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| Laser levelling a floor |
Nuttall posted this at eHow in 2009, and Leaf Group moved it to Hunker in 2017; in the process chopping off Kelly's "references." That's no problem, though, because according to the Wayback Machine, her references were both pages of instruction for using floor leveling compound.
| At the simplest, you can figure out whether your floor is level (and which direction it slopes) by dropping a marble in the center of the room. Try it at several places, just in case the floor is really wavy. According to Kelly, though, you need a level (presumably a carpenter's level): "The length of the level depends on the size of the floor: small rooms requires a 2-foot level; medium-size rooms, a 4-foot level; and large rooms, an 8-foot level."While 8- and even 10-foot levels are available (for a couple hundred bucks...), most people don't have one. That being said, we were pretty sure Kelly was headed in the wrong direction, anyway, and she proved that quickly: |
"Mark the areas that are out of level with a pencil... Use a tape measure to determine how far out of level the floor is. Make a note on the floor next to the pencil line... Repeat this procedure over the whole surface of the subfloor."God forbid you have a 20 by 30-foot room! But Kelly's procedure raises a serious question: if the floor has both high and low spots, what good are these numbers written on the floor? They refer only to the other end of the level; not to a common datum! We're pretty sure that whatever resource Kelly used (maybe even Daddy or husband Josh) was thinking about measuring along a wall – not across the whole floor.
No, the way to do this is to use a laser level on a stand. When you do that, you are measuring the high and low spots with reference to a single spot in the room. Do it Kelly's way, and your results are going to be every bit as worthless as her third Dumbass of the Day award.¹
¹ That and $4.95 will buy you a caramel macchiato...
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