otherwise jointless porch.