Browse Forums Building A New House Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 3Aug 25, 2022 2:40 pm Architectural Homes & Duplexes - specialising in custom designing homes to your budget Get a Free Onsite Consultation Today or send a PM for information, questions or advice. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 4Aug 26, 2022 12:56 pm Architectural Homes & Duplexes - specialising in custom designing homes to your budget Get a Free Onsite Consultation Today or send a PM for information, questions or advice. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 8Jul 18, 2023 1:10 pm Architectural Homes & Duplexes - specialising in custom designing homes to your budget Get a Free Onsite Consultation Today or send a PM for information, questions or advice. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 11Jul 18, 2023 2:11 pm Architectural Homes & Duplexes - specialising in custom designing homes to your budget Get a Free Onsite Consultation Today or send a PM for information, questions or advice. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 12Jul 18, 2023 2:16 pm Putting particle board over and widening up the spacing would save some joist installation cost but? So the true additional cost would 40 - 50$ sqrm offset by a reducion in joists and installation Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 13Jul 18, 2023 2:17 pm Seems that Hebel might require 2x more, this should be a significant cost increase.
Hello_world do you want to check XCEM? They should be okay/working well with wider joist space Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 14Jul 18, 2023 2:18 pm Hello_world Putting particle board over and widening up the spacing would save some joist installation cost but? So the true additional cost would 40 - 50$ sqrm offset by a reducion in joists and installation Its hard to say as the engineer will specify the joist spacings so it's not as simple as just widening them from 450-600mm as joist spacings depend on a number of factors with the design such as loads and spans etc Architectural Homes & Duplexes - specialising in custom designing homes to your budget Get a Free Onsite Consultation Today or send a PM for information, questions or advice. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 15Jul 18, 2023 2:22 pm alexp79 Seems that Hebel might require 2x more, this should be a significant cost increase. Hello_world do you want to check XCEM? They should be okay/working well with wider joist space Why would people go for hebel if XCEM flooring is superior to hebel - according to the XCEM advertising material? Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 16Jul 18, 2023 2:25 pm Hello_world alexp79 Seems that Hebel might require 2x more, this should be a significant cost increase. Hello_world do you want to check XCEM? They should be okay/working well with wider joist space Why would people go for hebel if XCEM flooring is superior to hebel - according to the XCEM advertising material? XCEM is quite new, they have just released this flooring less than a year ago or so. Hebel is CSR which invested obviously much more money into marketing and brand awareness for ages. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 17Mar 27, 2024 5:35 am I used Hebel powerfloor on the second storey of one side( the one I live in) the other side yellow tongue.. sealed it and direct stuck 19mm engineered flooring.. cost almost 10k supply and install the Hebel…it’s absolute rubbish.. the noise transfer downstairs is terrible to the point when sitting downstairs you can hear the cable from a phone charger hitting the floor when being in plugged. When I made a comment on socials they sent two reps out who said “that is noisy”.. it’s because you direct stuck it and didn’t use underlay. Then further to that they said look at our site for laying timber floating floor it needs underlay and for a full effect it relies on the underlay, insulation, resilient mounts and 13mm plasterboard to the ceiling for it to be truly effective.$10000 for a product that’s noisier than 19mm yellow tongue. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 18Mar 27, 2024 5:56 am 9348 I used Hebel powerfloor on the second storey of one side( the one I live in) the other side yellow tongue.. sealed it and direct stuck 19mm engineered flooring.. cost almost 10k supply and install the Hebel…it’s absolute rubbish.. the noise transfer downstairs is terrible to the point when sitting downstairs you can hear the cable from a phone charger hitting the floor when being in plugged. When I made a comment on socials they sent two reps out who said “that is noisy”.. it’s because you direct stuck it and didn’t use underlay. Then further to that they said look at our site for laying timber floating floor it needs underlay and for a full effect it relies on the underlay, insulation, resilient mounts and 13mm plasterboard to the ceiling for it to be truly effective.$10000 for a product that’s noisier than 19mm yellow tongue. It's the same as concrete floors in apartments and why strata rules are so strict about using acoustic underlays. Also I would never use Hebel on it's own as a flooring, we always put yellowtongue over the top to protect it and the result of the two in combination is brilliant. Architectural Homes & Duplexes - specialising in custom designing homes to your budget Get a Free Onsite Consultation Today or send a PM for information, questions or advice. Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 19Mar 27, 2024 6:08 am Do you ever just use yellow tongue by it’s self, or do you double that up aswell or do you only use powerfloor? I think as a general buyer of the product power floor is advertised as an alternative to yellow tongue, you shouldn’t have to then fit 19 mm timber plus underlay plus a floor covering to benefit or if you do it should be advertised.. as stated in this thread people are unaware you need to do that Re: Hebel PowerFloor vs Traditional Timber Floors 20Mar 27, 2024 12:01 pm We used Hebel Powerfloor in our double storey new build. We didn't put any yellow tongue on top - I would have if this was offered by the builder at the time but it wasn't. On the upper floor, we have a mix of carpet (with good underlay) in the bedrooms and a good laminate with built in layer of underlay in the sitting area and hallway. Laminate is installed as floating rather than direct stick. We also had insulation installed in the downstairs ceiling between floors. After living in the house for 5-6 months, we notice very little noise transfer to the downstairs. 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