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Laminate Flooring Glossary

Acclimation - The 48-hour time period when unopened packages of laminate flooring should be placed in the center of the room where they are to be installed. The acclimation process allows the flooring to stabilize to the room temperature; failure to do so can result in the boards shrinking (creating gaps) or expanding (creating peaks).

Clic2Clic – Kronotex USA’s specially developed tongue and groove joints that make it possible to snap the individual planks together with a simple “click.” Once joined, the planks form a single, fixed unit.

Door Jam Saw – Used to cut away a portion of the door casing, allowing laminate planks to slide underneath.

End Molding – Used to make a transition between floors of unequal heights. Examples: either wood or laminate to carpet or vinyl.

Expansion – The floor’s reaction as it responds to the room temperature and humidity. As temperature or humidity rises, laminate flooring planks expand outward, which is why the expansion gap is a critical part of laminate flooring installation.

Floating Floor – A floor that is not nailed or glued to the subfloor. Kronotex laminate floors maintain their structure and stability from their expertly designed tongue-and-groove Clic 2 Clic locking system.

Laminate Flooring – Extremely durable flooring comprised of four layers: a stabilizing under-layer, a dense fiberboard core, a decorative paper layer containing the wood grain or tile design, and a clear, protective wear layer.

Main Light Source – The main light source of a room is often the sun coming through the main window in a room. Laminate flooring should be installed parallel to the main light source in a room to create the most flattering look.

Pull Bar – Installation tool used for tightening the tongue and groove joints.

Quarter-Round Molding – Used to accent the transition and cover the gap between the floor and the baseboard. Especially useful for retrofitted floors where the baseboard is typically not removed.

Reducer – Used to make a transition from a laminate or wood floor to ceramic tile, thresholds and cabinets.

Spacers – Small triangular plastic pieces used to maintain the required expansion gap around the laminate floor, allowing room for expansion.

Stagger – When installing laminate flooring planks, you should stagger the joints by using a two-thirds length plank to start the second row and a one-third-length plank to start the third. Repeating the same stagger throughout can call attention to the joints by creating a floor-wide pattern. Staggering planks more randomly helps the joints submerge into the hue and grain of the surface.

Stair Nosing – Used to provide a finished look to stair risers.

Subfloor – The floor laminate planks are to be installed on top of; generally wood or concrete. See installation instructions for subfloor preparation.

T-molding – Used to transition two floors of the same height, typically between rooms or in an entryway. Also used as an expansion joint for floors installed in larger sized rooms.

Tapping Block – A hard plastic block that is placed against the edge of a plank and used to tap end joints together.

Tongue and Groove – the edge profile found on laminate flooring planks to allow fastening together without the use of glue or nails.

Underlayment – Pad installed above the subfloor before laminate planks are installed. The underlayment pad provides sound dampening and levels out minor imperfections in the subfloor.

Vapor Barrier – A polyethylene film used to prevent moisture damage from concrete subfloors.

Wall Base – Also called a baseboard, it is used to make the transition from floor to wall in almost every installation.
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