Hey All,
I've started the process of tearing up my old stairs treads and replacing them with hardwood treads.
The stairs were covered in carpeting down the center 28" wide with 4" stained pine "accents" on each side. I've removed the carpeting, the side accent pieces, and the particle board risers.
Attached is a photo of the stairs in their current condition:
The basic structure of the treads are simply two 2x4's laying on their side, one in the front and one in the back with 1/2 inch plywood on top. You can see this best on the top tread in the photo from underneath. The net thickness of the treads is 2" (1.5" of 2x4 and 0.5" of plywood)
Don't be fooled by the shadows on the side, the stain marks show the hight of the decorative 4" endcaps. The majority of the tread hight was the top of the plywood plus whatever the thickness of the carpeting was (there was no padding). The stairs feel "right" walking up them now as shown, there is no odd step at the landing. So basically my intent is to maintain the current hight marked by the top of the plywood.
My plan is to install 1" thick solid hardwood treads. This leaves me with a 1" gap in thickness/height when I remove whats there as I plan to maintain the current tread high.
So what's the best thing to do? I'm guessing adding 1" thick shims the same width of the stringers, but I'd greatly appreciate the experience and input of folks who've come across this issue before.
My main concern is that adding 1" thick booster shims will create another seam/gap that may squeak, and possibly weaken the structure too much?
Comments and suggestions greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
-Kevin
I've started the process of tearing up my old stairs treads and replacing them with hardwood treads.
The stairs were covered in carpeting down the center 28" wide with 4" stained pine "accents" on each side. I've removed the carpeting, the side accent pieces, and the particle board risers.
Attached is a photo of the stairs in their current condition:
The basic structure of the treads are simply two 2x4's laying on their side, one in the front and one in the back with 1/2 inch plywood on top. You can see this best on the top tread in the photo from underneath. The net thickness of the treads is 2" (1.5" of 2x4 and 0.5" of plywood)
Don't be fooled by the shadows on the side, the stain marks show the hight of the decorative 4" endcaps. The majority of the tread hight was the top of the plywood plus whatever the thickness of the carpeting was (there was no padding). The stairs feel "right" walking up them now as shown, there is no odd step at the landing. So basically my intent is to maintain the current hight marked by the top of the plywood.
My plan is to install 1" thick solid hardwood treads. This leaves me with a 1" gap in thickness/height when I remove whats there as I plan to maintain the current tread high.
So what's the best thing to do? I'm guessing adding 1" thick shims the same width of the stringers, but I'd greatly appreciate the experience and input of folks who've come across this issue before.
My main concern is that adding 1" thick booster shims will create another seam/gap that may squeak, and possibly weaken the structure too much?
Comments and suggestions greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
-Kevin