Find Floors By: Price | Color | Species | Width | Finish

Search By Manufacturers

Oak Flooring

 

Without a doubt the most popular wood in the United States. Both red and white oak are extremely abundant and have been used for everything from railroad ties, cabinets, ship & barn beams, furniture to hardwood flooring. Oak is very dense and has a strong impact resistance, good grain clarity and stains well, which all adds to its appeal as hardwood flooring. Although oak hardness is not as great as hickory or some maples, its availability, graining and density are what make it so popular for hardwood flooring.
Red oak and white oak are both common hardwoods growing through out the Eastern, Midwestern and Southern states. The denser oaks come from the colder climates where the trees have shorter seasonal growing periods. Oak flooring is also a green product and is considered an environmentally friendly choice of flooring. Many mills also use selective harvesting and replanting of new young trees to help protect and manage the oak tree forests. Also, solid oak flooring can easily last a lifetime and can be refinished several times, constantly adding value to your home.

Red Oak Flooring

Red oak flooring is available in both 3/4" solid and engineered hardwood. They vary in width from the 1-1/2" strip planks to 7" or wider planks. Solid oak strip flooring comes in both prefinished and unfinished styles and are generally 1-1/2" to 3-1/4" in wide and random lengths. Solid oak plank flooring also comes in prefinished and unfinished width from 3-1/2" to about 8" and in random lengths. Engineered red oak flooring has a thin top layer of red oak and the plies underneath are usually a softer wood. Once installed it is hard to tell the difference between an engineered and solid hardwood oak floor.

White Oak Flooring

White oak flooring is pretty much the same as red oak but has a white coloration and is slightly more moisture resistant than red oak. Also, white oak flooring is slightly harder than red oak.  Both red and white oak flooring are installed the same ways and require the same care and maintenance.

Installing Oak Flooring

Solid oak flooring has to be nailed-down over a plywood sub-floor and the proper expansion joint has to be left around all vertical walls to allow the planks to expand and contract. Engineered oak floors can be glued-down or stapled over wood sub-floors and glued over concrete slabs. Some engineered wood floors can also be floated over a variety of sub-floors (Floating Hardwood Floors).

Login

Hardwood Resource Center


Free Shipping Products