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Molding solution for a staircase guard rail

camaross

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Oct 15, 2009
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Maryland
I'm replacing the carpet of my bedrooms with Mohawk luxury vinyl planks. Would anyone please help me with a question?

Is quarter round molding my best solution for my stairs guard rail? Please see a picture below. I have a feeling that a quarter round molding next to the base of my guard rail will not look superb.

Flooring.jpeg
 
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larry4406

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Jan 27, 2006
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Northern Virginia
On new construction houses, we hold the rails up based on the thickness of the flooring allowance so the flooring tucks under.

Can you raise your railing up to do this?

Pop off those mushroom caps on the rail base plate to get access to the screws. Back out the screws. That being a straight rail you probably have a rosette at one end where it anchors to a wall; there is likely mushroom caps there concealing screws. The harder part will be where the stair rail connects.
 
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camaross

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Can't you just run it tight to the rail board.
Screenshot_20220806-092545_Gallery.jpg
Screenshot_20220806-092604_Gallery.jpgScreenshot_20220806-092501_Gallery.jpg


Many thanks! The instruction of my luxury vinyl plank says I need to leave at least 3/8 inch of expansion gap. Maybe people can do that with real wood floors?
 

jar944

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Northern VA
Many thanks! The instruction of my luxury vinyl plank says I need to leave at least 3/8 inch of expansion gap. Maybe people can do that with real wood floors?
Ah. Yeah you can run real wood tight on ends (length wise) wasn't thinking about vinyl expansion. Can you undercut/rabbet the rail board?
 
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strutaeng

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Dec 12, 2011
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Dallas, TX
I wouldn't worry about that expansion gap requirement here; that's for like a large room 30'-40' to allow for expansion and contraction. This is, what, the width of the stair?

Now then, it appears to me that the oak stained piece is thicker than the planks? Is there a chamfer, or is that just a flash/perspective illusion?

If you could remove that oak piece an machine rabbet, that would look best. Maybe consider just butting the planks and use that silicone colored caulk, or leave a small gap, again with the silicone.
 

Uncle murph

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Jan 28, 2021
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Harford county
I wouldn't worry about that expansion gap requirement here; that's for like a large room 30'-40' to allow for expansion and contraction. This is, what, the width of the stair?

Now then, it appears to me that the oak stained piece is thicker than the planks? Is there a chamfer, or is that just a flash/perspective illusion?

If you could remove that oak piece an machine rabbet, that would look best. Maybe consider just butting the planks and use that silicone colored caulk, or leave a small gap, again with the silicone.
This.**** it tight and leave a gap at the other end,the gap listed in the instructions is worse case in large,unconditioned space room.
 

falakikram

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Aug 11, 2022
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I wouldn't worry about that expansion gap requirement here; that's for like a large room 30'-40' to allow for expansion and contraction. This is, what, the width of the stair?

Falak ikram
 

CSRPenFab

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Oct 27, 2015
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Meridian Idaho
I'd vote for undercutting the railing base to allow your floor planks to slide cleanly underneath. See if your local tool rental place rents an "undercut" saw. Make a few passes and break out the cut with a chisel. You could use a multi-tool, but it'd be a beeotch to get a straight cut all along that base.

Screenshot 2022-08-11 082928.jpg
 

rlitman

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Oct 18, 2010
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Location
Long Island
I'd vote for undercutting the railing base to allow your floor planks to slide cleanly underneath. See if your local tool rental place rents an "undercut" saw. Make a few passes and break out the cut with a chisel. You could use a multi-tool, but it'd be a beeotch to get a straight cut all along that base.
That's an option. I'd suggest calling the manufacturer. My Coretec LVP for example has an installation option that includes glue-down instead of fully floating. In such a floor, the expansion space isn't nearly as important.

As was pointed out above, the required expansion space depends on the size of the room (width of the floor), and it should be safe to proportion it down when the floor is covering smaller areas.

Knowing this, if it were my floor, I'd install it tight and not undercut.
 
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