FHB Logo Facebook LinkedIn Email Pinterest Twitter X Instagram Tiktok YouTube Plus Icon Close Icon Navigation Search Icon Navigation Search Icon Arrow Down Icon Video Guide Icon Article Guide Icon Modal Close Icon Guide Search Icon Skip to content
Subscribe
Log In
  • How-To
  • Design
  • Tools & Materials
  • Restoration
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Forum
  • Magazine
  • Members
  • FHB House
  • Podcast
Log In

Discussion Forum

Discussion Forum

workshop floor material

rscoby | Posted in Construction Techniques on August 27, 2008 04:04am

This may be more a Fine Woodworking question, as it concerns my shop, but I’m asking in both forums as it’s also a construction question about a pretty large floor.

I have a 24 x 45 outbuilding that I placed on a raised foundation so that I could have a wooden floor laid over joists with crawl space underneath.

I have completed the joist structure and am now putting down 3/4 in. T&G OSB subfloor. I’m seeking suggestions for what the finished floor should be. For strength, I’d like it to be another 1/2 – 3/4 in., but don’t really know what to use or where to get it (or who to ask).

Any suggestions would be most welcome.

Richard Scoby
Madison, WI

Reply

Replies

  1. User avater
    Gene_Davis | Aug 27, 2008 04:54pm | #1

    What do you want out of the floor surface?

    And what is your budget?

    Two very important questions.

    It's a wood workshop, right?  IMHO, the t&g OSB is enough, and I would use waterborne floor coating products to seal and topcoat it.  BonaKemi is the brand name.  They have all the stuff.

    Put the money you save, by not layering on another thickness of wood, into your next good tool or machine.  Does your planer have spiral teeth, replaceable carbide inserts?  Did you really plan right for all the gear needed for state of the art dust collection?

    Or instead are you going for looks, and want the camera crew to pick up on that floor, when filming your next "New Cheesehead Workshop" segment? ;-)

     

    View Image

    "A stripe is just as real as a dadgummed flower."

    Gene Davis        1920-1985

    1. rscoby | Aug 27, 2008 05:08pm | #2

      So, I should skip the maple flooring, you think?If a 3/4 in floor is enough for strength, then I'm happy to quit at that. The money I'd save on another round of flooring would probably pay for the Oneida Cyclone system I'm planning to install. And I'd be done with it a lot sooner!Yes, it's a woodshop, and no, I don't need it to be pretty. I'm gluing and nailing the OSB to the joists.Richard

      1. peteshlagor | Aug 27, 2008 05:19pm | #3

        You gonna run the DC ducting under the floor or overhead?

         

        1. rscoby | Aug 27, 2008 05:28pm | #4

          I'm planning to run it under the floor, with a six inch main line and four inch branches terminating in blast gates at floor level. Flexible from there to each machine.Richard

          1. peteshlagor | Aug 27, 2008 06:53pm | #5

            Then the floor needs to able to have access in case of a creature or wedding ring taking residence.

            That eliminates the maple.  Unless you put in access doors.

             

          2. rscoby | Aug 27, 2008 07:01pm | #6

            I've installed two headouts, one on either side of the girder that runs the length of the building, and plan on installing trapdoors and stairs to the crawl space.I'm also installing some fluorescents down there on either side of the girder so there's no place to hide.

          3. peteshlagor | Aug 27, 2008 07:44pm | #7

            In that case, bring on the maple.

      2. User avater
        Gene_Davis | Aug 27, 2008 09:03pm | #9

        Your OSB is enough, floor-wise, and anything you put onto it is "finish," or eye candy.

        I can get "character grade" (i.e. knots, color and graining all over the map, etc.) hard maple or oak for under $1.50/sf, but then I am going to have to lay it, buy resin paper for under, staples or nails, borrow or rent the flooring tools, then get more gear, and spend more money, to sand and finish it.

        I can get some sort of on-sale closeout in a prefinished t&g plank of some kind, but it's back to doing the tool-up, etc. 

        I can get the gallonage of sealer and finish, plus the squeegee applicator gear, and in two days, do the waterborne seal and two coats of finish.

        Better yet, I can do nothing, accept the OSB surface as-is, and start to move in and wire up and pipe up all the machines.

        It is time to get doing some projects, right?  I just got the used copy of Krenov's The Impractical Cabinetmaker I ordered online.  My hardbound copy long ago got lost in a flood.  I will do a version of the doublesided music stand he shows in the book.  His was all pearwood, but I am thinking of doing this one in brown maple. 

        View Image

        "A stripe is just as real as a dadgummed flower."

        Gene Davis        1920-1985

        1. rscoby | Aug 27, 2008 09:48pm | #10

          Only one other person suggested another layer of flooring, and that was another round of 3/4 t&g OSB. Everyone else just made suggestions to pretty it up.I'm quite happy to use it as is for now (or forever) since it's over 1000 sq ft of floor. The money would be much better used on the vac system now. If I can't stand not remodeling something in the future, I can think about other treatments for the floor then.I've had a brand new Powermatic cabinet saw in a box since March and I'm dying to open it and use it.Thanks for all your suggestions!RichardP.S. Good luck on the Krenov cabinet.

          1. LIVEONSAWDUST | Aug 28, 2008 04:29am | #11

            Although the 3/4 OSB is enough structurally, I have not been happy with the "give" you get between joists when a large point load is placed upon it, such as a heavy tablesaw on castors or legs.

            This may seen unorthodox, but run1/2 or 3/4 MDF over the OSB, then poly it. The floor will seem much stiffer, the MDF is very durable (slap it with a hammer, its hard to dent) and its easy to sweep.

            If you leave the OSB, the surface will wear in time and get so rough it will be hard to sweep

            I did some stair treads out of MDF in an industrial use situation and they have held up well. These were installed over regular carpet & vinyl adhesive, then finish nailed just to hold it untill the adhesive set up

            I even wished I could get MDF in 2 different shades, I'd cut it into squares and install it checkerboard style

          2. User avater
            basswood | Aug 28, 2008 04:45am | #12

            http://www.spectratechmdf.com/

          3. LIVEONSAWDUST | Aug 29, 2008 05:01am | #22

            Very cool, but now I need a project for it.looks pricy, though

          4. Shep | Aug 28, 2008 05:21am | #13

            The MDF was what I was going to suggest to the OP.

            And a couple of coats of finish, IMO, is necessary. Partly to seal the floor. Partly to keep the MDF from getting so slippery with sawdust on it.

          5. MSLiechty | Aug 28, 2008 07:11am | #14

            I agree I'd be installing 1-1/8" T & G sturdifloor.ML

  2. Hudson Valley Carpenter | Aug 27, 2008 08:13pm | #8

    I've done a couple of shop floors with Armstrong commercial linoleum, 12"X12".  They're inexpensive and easy to install.  At a full 1/8" thickness, they're very durable.

    Lighter colors reflect light well which helps to see the workpiece better with less illumination.  Small objects dropped on the floor are easily located.

    After the initial buffing and waxing, this flooring is very easy to sweep.   

    If a tile gets damaged, it takes only a few minutes to heat the tile, remove and replace it.

    As much as I love the natural look of a wood floor, even sealed plywood, commercial linoleum is more practical.

  3. jeffwoodwork | Aug 28, 2008 08:01pm | #15

    Sounds like your on your way with the 3/4",  I think for the shop 1 1/8" would be a better choice.  Do you have any plans to partition some of the shop off for storage, office or finish area?  If so you could do hardwood in one area and vinyl or the like in an other.  If anything the OSB needs some type of finish paint, or sealer.

  4. breadman128 | Aug 28, 2008 08:46pm | #16

    Since 3/4 inch is fine for 90% of your shop I would just heavy up where your machinery is going to be located. If it is in a fixed location a couple of 2x6"s or 8"s across the joists would stiffen things up. Also a piece of 3/4 ply beveled to 45 degrees or greater on all edges where 2 by material would be unadvised would be aproppiate.Just screw it down so things can be moved around later.
    In the worse case you cold go underneath and block up at specific location. Paint with a good porch and deck enamel and start making sawdust.

  5. PlaningMill | Aug 28, 2008 09:08pm | #17

    I got utility grade 3/4 inch thick maple 2 1/2 inches wide from Lumber Liquidators for 99 cents a board foot.  Looks great and a pleasure to walk on.

    1. rscoby | Aug 28, 2008 09:12pm | #18

      Is that maple T&G?

      1. PlaningMill | Aug 28, 2008 09:18pm | #19

        Yes.

  6. Dakota | Aug 28, 2008 11:54pm | #20

    Wow, your shop sounds like mine that I just finished. 

    I used 1 1/8 t&g glue and nail for sub floor.  Then bought utility grade birch from Lumber Liq for .79 cents per square foot.  If you use the utility floor, be sure it's square edge and not the beveled or that will always be filled with sawdust.  Also the utility grade has many voids and knot holes and I had to fill them with black epoxy and sand smooth when I sanded the floor.  More work, but cool looking.

    I also found this new finish that's made from, belive it or not, bugs!  Use alcohol to thin, dries quick and easy to repair.

    I placed a trap door to gain access to under the floor to run the dust collector.  I will wait a year before I place the dust collector outside to have the best shot at having the tools in the right place.

    Good luck with the project.

  7. User avater
    MarkH | Aug 29, 2008 03:13am | #21

    If you go with hardwood, it's not entirely necessary to sand and varnish it. Just seal it.

Log in or create an account to post a comment.

Sign up Log in

Become a member and get full access to FineHomebuilding.com

Video Shorts

Categories

  • Business
  • Code Questions
  • Construction Techniques
  • Energy, Heating & Insulation
  • General Discussion
  • Help/Work Wanted
  • Photo Gallery
  • Reader Classified
  • Tools for Home Building

Discussion Forum

Recent Posts and Replies

  • |
  • |
  • |
  • |
  • |
  • |
View More Create Post

Up Next

Video Shorts

Featured Story

Podcast Episode 685: Patching Drywall, Adding Air Barriers, and Rotted Walls

Listeners write in about running a profitable contracting business and ask questions about patching drywall, adding air barriers, and fixing a patio poured against the house.

Featured Video

Micro-Adjust Deck-Baluster Spacing for an Eye-Deceiving Layout

No math, no measuring—just a simple jig made from an elastic band is all you need to lay out a good-looking deck railing.

Related Stories

  • A Summer Retreat Preserved in the Catskill Mountains
  • Fine Homebuilding Issue #332 Online Highlights
  • The Trump Administration Wants to Eliminate the Energy Star Program
  • Podcast Episode 685: Patching Drywall, Adding Air Barriers, and Rotted Walls

Highlights

Fine Homebuilding All Access
Fine Homebuilding Podcast
Tool Tech
Plus, get an extra 20% off with code GIFT20

"I have learned so much thanks to the searchable articles on the FHB website. I can confidently say that I expect to be a life-long subscriber." - M.K.

Get home building tips, offers, and expert advice in your inbox

Signing you up...

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
See all newsletters
See all newsletters

Fine Homebuilding Magazine

  • Issue 331 - June 2025
    • A More Resilient Roof
    • Tool Test: You Need a Drywall Sander
    • Ducted vs. Ductless Heat Pumps
  • Issue 330 - April/May 2025
    • Deck Details for Durability
    • FAQs on HPWHs
    • 10 Tips for a Long-Lasting Paint Job
  • Issue 329 - Feb/Mar 2025
    • Smart Foundation for a Small Addition
    • A Kominka Comes West
    • Making Small Kitchens Work
  • Issue 328 - Dec/Jan 2024
    • How a Pro Replaces Columns
    • Passive House 3.0
    • Tool Test: Compact Line Lasers
  • Issue 327 - November 2024
    • Repairing Damaged Walls and Ceilings
    • Plumbing Protection
    • Talking Shop

Fine Home Building

Newsletter Sign-up

  • Fine Homebuilding

    Home building tips, offers, and expert advice in your inbox.

  • Green Building Advisor

    Building science and energy efficiency advice, plus special offers, in your inbox.

  • Old House Journal

    Repair, renovation, and restoration tips, plus special offers, in your inbox.

Signing you up...

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
See all newsletters

Follow

  • Fine Homebuilding

    Dig into cutting-edge approaches and decades of proven solutions with total access to our experts and tradespeople.

    Start Free Trial Now
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • X
    • LinkedIn
  • GBA Prime

    Get instant access to the latest developments in green building, research, and reports from the field.

    Start Free Trial Now
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
  • Old House Journal

    Learn how to restore, repair, update, and decorate your home.

    Subscribe Now
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • X
  • Fine Homebuilding

    Dig into cutting-edge approaches and decades of proven solutions with total access to our experts and tradespeople.

    Start Free Trial Now
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • X
    • LinkedIn
  • GBA Prime

    Get instant access to the latest developments in green building, research, and reports from the field.

    Start Free Trial Now
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
  • Old House Journal

    Learn how to restore, repair, update, and decorate your home.

    Subscribe Now
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • X

Membership & Magazine

  • Online Archive
  • Start Free Trial
  • Magazine Subscription
  • Magazine Renewal
  • Gift a Subscription
  • Customer Support
  • Privacy Preferences
  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Terms of Use
  • Site Map
  • Do not sell or share my information
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • California Privacy Rights

© 2025 Active Interest Media. All rights reserved.

Fine Homebuilding receives a commission for items purchased through links on this site, including Amazon Associates and other affiliate advertising programs.

X
X
This is a dialog window which overlays the main content of the page. The modal window is a 'site map' of the most critical areas of the site. Pressing the Escape (ESC) button will close the modal and bring you back to where you were on the page.

Main Menu

  • How-To
  • Design
  • Tools & Materials
  • Video
  • Blogs
  • Forum
  • Project Guides
  • Reader Projects
  • Magazine
  • Members
  • FHB House

Podcasts

  • FHB Podcast
  • ProTalk

Webinars

  • Upcoming and On-Demand

Podcasts

  • FHB Podcast
  • ProTalk

Webinars

  • Upcoming and On-Demand

Popular Topics

  • Kitchens
  • Business
  • Bedrooms
  • Roofs
  • Architecture and Design
  • Green Building
  • Decks
  • Framing
  • Safety
  • Remodeling
  • Bathrooms
  • Windows
  • Tilework
  • Ceilings
  • HVAC

Magazine

  • Current Issue
  • Past Issues
  • Magazine Index
  • Subscribe
  • Online Archive
  • Author Guidelines

All Access

  • Member Home
  • Start Free Trial
  • Gift Membership

Online Learning

  • Courses
  • Project Guides
  • Reader Projects
  • Podcast

More

  • FHB Ambassadors
  • FHB House
  • Customer Support

Account

  • Log In
  • Join

Newsletter

Get home building tips, offers, and expert advice in your inbox

Signing you up...

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
See all newsletters
See all newsletters

Follow

  • X
  • YouTube
  • instagram
  • facebook
  • pinterest
  • Tiktok

Join All Access

Become a member and get instant access to thousands of videos, how-tos, tool reviews, and design features.

Start Your Free Trial

Subscribe

FHB Magazine

Start your subscription today and save up to 70%

Subscribe

We hope you’ve enjoyed your free articles. To keep reading, become a member today.

Get complete site access to expert advice, how-to videos, Code Check, and more, plus the print magazine.

Start your FREE trial

Already a member? Log in