Flooring Issues Around Pellet Stove

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bdaoust

Member
Nov 28, 2012
183
Western, MA
I have a half finished basement where my P68 is. The P68 is used to heat the house, so the basement does get overheated.

Currently, there is laminated wood flooring, which is separating where it snaps together. While in the summer it may be damp (I do run a dehumidifier) , I don't have any major moisture issues.

I want to replace the flooring, but not sure if the separating was caused by the excessive heat, moisture or just the fact whoever laid it, laid it incorrectly.

I was thinking of using a vinyl flooring, which is less picky about moisture, but not sure how that will withstand high temperatures.

Any recommendations? I can post some pictures if necessary.
 
are you saying you have the stove sitting directly upon the laminate flooring and are asking if you can place it directly on top of vinyl flooring instead? No. Stove should be sitting on a "non-combustible material"...laminate and vinyl, both "combustible". Put it on a piece of sheet metal, or glass, or stone, of concrete, or even some type of prefab hearth thingy. Get a sheet of dura-rock and mud some tile up on that sucker.
 
Go buy a pre-made hearthpad. There is probably a building code that requires some kind of non-combustible floor directly below the stove.
 
The stove is on the cement floor of the basement with about a foot clearance on the sides.
 
Underneath and around the stove you could let it sit on bare concrete, but it would look much better on ceramic tile (thinset them in place), and grout the joints.
 
I would agree about the vapor barrier on the concrete but the heat from the pellet stove does dry out our living room. The poplar tongue and groove on our floor shrinks in the winter and swells back to normal in the summer when humidity comes back up.
 
I do have a vapor barrier. Going to replace the laminate with vinyl wood planks.
 
I do have a vapor barrier. Going to replace the laminate with vinyl wood planks.


laminate is a plague Shaw Industries (Pergo) has released on the masses. It is awful anywhere it comes into contact with the slightest bit of moisture. I see people use it in kitchens and baths and just have to shake my head as they will be pulling it back up in a few years. I have manufactured the stuff for Shaw and Mohawk (compressed saw dust), laid it, and ripped up up and to me the only place I would use it is over a WELL VENTILATED crawl space.

As for the vinyl I would avoid that also, I am skeptical that it would stand up to the temperatures close to the stove ( even with the hearth). If it were me I would do a large hearth in tile and just run the vinyl in to that.
 
As for the vinyl I would avoid that also, I am skeptical that it would stand up to the temperatures close to the stove ( even with the hearth). If it were me I would do a large hearth in tile and just run the vinyl in to that.[/quote]


I'm already doing the vinyl. Bought it and it's almost installed. How much of a perimeter around the stove should I leave? Right now the stove is on concrete (was when I bought the house) Should the perimeter around the stove be a foot, two, three?
 
I'm already doing the vinyl. Bought it and it's almost installed. How much of a perimeter around the stove should I leave? Right now the stove is on concrete (was when I bought the house) Should the perimeter around the stove be a foot, two, three?

According to the OM only 6" is required Front, back and sides. But you can extend it to whatever suits you
 
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