L5wolvesf
Well-known member
So I had a leak behind the shower in our house. Got the leak fixed and need to repair the soaked particle board subfloor. Generally not a big deal except I can’t find floor joists. Since this is the only bathroom ripping up a huge chunk can only be done as long as I get it closed up quickly. I pulled out some linoleum (the paper-like backing didn’t come up) and used a stud finder to try to find a joist. My normally trusty Zircon stud finder found nada, battery is good and it will find wall studs. So Plan B, drilled a 2 inch hole off to the side and take a look with a flashlight and mirror. I found a joist that runs along the open side of the shower, about 16 inches from the hole – great. So I check 180 from there stick the inspection mirror in and then a grabber tool and find . . . nada. From what I know the joists should be either 16 or 24 inches on center.
FWIW, the house is a converted 1970s mobile. All that is left of the mobile is whatever is under the floors plus the bathroom and kitchen. The 16 or 24 inches on center should apply in this case from what I’ve read. Also, I had to do a floor repair in another part of the house about 10 years ago and I found the floor joists easily.
So I’m facing 32 or more inches on center floor joists?
The floor has never been noisy or soft. Is that even a thing?
Am I missing something?
A better tool to find the joists?
Thank you in advance
FWIW, the house is a converted 1970s mobile. All that is left of the mobile is whatever is under the floors plus the bathroom and kitchen. The 16 or 24 inches on center should apply in this case from what I’ve read. Also, I had to do a floor repair in another part of the house about 10 years ago and I found the floor joists easily.
So I’m facing 32 or more inches on center floor joists?
The floor has never been noisy or soft. Is that even a thing?
Am I missing something?
A better tool to find the joists? Thank you in advance
