Anonymous wrote:OP, what do you think might be done about this?
There's only three ways out: lower the new floor, raise the old floor, or smooth out the difference between them. There's no way to raise or lower a floor without tearing it out and redoing it.
Anonymous wrote:5-6”? That’s practically a stair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our contractor made a wood threshold and shaved it/planed it?? down to a very slight slope between the wood and the tile in the kitchen tile and sub flooring. Barely noticeable.
Okay but I’m this case there is an inch difference
Same with ours. Hardwood floors meeting kitchen tile floors on sub flooring. You'd trip going in and out. So contractor came back and created a threshold that was carefully sloped. It helped that both the wood and the tiles were dark. But still, barely noticeable and no way to take up the wood floor to gradually raise it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our contractor made a wood threshold and shaved it/planed it?? down to a very slight slope between the wood and the tile in the kitchen tile and sub flooring. Barely noticeable.
Okay but I’m this case there is an inch difference
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depending on the type and condition of the flooring, some installers can take up the existing flooring, put in subfloor or raise the subfloor of the wooden floors to make the floors match and then reinstall the flooring. It usually only works with good quality old hardwood that is kept in good condition, but it is possible. Just expensive.
So basically I’d have to redo the entire wood floor with new subflooring?
Anonymous wrote:Depending on the type and condition of the flooring, some installers can take up the existing flooring, put in subfloor or raise the subfloor of the wooden floors to make the floors match and then reinstall the flooring. It usually only works with good quality old hardwood that is kept in good condition, but it is possible. Just expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Our contractor made a wood threshold and shaved it/planed it?? down to a very slight slope between the wood and the tile in the kitchen tile and sub flooring. Barely noticeable.