Personally I would not recommend using a substance like graphite or an powder because of the potential to stain the wood. It could be a real mess – especially if I tried it at my home!!!! I can be a real klutz at times so I suggest trying using just plain old floor wax if you can’t do a more permanent fix like Marlon suggested. If the flooring is really loose, perhaps a board or two can be removed and reinstalled after flooring paper has been wedged underneath the offending board?
Jack C. Porter
Preservation Consultant
State Historical Society of Iowa
600 East Locust
Des Moines, IA 50319
When we build, let us think that we build
forever.
Let it not be for present delight nor for
present use alone.
Let it be such work as our descendants will
thank us for;
and let us think, as we lay stone on stone,
that a time is to come when those stones
will be held
sacred because our hands have touched them,
and that men will say, as they look upon
the labor and wrought substance of them,
“See! This our father did for
us.”
—John Ruskin
From: renov...@googlegroups.com [mailto:renov...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of ksgal...@aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 30, 2012 6:07
AM
To: renov...@googlegroups.com
Subject: {RenovateDSM} squeaky
hardwood floors
GM. I have been reading various websites about how to quiet wooden floors that squeak. The problem is in hallways primarily. Does anyone know of a solution? Surely it can't be as easy as putting graphite in between the boards. Would be nice if it was though. Thanks.
Susan Kern,
--
Who's to say it's the finished floor that is squeaking? It could very well be the subfloor that is the source. Before the advent of plywood and osb, subfloors were generally ship lapped 1x6 boards nailed to the joists. Lots of opportunities for squeaks with all those seams. The nails loosen over time too, causing squeaks. No feasible way to fix this issue really. Squeaky floors are just part of the "charm" of an old house. We joke that at least no one can sneak up on us in the night! ;-)