These REAL Hardwood Floors have a Ridiculously Cool Trick

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  • čas přidán 21. 12. 2020
  • Can your hardwood floors do this?!? floorsbysteller.com/ can pull a center board for a quick repair, or to dry out - if your dishwasher overflowed! VERY impressive product!
    Follow along with Kim's CZcams channel to see more on Steller Floors and this remodel - / kimlewis
    Follow Steller Floors - bit.ly/34BSnb3
    / stellerfloors
    Follow Matt on Instagram! / risingerbuild
    or Twitter / mattrisinger
    For more great video content check out Matts new site! buildshownetwork.com/
    Sign-Up for the Newsletter buildshownetwork.com/newsletter
    Build Show Network on Instagram / thebuildshow
    Huge thanks to our Show sponsors Polywall, Huber, Dorken Delta, Prosoco, Rockwool & Viewrail for helping to make these videos possible! These are all trusted companies that Matt has worked with for years and trusts their products in the homes he builds. We would highly encourage you to check out their websites for more info.
    www.Poly-Wall.com
    www.Dorken.com
    www.Huberwood.com
    www.Prosoco.com
    www.Viewrail.com
    www.Rockwool.com

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @gial8862
    @gial8862 Před 3 lety +26

    Anyone else notice the floors seemed to be warping upwards already? Even in their glorious final product video shoot there, they had a good few mm’s of uneven boards. I wonder how bad it gets a year or two into use?

  • @alexanderpersinger7074
    @alexanderpersinger7074 Před rokem +501

    Awesome book that gives you step-by-step photos czcams.com/users/postUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt and directions to make every day project. I can see myself making a few of these projects and giving them as housewarming and holiday gifts!

  • @alec4672
    @alec4672 Před 3 lety +94

    I remember seeing this a while ago on here when you were at IBS I think. I'm so glad this was a successful product with a few good years on it now. Another scenario I think this would work good with is wiring. You could frame the floor it in such a way that there's a removable strip of sub flooring perfectly under a row or two of hard wood. Giving access into the joist space for electrical or even plumbing. Good for finished basements or the 2nd floor if attic access is limited.

    • @marcob1729
      @marcob1729 Před 3 lety +1

      I really don't know if you'd want that removable subfloor to be parallel with the top floor. Maybe if it were in a lot traffic area?

    • @jaykrahl2407
      @jaykrahl2407 Před 3 lety +1

      IBS is no BS...just saying.

    • @G1ennbeckismyher0
      @G1ennbeckismyher0 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jaykrahl2407 irritable bowl syndrome?

    • @njineermike
      @njineermike Před 3 lety +4

      @@marcob1729 That's pretty much how server rooms are built.

    • @bakedjohnwick4793
      @bakedjohnwick4793 Před 3 lety

      Great idea man 💯

  • @markroper9269
    @markroper9269 Před 3 lety +8

    That was an awesome video! It is the best of all worlds! It fixes so many things: no glue/nails, it snaps together anywhere in the field, refinishing is super easy and keeps your house usable, repair is easy, and it is the same cost as regular hardwood floors. I see this becoming a go to product. Very cool!

  • @brianwideman2342
    @brianwideman2342 Před 3 lety +17

    That's definitely the innovation. Stains, dings, renovation..Ease of in out. Awesome video Matt.

  • @normanmfakierjr2387
    @normanmfakierjr2387 Před 3 lety +21

    Of all the great Build Shows this is for sure top 10. Keep bringing us the leading edge of home construction Matt.

  • @arishem555
    @arishem555 Před 3 lety +390

    So, when you are moving to another house you can literally take your floors to new address :-D

    • @ricoludovici2825
      @ricoludovici2825 Před 3 lety +40

      That is actually the very reason all those laminate "floating" floors come from Scandinavia. People there live somewhere for many years. They don't move frequently, but they also do not own their dwelling. They may improve it and remove the improvement if it is not physically connected to the structure. That would be floors and appliances.
      They can also install and remove kitchen cabinets that are hung on rails screwed to the wall. Think: IKEA. The cabinets go; the rail stays. And yes, they do take the floors with them when they leave.
      OTOH, the new tenant can pay the departing tenant for the depreciated value of the improvements if s/he wants to keep them. And that deal is outside the lease payment[s] and rental contract.

    • @VYR1985
      @VYR1985 Před 3 lety +6

      @@ricoludovici2825 sounds like the same thing we do in the Netherlands.
      Usually kitchens are part of the house though. So it will not be allowed to remove.
      When you have upgraded it yourself to a fancy one, and you are in a 'social housing' house the agency usually pays you a percentage of the depreciated value because you made the house worth more for them. Do mind that social housing over here does not necesarrily means lowest of the low quality. A large lot of them can go up to 750 euros of rent max a month.
      To put that in perspective a mortgage can be as low as 550.

    • @ricoludovici2825
      @ricoludovici2825 Před 3 lety +10

      @@VYR1985 In the US, anything you do your rental home is considered 'donated improvements'. Hence, most people will do nothing more than paint the walls of their apartment or house. And for that, they have to get the owner's permission and abide with his approved colors.
      Carpet is not moveable because it is nailed to the floor. In fact, you cannot remove or replace the existing carpet without the owner's permission. And if you do, your replacement carpet stays and becomes HIS/HER property.
      Kitchens always come finished with cabinets and appliances. You cannot change these out, even if you pay for them. Except in some places, like California, where the refrigerator belongs to the renter. And s/he will often just sell it to the next tenant for a nominal sum or leave it in place, abandoned so to speak. Or the tenant RENTS the fridge from the landlord or an appliance rental company.
      Also, Americans move much more frequently than Europeans, too. Average apartment tenancy is about 3 years. Purchased home would be 6 to 7 years residence on average.
      So those floating floors are for purchased homes.

    • @Casmige
      @Casmige Před 3 lety +4

      My tenants moved out and took everything except the kitchen sink....
      [Looks in the kitchen]: nope, they took that too

    • @williamharvey3860
      @williamharvey3860 Před 3 lety +1

      That is typically not legal in most states...unless you want to lose the sale.

  • @sgtcompton8838
    @sgtcompton8838 Před 3 lety

    This is absolutely amazing! I love learning about new products to offer my customers. Great job with the video and to Evan for inventing this 👏

  • @MeetKevin
    @MeetKevin Před 3 lety +381

    landlords approve!

    • @alexlewis8143
      @alexlewis8143 Před 3 lety +4

      React to it

    • @StellerFloors
      @StellerFloors Před 3 lety +8

      Tenants too!

    • @tscoffey1
      @tscoffey1 Před 3 lety +63

      I’m not a rental owner, but if I were, I would never put in $15 per square foot flooring in my units. Tenants aren’t going to respect the value.

    • @StellerFloors
      @StellerFloors Před 3 lety +38

      @@tscoffey1 Depending on the neighborhood ($1800 per month+), if you can get $200 per month out of the tenant for hardwood living areas instead of carpet for about 500 sqft, the floor pays itself off in 3 years or so. Then you can take minutes to repair it for less down time between tenants, and you can charge tenants to replace whole planks out of deposits versus $5 per sqft refinishing costs. That doesn't even include the write-off. If you choose hardwoods, choose us!

    • @RecklessTheory
      @RecklessTheory Před 3 lety +16

      @@StellerFloors Should make a basic common red oak variety where the selection is less stringent that has a slight price cut because of it and use it as an economy option. I think it would be easier to push that one into the retail market or for folks on a tighter budget at a wider scale and really deliver some serious returns. Keep the rest for those who want specific colors and tones and species. I think this is an amazing flooring concept though and I hope it succeeds.

  • @ProMSL
    @ProMSL Před 3 lety +44

    Very interesting. My concern would be the plastic connectors becoming brittle overtime though.

    • @Digidoc316
      @Digidoc316 Před rokem +2

      Also, how much gap is created at the joints by the top of the plastic clip?

    • @ronradmer3573
      @ronradmer3573 Před rokem +1

      They shouldn’t because there is no exposure to UV light. And even if one broke, replace the section that broke and stomp it down. 😊

    • @Riverrockphotos
      @Riverrockphotos Před rokem

      @@Digidoc316 Looks like the plastic clip is below the top of the board and the gap looked minmual.

    • @wilmorin3421
      @wilmorin3421 Před rokem

      pretty sure its aluminum

    • @wilmorin3421
      @wilmorin3421 Před rokem

      it IS plastic 😯

  • @Luke-qc1rm
    @Luke-qc1rm Před 3 lety +2

    Yup! I remember that video two years ago. Impressed then, impressed now

  • @netmaster88
    @netmaster88 Před 3 lety

    I love watching all the new innovative building materials and systems you guys show. I'm not always 100% on board but sometimes I'm like omg I need that right now!!! Lol

  • @ladyofthemasque
    @ladyofthemasque Před 3 lety +5

    Oh yeah, I saw this on that trade show review you did! I'm glad to see they're doing well!

  • @SyFyJoe
    @SyFyJoe Před 3 lety +36

    Glad you did a follow up on that company, Matt. I was hoping they managed to stay in business.

    • @StellerFloors
      @StellerFloors Před 3 lety +11

      Thank you! Check us out on youtube and instagram to catch up with how far we've progressed!

    • @1943vermork
      @1943vermork Před 3 lety +1

      @@StellerFloors oh sweet!

  • @kendavis8046
    @kendavis8046 Před 3 lety +2

    Incredibly cool product! Thanks, Matt, and Merry Christmas!

  • @scorpio6587
    @scorpio6587 Před 3 lety +6

    I love it. I remember when you showed it at that trade show, and I thought it was brilliant then. I want this floor!

  • @TheDougSpot
    @TheDougSpot Před 3 lety +11

    $12-$20 is extraordinarily high for hardwood floors.
    I could get some of the best hardwood installed twice for that price

    • @billm1651
      @billm1651 Před rokem

      Yeah site finished oak is like $7.50-$8.50sqft all in for me.

    • @patty109109
      @patty109109 Před 2 měsíci

      This was three years ago. I wonder what Matt pays for it now.

  • @mycowboyways915
    @mycowboyways915 Před rokem +3

    I'd love to see this over a WarmBoard floor ! Look like a great combination.

  • @robertechols9094
    @robertechols9094 Před 3 lety

    That is awesome flooring! I remember when you first saw it. I was blown away like you were!

  • @johnpichette1146
    @johnpichette1146 Před rokem

    Build show is improving my remodel so much. Zip is the system, Love my cavity sliding door, looks like my floors will be a snap.

  • @mennomateo
    @mennomateo Před 3 lety +4

    This would be an amazing product in a condo installation. Real wood flooring repairable. Amazing

  • @RecklessTheory
    @RecklessTheory Před 3 lety +3

    Wow this is ingenious! can you imagine never having to stress to much about scratching the floor somewhere by accident? Just pull up the plank and replace it. But also you can pull up the floor and refinish it on site or in a garage board by board if you have to...

    • @StellerFloors
      @StellerFloors Před 3 lety

      Yes, this is exactly why we love our floors! You can re-think your relationship with your floors from the ground up. Why get wire-brushed flooring and cover up the grain if you don't need to live with scratches? Let that magnificent grain shine :)

  • @glennsmith8949
    @glennsmith8949 Před 3 lety

    Im Speechless, what can anyone say , other than
    WHAT AN AMAZING FLOORING
    Thank you all for sharing this story WOW.

  • @sh0t0kan
    @sh0t0kan Před 3 lety

    I remember when you first saw them. I think this is by far the coolest thing ever. Why not a real wood floor? Game changer.

  • @_bradjohnson
    @_bradjohnson Před 3 lety +8

    These are awesome, would love to see some finished product/customer reviews. I hope this takes off in a big way!

    • @StellerFloors
      @StellerFloors Před 3 lety +4

      Check out our youtube channel and Kim Lewis' new review: czcams.com/video/7IcRXdHl5v4/video.html and czcams.com/video/A8ly1TO5hjs/video.html

    • @_bradjohnson
      @_bradjohnson Před 3 lety +1

      @@StellerFloors done and done! Subscribed!

  • @electricrenfro1480
    @electricrenfro1480 Před 3 lety +115

    Think their business motto is “drop-pop-and lock it”?

  • @ScottyLo
    @ScottyLo Před 3 lety +1

    Very nice if you wanted to move a wall too. You can just pull up the peaces and make whatever changes and reconfigure the peaces and not have to do any crazy splicing. Very cool product. 👍

  • @jeffreyhill1011
    @jeffreyhill1011 Před 3 lety

    I dig this system. I may look into it when it comes time to resurface my hardwood since its 100 old floor and doesn't really have the thickness to be sanded again but really needs it

  • @Cooper1
    @Cooper1 Před 3 lety +26

    My furnace is in the crawlspace under the house. If it ever needed to be replaced or even substantially serviced with new parts, it would need to come up through the floor joists under the master bed, which means the floor would have to come up. This is the product I wanted before I knew it existed. I just did my house in click bamboo which was a huge compromise to the solid oak we wanted. I laid it so that only one room would have to be unclicked if we need to pull the furnace. This product would have let me just pull the area to get the furnace out. Wish I had seen this earlier.

    • @Dav3
      @Dav3 Před 3 lety +5

      LOL WTF? Why on earth wouldnt you have or add an access hatch like every other house in the world? Or have an access door from the outside of the house? Pretty serious thing to overlook....Even my 120+ year old stone house with a 3/4 basement has stairs down to access the mechanical systems

    • @Cooper1
      @Cooper1 Před 3 lety +25

      @@Dav3 I really appreciate your thoughtful and constructive feedback. You seem like a nice person. Wow, an access door, I never thought of that... 1st I didn't build the house. 2nd I'm on a 18" perimeter foundation not a basement. Outside the house on all sides but one, the ground is 6" below the top of the foundation. There's nothing to put a large door into. The house is in a city with no room to excavate a set of stairs. 3rd, the existing access door to the crawl space is about 12" high, meaning you can crawl in on your belly to maintain the unit, but you cant R&R an entire furnace. 4th, the furnace is directly under the center of the bedroom floor so an access hatch big enough to pull out a furnace unit would look crappy. 5. Either way, the subfloor would need to be removed. 6. Similar construction happens frequently when they put HVAC equip into an attic crawl space during framing. 7. If the heater does die and needs to be R&Rd, then we would spend a half-day and pull up the floor and subfloor (thus the click lock solid bamboo). I expect this to be at most a once every 20-year event. 8. I'm complimenting a product. If I needed your construction criticism I'ld have sent you a set of floorplans.

    • @ArSeNiiKZz
      @ArSeNiiKZz Před 3 lety +7

      @@Cooper1 You did the best you could and I'm sure it's perfect for what you needed ! Loving how you politely replied to that negative prick

    • @PhotonHerald
      @PhotonHerald Před 3 lety +2

      Heh! Isn't that ALWAYS the way?
      You go nuts looking for the best solution.
      Can't find it, and compromise with something that isn't QUITE what you want, but fits your criteria.
      THEN, after you get everything done, the better solution "magically" appears and you're kicking yourself!
      Personally I'm convinced this kinda stuff happens to me because I was a complete bastard in several, consecutive previous lifetimes....

    • @patrickcorcoran8083
      @patrickcorcoran8083 Před 3 lety +1

      These days the best option when a furnace dies is to replace it with heat pumps. I'd just disconnect the fuel and leave it where it is if it ever kicks the bucket. I just replaced my NG furnace with heat pumps and I'd never go back.

  • @scpitts
    @scpitts Před 3 lety +8

    Awesome innovative product. I definitely want something like this in my next home.

    • @scpitts
      @scpitts Před 3 lety

      @steveXracer because it means it'll be easier to maintain. It's the one thing I hate about nailed/stapled hardwood floors.

    • @scpitts
      @scpitts Před 3 lety +1

      @steveXracer My apologies, "replace" is the correct word but maintain is also a good word too. Instead of sanding and/or staining a section of hardwood, you can also do a single piece, making it easier to fix, instead of replacing.

    • @rixtunz3625
      @rixtunz3625 Před 3 lety

      @steveXracer really?

  • @mishamoschera6129
    @mishamoschera6129 Před 3 lety +1

    This is awesome! Definitely getting this for my new sunroom!

  • @slrkls
    @slrkls Před 3 lety +2

    I’ve been installing for 25 years, why have I never seen this product/system. It definitely has peaked my interest.

  • @JamesBiggar
    @JamesBiggar Před 3 lety +69

    Nice product!

    • @jamesmayle4712
      @jamesmayle4712 Před 3 lety

      The meaning of life is our relationship with God. These four steps are the key to getting a Divine Revelation directly from him. They are something you'd eventually do if you took God seriously enough to read the Bible, while implementing its teachings. They are, forgive your parents, break down before Jesus, ask for forgiveness, and read three books of the Bible. Step four requires the first book of each testament, and one you chose yourself. The order is actually important. The steps build on each other. Each one primes your soul for the next. To be forgiven we must forgive. Mathew 6: 14-15. That's why forgiving others has to come before asking for forgiveness. Jesus will not forgive you until you've at least done the bare minimum, our parents. They're supposed to be easiest to forgive, because they've fed, housed, loved us to some degree. Our problems with them are supposed to represent our problems with God. This is why the bare minimum to receive the revelation is our parents. You'll still have to forgive everyone though, but that comes much easier after meeting God. I'm extremely serious and very literal. I'm not talking about signs, nor feelings, nor prayer. It's an actual literal pulled out of your body direct one on one conversation, nothing you can miss. nor misinterpretae. The vast majority of christans never bother to do what God wants seriously, so most never get this revelation. To most outside church their Bible is a paper weight, or at best a virtue signal. Their religion is in what other people think about them, not their relationship with God. Please do those steps I mentioned, there really is a Divine Revelation waiting for all of us. There's extraordinarlly important information we all desperately need in this revelation, but those who get it are forbidden to share it. The Truth that Jesus Christ is Lord is written on every human heart. We all have that knowledge inside us, but we bury it under mountains of pain and anger. Those steps clear away that garbage inside you, letting God heal you, so that his words boom clearly inside your soul. The entire point of our existence here is to Trust God enough that we pay him this mustard seed of Faith, so his Grace can remove the stain sin has left on our souls. Everyone that does not get this Grace is not forgiven of any of their sins, even if they turned around and we're the best person from 25 to death. Without Grace those first sins are still counted against you, tying you to the devil's punishment. It's not about being a good person, It's about being forgiven for when you weren't. The Bible is Truth. Please do those steps and see for yourself. Please take your salvation seriously.

    • @n2bfw884
      @n2bfw884 Před 3 lety

      @@jamesmayle4712As I write this you have copied and pasted the same message 3 times so far. All you're accomplishing is showing people how brainwashed you are. Knock this crap off.

  • @GUITARTIME2024
    @GUITARTIME2024 Před 3 lety +6

    Ok, this is so good it's insane.

  • @stevenpressley5956
    @stevenpressley5956 Před 3 lety

    This guy has revolutionized hardwood floors. Awesome 👍🇺🇸👊

  • @nikumeru
    @nikumeru Před 3 lety

    Now that's an innovation, seems like a great product, I wish them great success!

  • @packymck
    @packymck Před 3 lety +4

    I want to know/see what you have to do when ripping a board to fit it against a wall at the end of the run, and/or odd sections of wall and how to align this floating floor. Rare to be able to use a full sized (width) board all the way across a room.

  • @rpatrick2
    @rpatrick2 Před 3 lety +108

    How you can store the gold and the guns at your new home Mr. Wick.

    • @ThisTall
      @ThisTall Před 3 lety +4

      🤫

    • @nothere7198
      @nothere7198 Před 3 lety +10

      heh, that's where my mind went to immediately

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Před 3 lety +7

      Under Any and EVERY board...

    • @markthompson4225
      @markthompson4225 Před 3 lety +1

      Imagine if he was intoxicated when he put it under a board...
      Now which one did I put that under now...
      2 hours later...

    • @jonmayer
      @jonmayer Před 3 lety +2

      Ultraviolet pen with a tiny marking to help you find it quickly.

  • @crisrobinson4146
    @crisrobinson4146 Před 10 měsíci

    I am currently planning a build and I think that I have found most of my ideas through the Build Show!

  • @patmason7276
    @patmason7276 Před 3 lety

    Wished I had use this flooring. Have damage in several spots have to take up large sections to replace. Excellent

  • @hyperfocal2002
    @hyperfocal2002 Před 3 lety +45

    Riverdance, the flooring.

  • @garethsnaim8174
    @garethsnaim8174 Před 3 lety +3

    Now thats a damn good idea! get to the UK!

  • @shawnbenjamin8868
    @shawnbenjamin8868 Před 3 lety

    I live like 20 minutes from these guys and never heard of them. Will be visiting when I am ready to do my floors

  • @f.jasonarotin2417
    @f.jasonarotin2417 Před 2 lety

    I used Rubio Monocoat on my red oak floor, 3 years no issue, you can walk on it after a few hours. Have not needed to repair a scratch but your supposed to be able to rub the Rubio into the scratch and it will return the scratch to the same color as the finish. Worked well on my black walnut countertops except for a ring from a galvanized can left next to the sink for several weeks. 2 liters did 1000 sq. Ft. Had I known about the Stellar flooring I would have went with it really good design.

  • @aljanssen7748
    @aljanssen7748 Před 3 lety +5

    So cool! The video with him 2 years ago was my introduction to your channel!

  • @stefanhoffman7052
    @stefanhoffman7052 Před 3 lety +53

    You can install that floor while listening to Cotton Eye Joe.

    • @rising_1rish978
      @rising_1rish978 Před 3 lety

      thanks now that song is stuck in my head

    • @jamesmayle4712
      @jamesmayle4712 Před 3 lety +2

      The meaning of life is our relationship with God. These four steps are the key to getting a Divine Revelation directly from him. They are something you'd eventually do if you took God seriously enough to read the Bible, while implementing its teachings. They are, forgive your parents, break down before Jesus, ask for forgiveness, and read three books of the Bible. Step four requires the first book of each testament, and one you chose yourself. The order is actually important. The steps build on each other. Each one primes your soul for the next. To be forgiven we must forgive. Mathew 6: 14-15. That's why forgiving others has to come before asking for forgiveness. Jesus will not forgive you until you've at least done the bare minimum, our parents. They're supposed to be easiest to forgive, because they've fed, housed, loved us to some degree. Our problems with them are supposed to represent our problems with God. This is why the bare minimum to receive the revelation is our parents. You'll still have to forgive everyone though, but that comes much easier after meeting God. I'm extremely serious and very literal. I'm not talking about signs, nor feelings, nor prayer. It's an actual literal pulled out of your body direct one on one conversation, nothing you can miss. nor misinterpretae. The vast majority of christans never bother to do what God wants seriously, so most never get this revelation. To most outside church their Bible is a paper weight, or at best a virtue signal. Their religion is in what other people think about them, not their relationship with God. Please do those steps I mentioned, there really is a Divine Revelation waiting for all of us. There's extraordinarlly important information we all desperately need in this revelation, but those who get it are forbidden to share it. The Truth that Jesus Christ is Lord is written on every human heart. We all have that knowledge inside us, but we bury it under mountains of pain and anger. Those steps clear away that garbage inside you, letting God heal you, so that his words boom clearly inside your soul. The entire point of our existence here is to Trust God enough that we pay him this mustard seed of Faith, so his Grace can remove the stain sin has left on our souls. Everyone that does not get this Grace is not forgiven of any of their sins, even if they turned around and we're the best person from 25 to death. Without Grace those first sins are still counted against you, tying you to the devil's punishment. It's not about being a good person, It's about being forgiven for when you weren't. The Bible is Truth. Please do those steps and see for yourself. Please take your salvation seriously.

  • @garyflythe1362
    @garyflythe1362 Před 3 lety

    This product should revolutionize putting down hardwood floors time cost nails everything beautiful video love the new products

  • @hermanr5513
    @hermanr5513 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice! And if you ever want to change flooring (eg from wood to tile in the kitchen), you can pick up the boards and set them into another room.

  • @eugeneshealthproject
    @eugeneshealthproject Před 3 lety +9

    I love this concept. How long is the life of the boards? And after a few years do they start popping out of their tracks?

    • @Alamyst2011
      @Alamyst2011 Před 2 lety

      They certainly will. Moisture will weaken the substrate and these will pop. Usually new, innovative construction methods fail.

  • @justinb1606
    @justinb1606 Před 3 lety +4

    10 seconds in and I'm sold!

  • @HippieHillHomestead
    @HippieHillHomestead Před 3 lety +1

    Very cool product. Thanks for sharing with us.

  • @clemkadiddlehopper7705

    Also, refinishing can be done by-the-piece, in a controlled shop, assembly-line style (efficient). Color and thickness matching can be done by the piece, for a repair, with comparative samples. The simplicity and re-usability is amazing. This will become the standard for wood flooring. If it goes public, I'm all in early.

  • @sshygurl
    @sshygurl Před 3 lety +7

    I need this in my house!!!

  • @ComfortablyNumb8888
    @ComfortablyNumb8888 Před 3 lety +3

    Cool product, love the innovation. Seems like the bevel on the planks is larger than in nail down floors to compensate for any irregularities in manufacturing/install. I also see some proud edges and gapping in some of the planks. Any subfloor irregularities would amplify this. Not for me, but interesting product nonetheless.

    • @arthurleclaire154
      @arthurleclaire154 Před rokem

      Don’t know how you lay floor but where I’m from if a sub floor has irregularities you fix that, then lay floor. We don’t just cover it and forget it.

  • @seanpalmer2050
    @seanpalmer2050 Před 3 lety +2

    The wood floor in my old house in Philadelphia was about 4 inches thick, random planks. You'd go on the basement and look up, and there was the bottom of it. You could see a little daylight between the planks. Solid. No creaking.

  • @Jason-dm7uh
    @Jason-dm7uh Před 3 lety

    Super cool and efficient, I have to get this stuff here to the UK 🇬🇧

  • @jameschristiansson3137
    @jameschristiansson3137 Před 3 lety +3

    The amazing Matt Risinger show!

  • @jpneal10
    @jpneal10 Před 3 lety +60

    I love the concept and if money wasn’t a concern I’d definitely consider it, but like many of the other comments the price is just too high. Plus since the company’s only been around a few years there’s no “proof of longevity” in the plastic tracks, especially for spending $14+/sf on materials only. I’d need to see how it’s holding up after 10 years before dropping $30K to upgrade my house. I think materials/tax/shipping would need to be below $10/sf to be considered by me.

    • @denispilipchuk9091
      @denispilipchuk9091 Před 3 lety +20

      How about no more than $6 for materials to be considered by me.( actual installer and a salesperson)
      $14 is crazy!!!!

    • @lordgarth1
      @lordgarth1 Před 3 lety +2

      You think they invented some sort of new plastic?

    • @denispilipchuk9091
      @denispilipchuk9091 Před 3 lety +13

      @Ab Ba thats the thing. For $14 dollars the quality is horrible. You can get amazing stuff for $10!!! $14 is crazy
      It looks like a $3 per sf product. Look in detail at joints. Look at the height difference. It looks bad.

    • @firesurfer
      @firesurfer Před 3 lety +7

      @@denispilipchuk9091 Really? Looks good to me. The real advantage is the homeowner can install it. Labor is nonexistent.

    • @denispilipchuk9091
      @denispilipchuk9091 Před 3 lety +8

      @@firesurfer look closer. I have 12 years of experience as an installer. If I can tell from a heavily edited video then more so in person. I don't think homeowners are going to jump on installing it. Its still labor intensive

  • @djirate052380
    @djirate052380 Před 3 lety +1

    I install hardwood floors and this is AMAZING!

  • @liamjenkins82
    @liamjenkins82 Před 3 lety

    Great idea. I look forward to seeing in Australia in 20 years time

  • @IanSmithKSP
    @IanSmithKSP Před 3 lety +21

    2:13 how to destroy your knees in one year.

    • @julianfrederick9082
      @julianfrederick9082 Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah if you’re in your sixties... what’s wrong with your knees man?

    • @IanSmithKSP
      @IanSmithKSP Před 3 lety +8

      @@julianfrederick9082 nothing. But as a hardwood flooring guy who’s used his knees in a similar fashion, I can tell you this destroys your knees. It literally sends the energy through your knee joint essentially turning the cartilage into the hammer. Almost all of that force ends in your knee cap causing inflammation and micro tearing of the ligaments.

    • @IanSmithKSP
      @IanSmithKSP Před 3 lety

      @@jamesmayle4712 I wish there was a hell for you.

    • @inteallsviktigt
      @inteallsviktigt Před 3 lety +1

      Well good that god invented the rubber hammer

  • @brianmeade1932
    @brianmeade1932 Před 3 lety +3

    You could technically finish the floor and then install as well. I would like to see the transitions between room, closets, etc. as well though.

  • @jrburch522
    @jrburch522 Před 3 lety +1

    Looks great. The repair value IS huge. However nothing beats a job site finish. I wanted to see the edges and how they match up. How dependent are they on the slab? I have another way to make a floating floor that sits on a 3/4 plywood. The biggest drawback is that finished thickness is 1 1/2 but it is bulletproof- except for water.

  • @2WheeledMafia
    @2WheeledMafia Před 2 lety

    I've been installing flooring for over 30 years.
    I have worked with all the click and drop and lock systems.
    I will be ordering samples for my customer's it looks like it's a nice true drop in system my only worry will be if the tracks get damaged in shipping if a tube gets crushed shipping companies are ABSOLUTELY BRUTAL besides that I'm very excited.

    • @satochinakamoto6129
      @satochinakamoto6129 Před rokem

      Solution have somebody drive to the factory and pick it up yourself. Fly in rent a truck drive back..or simply bill the cusy for a couple extra boxes.

  • @CowboyCorky
    @CowboyCorky Před 3 lety +10

    I think it would be cool if they had this system for laminate floors too

  • @ericemenhiser5781
    @ericemenhiser5781 Před 3 lety +10

    What about expansion/contraction in a house that does not have tight humidity control? Will there eventually be gaps between the boards on the ends where there isn't anything holding them together?

    • @markanthony3275
      @markanthony3275 Před 3 lety +1

      When the boards do warp because of humidity...do you think plastic strips will hold them straight better than nails ? Wood , in a sense, is a living thing...and these floors have been machined to an MDF standard...but that won't last.

    • @Rob--
      @Rob-- Před 2 lety

      @@markanthony3275 you're right, just another way manufacturers sell products to customers and leave installers out to dry when the warranties are questioned.

    • @markanthony3275
      @markanthony3275 Před 2 lety

      @@Rob-- Exactly!

  • @mrwhobodiggz
    @mrwhobodiggz Před rokem

    That man is a genius I can't beleive how simple it is! Way stronger than a micro tongue and Groove like you find on most floorings.

  • @honeytgb
    @honeytgb Před rokem

    That flooring is awesome! I am sold!

  • @YosemiteJohn
    @YosemiteJohn Před 3 lety +3

    If I still had a house to put it in would look into this

  • @jimcahill6330
    @jimcahill6330 Před 3 lety +9

    You can install it with a Pogo stick. ;-) I remember the previous video - glad to see he's hit the market.

  • @patriot1303
    @patriot1303 Před 3 lety

    Impressive! Great find Matt!

  • @brandonterpstra3338
    @brandonterpstra3338 Před 3 lety +2

    That's pretty cool! I think the ease of refinishing sounds incredible. Seriously just take it out, run it through a drum sander and refinush....

    • @cmiller6352
      @cmiller6352 Před 3 lety

      It seems like an industrial or commercial finishing process would achieve a much better result than what could be done after a floor is installed.

  • @richardj163
    @richardj163 Před 3 lety +8

    Not only that... the floors can be re-used!

  • @timdex91
    @timdex91 Před 3 lety +5

    This would be a great way to upgrade in a starter home. Then move it when you get ready to move up.

    • @kenbrown2808
      @kenbrown2808 Před 3 lety

      that sounds to me like a good way to lose more resale value in the old house than it saves you on the new house.

    • @fakenewscuomo3577
      @fakenewscuomo3577 Před 3 lety +1

      $18 per sq ft. It's like stealing money.

  • @chrismcdonald4748
    @chrismcdonald4748 Před 3 lety +2

    Remember you showing this guys at the home show I believe. Nice stuff

  • @jawnny_owl1857
    @jawnny_owl1857 Před 3 lety

    The was a random suggested video, but as a contractor I'm glad I came across this and going to start looking up the prices for purchasing. Shout out to the inventor also a s a fellow Pennsylvanian!

    • @buildshow
      @buildshow  Před 3 lety

      Very cool! I’m also a PA boy who married a Tx girl. Grew up in Pgh

  • @bryanmise1884
    @bryanmise1884 Před 3 lety +18

    What kind of craftsman wizardry is this? Is this the Jetsons house?

  • @jaxonburt3670
    @jaxonburt3670 Před 3 lety +15

    Coming from a floor specialist:
    This invention is cool but won’t work the way they said. If you need to refinish it, meaning sand it, change the color and clear it with a lacquer, you won’t be able to pop a board out if it gets damaged because the lacquer would have bonded the boards together as lacquer is a strong clear durable glue pretty much. So you wouldn’t be able to repair it to perfection just as a traditional sanded hardwood floor. You can pull traditional sanded Hardwood floors out for a spot repair just as you would if this was to be sanded. Just hire a hardwood floor specialist near you.

    • @geirbalderson9697
      @geirbalderson9697 Před 3 lety +1

      See, my point exactly.

    • @scottjamieson9623
      @scottjamieson9623 Před 3 lety

      Hypothetically, why would you not be able to:
      Lay the floor, finish with lacquer, cure, cut the seams with a utility knife, replace the board, then finish again with lacquer? Since lacquer is self-wetting it would blend the new board back into the previous seams.

    • @jaxonburt3670
      @jaxonburt3670 Před 3 lety +4

      @@scottjamieson9623 oh I wish it was that easy. Owned a business for 8 years now and repairs are one of the hardest to do because you’ll never get a perfect seamless match. The stain never behaves the same as the first time you stained the floor because the stain has aged and you’ll see exactly where you repaired because the lacquer doesn’t Flow into the existing lacquer creating a halo around the boards you just repaired. Once you sand, the floor becomes smooth (no bevels) so you’ll always be able to tell what’s been repaired. You can get close, really close but never perfect.

    • @scottjamieson9623
      @scottjamieson9623 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jaxonburt3670 I hear you. I was ignoring the part about matching stain because that's never easy. But what you said made it sound like these new boards wouldn't come out because of lacquer acting like glue. I'm sure it would take work, but a lot less work than taking out half the floor, no?

    • @clemkadiddlehopper7705
      @clemkadiddlehopper7705 Před 3 lety +6

      I believe Matt specifically mentioned popping it out, and doing the work in the shop, which can be assembly lined to make efficient. Individual pieces, refinished in a shop, little dust in the home.

  • @Zuckerpuppekopf
    @Zuckerpuppekopf Před 3 lety

    A great idea, and a great idea to implement once the price comes down a bit

  • @Hard_7_Iron
    @Hard_7_Iron Před rokem

    Wow! Pretty amazing floors.

  • @carlosmerida9952
    @carlosmerida9952 Před 3 lety +3

    Installer: when you hard wood floor is about 2” close to the wall
    How you do to cut 2” and install properly the tracks or rails? Or you need a special tool like a router to make a profile on the piece of wood?

  • @buzza2077
    @buzza2077 Před 3 lety +5

    Yeah it's nice for the first few years. It does start to warp easier, boards just randomly pop cause they don't gap with moisture. They do raddle.

    • @lahollander
      @lahollander Před 3 lety +3

      Is this from first hand experience? He said they'd only been manufacturing for two years. So how do you know how they behave after a few years?

    • @habaneropepper4156
      @habaneropepper4156 Před 3 lety +2

      Its floating, as long as its not attached to subfloor and you leave required space around walls floor will expand and contract under the base board just like any floating floor. Run into a lot of moisture issues with traditional hardwood cupping because of moisture in crawl/basement or lack of proper central air conditioning to maintain humidity in space.

    • @habaneropepper4156
      @habaneropepper4156 Před 3 lety +1

      Buzz A what do you mean? You don’t want gapping or conversely cupping in a hard wood floor. Floating floors combat this by allowing expansion and contraction independently of subfloor and are much less prone to this.

    • @user-ty2uz4gb7v
      @user-ty2uz4gb7v Před 3 lety +1

      How do you know they rattle?

    • @topherdean1024
      @topherdean1024 Před rokem

      I wonder. I did install a traditional 3/4" prefinished solid wood floor once using the floating method by gluing the T&G, and it came out nice and has lasted for over a decade with no cupping or warping, but it's in Hawaii, so it's a pretty stable environment. It seems to me that a floating floor system would be more prone to cupping, since it's not nailed down.

  • @spasmodicwon
    @spasmodicwon Před rokem

    Matt - you are almost there. You’ve almost made it to the million subscribers mark. Let’s get going!!!!!!

  • @gregdhont2307
    @gregdhont2307 Před 3 lety

    Looks great! I like it! Is there a solution for a perpendicular transition/reducer? (other than gluing it to subfloor and letting this floor 'slide' along side it)

  • @rickgeller6043
    @rickgeller6043 Před 3 lety +10

    This product floored me.

  • @scurling2993
    @scurling2993 Před 3 lety +17

    When your kid spills milk on the floor, how do you clean that up when it seeps into the connectors? The floor has advantages, but a lot of disadvatages too.

    • @dlopes523
      @dlopes523 Před 3 lety +11

      They literally just showed you! Take a suction cup pull the boards, clean ,put boards back down.

    • @rixtunz3625
      @rixtunz3625 Před 3 lety +7

      A lot easier than prefinished nail down hardwood.

    • @TheHungarianchick
      @TheHungarianchick Před 3 lety +9

      @@dlopes523 I’d prefer not to pull up floor boards every time my cat tosses a hairball.

    • @haighyvshaighy
      @haighyvshaighy Před 3 lety +5

      Well it’s sealed on all 6 sides so it’s protected a little bit more and as for traditional application you can still get moisture between boards on a spill and you can’t do crap about it. I think this method is pretty cool. I just laid 4500sq’ of 3/4” hickory the traditional way and the compressor nailer is only so good until you get to about three boards away from the wall then it’s glue or hand toenailing. Every hand toenail hickory? It’s hard as shit! I would have loved this track system!

    • @scurling2993
      @scurling2993 Před 3 lety +5

      I appreciate the product, and I realize this post is a marketing effort. I just try to offer a little reality to the marketeers.
      I've installed clip-in flooring systems before, and the are NOT 100% sealed. They have their place in the building world, and are far less expensive to install, but don't tell me they seal the subflooring from moisture. I like the aspect of the removable slats, post installation.

  • @glen748
    @glen748 Před 3 lety +2

    Very Cool. Being 3/4 inch I can router a groove in the bottom and run cords under it to a device in the middle of the room. Also I could install this in an apartment and remove it when I leave.

  • @Xktree72
    @Xktree72 Před 3 lety +1

    I hope this video gets them more customers than they can handle!
    Hopefully they can go nationwide in a couple of years.
    If love to be able to provide the product to my customers here in Southern California.

    • @StellerFloors
      @StellerFloors Před 3 lety +1

      We do ship direct to customers nationwide! Give us a call and let us see how we can help you :)

    • @Xktree72
      @Xktree72 Před 3 lety +1

      @@StellerFloors
      Awesome, I'll give you a call in the new year!

  • @chrisz0619
    @chrisz0619 Před 3 lety +3

    Okay...I love that

  • @hobohank2040
    @hobohank2040 Před 3 lety +12

    I was wondering how this company was doing i like this product.

    • @Soviet_group-c9s
      @Soviet_group-c9s Před 3 lety

      Have you ever used it?

    • @alec4672
      @alec4672 Před 3 lety +1

      I remember seeing this a while ago at IBS and I'm glad he's actually using it.

    • @hobohank2040
      @hobohank2040 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Soviet_group-c9s unfortunately no. I like the concept and it looks like it would be an easier dyi project with real wood flooring.

  • @orangeguy3314
    @orangeguy3314 Před 3 lety +1

    Wow,great floor product!

  • @tsicby
    @tsicby Před 3 lety +2

    I plan to do wood floors in my kitchen and this would certainly make that a sensible choice. Stained, warped boards just pluck them right up and pop down new ones.

    • @1puppetbike
      @1puppetbike Před 3 lety

      After spending a small fortune on a removable floor.. homeowners are finding there are finally legitimate reasons to cry over spilled milk.
      -it's going to get super nasty in that house and washing the floor is going to make it worse..

  • @marcob1729
    @marcob1729 Před 3 lety +8

    I might have found what I'll put on top of my "slabless slab"

  • @sawxpatscelts
    @sawxpatscelts Před 3 lety +7

    I didn’t watch the full video but I couldn’t imagine the dollar per sq foot on this floor. (Came back and saw the price...no way) gotta have deep pockets for this floor.

    • @oregan34
      @oregan34 Před 3 lety +2

      It was close to 6 thousand for 400 sqft

    • @jrburch522
      @jrburch522 Před 3 lety

      Wood floors are not cheap unless your product is crap

    • @jaimetapia6733
      @jaimetapia6733 Před 3 lety

      You right, I think are several spends it

    • @jl9362
      @jl9362 Před 3 lety

      Went to the website and checked pricing and my smile turned into a frown. For the current plans i have drawn up it was over 20k for 800sq ft. of walnut. Ill pass.

  • @gustavolomeli1087
    @gustavolomeli1087 Před 3 lety

    Nice! I love this product highlight!

  • @Rick_Kopines
    @Rick_Kopines Před 3 lety

    This must be magic! It should be everywhere.

  • @bigfatbaataed
    @bigfatbaataed Před 3 lety +20

    So, when interviewing a prospective employee the number one question is do they have any Irish dancing experience...

  • @Bladepablo
    @Bladepablo Před 3 lety +7

    How it works with radiant heat?

    • @1puppetbike
      @1puppetbike Před 3 lety +2

      I pop's up when the desired temperature is reached.

    • @gial8862
      @gial8862 Před 3 lety

      I noticed in the video the boards already seemed to have a mm warp, or popup, to them. Makes me wonder if the entire floor can be sanded or not? or if each board must be individually plained and then put back...

  • @jamesshannon88
    @jamesshannon88 Před 3 lety

    Very stoked to see they made it through the pandemic

  • @branofattrebates2847
    @branofattrebates2847 Před 3 lety

    Great invention send it across the pond 🇬🇧🇬🇧.