Welcome to Carver Yachts Owners Forum
We are a boating forum for owners of Carver Yachts to enthusiastically discuss all aspects of Carver Boat ownership. Whether you are looking for your first Carver or currently own one, you are sure to feel at home on CarverYachtOwners.com
You are currently viewing our board as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to searching the forum topics, post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!
Click Flooring
-
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 6021
- Joined: July 10th, 2015, 9:58 pm
- Vessel Info: 1989 Carver 3807 Aft Cabin
- Location: Ontario, Canada
- Has thanked: 457 times
- Been thanked: 1687 times
Click Flooring
Of the samples and instructions I've seen, it seems none of the household choices are designed to be exterior installs. They seem to all be targeted to interior installations where temperatures are steady year round but the cost is in my budget. They all want about a 1/4 inch gap around the perimeter of the space, and it seems the ones I've looked at are all meant to float rather than be glued down and my preference is to glue them.
I've seen some pretty bad click flooring installations on boats so I can't use them to base a decision on, and the rest are products used by OEMs suited for the marine environment but come at a premium cost which I don't really want to get into.
Has anybody installed one of these products going against the recommended instructions?....
- Have you glued the product down, and what adhesive did you use? Has it lasted?
- Did you install flush up to walls and cabinets without it buckling?
- Has it survived seasonal temps with no ill effects years after the installation, or have large gaps developed around some planks?
- Would you do anything different?
- Phrancus
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 393
- Joined: October 1st, 2020, 10:03 am
- Vessel Info: Sold: Carver 26 Command Bridge / 280 sedan 1992.
- Location: Netherlands, Europe
- Has thanked: 16 times
- Been thanked: 133 times
- Contact:
Re: Click Flooring
Many variations, waterproof, moist proof but even the simplest can handle a household spill for enough time to mop it up. Its durability comes from its lack of wood, it's all plastic with a print and some wax on top. Works fine.
I put that in our holiday 'house' and that get's humid, freezes up in winter and gets dry and hot in summer. No problems with cracks, folds and such. I did not glue it in place as it needs to expand and contract a bit. If I remember correctly it does so in its length so the more you put in line, the more space it will need.
To cover up the gap (few millimeters) I put a small 3 centimeters high plank against the wall and that is fixed to that wall, free from the floor so it can move with seeing the gap. I used the side most in sight to start, leaving the gap on the other side. The whole floor is floating and keeps itself in place. When it starts to float on water you have bigger problems on board.
the quality of withstanding moist comes from the tight groove fit. This is no problem in most areas, only when it gets too tight to insert it in the right angle you might need to get creative. Small parts can be glued together, it doesn't move that much anyway.
Dont think that you can dissasemble and reassemble, that will damage the groove and it will chip easily later on.
Whatever you do, don't do what the previous owner of ours did: screw wood to the floor in such a pattern that you can't open anything any more without destroying the floor.....

- KyleR
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 293
- Joined: July 8th, 2022, 10:50 am
- Vessel Info: MV Verity
2002 Carver 396
Twin Cummins 6BTA 370HP - Location: On the move!
- Has thanked: 119 times
- Been thanked: 119 times
Re: Click Flooring
With that said, I recently came across the following product that I have never used - but am quite fascinated by. We are planning to rip out our carpet when all of the other work we want to do is complete and I have been looking at this stuff.
Supposedly it does not experience the expansion/contraction like normal laminate and vinyl flooring, doesn't require glue and doesn't even click together. It's just held in place by its own weight and friction.
If anyone has used it - please weigh in as it looks pretty interesting!
https://www.expressflooring.com/blog/articles/Loose-Lay-Vinyl-Plank-Flooring-Pros-and-Cons-Updated
(FYI - I am not affiliated with this company or any flooring company. I work in the commercial nuclear industry.)

2002 Carver 396
Twin Cummins 6BTA 370HP
-
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 6021
- Joined: July 10th, 2015, 9:58 pm
- Vessel Info: 1989 Carver 3807 Aft Cabin
- Location: Ontario, Canada
- Has thanked: 457 times
- Been thanked: 1687 times
Re: Click Flooring
The idea behind the solid vinyl is more about handling leaks than anything. A perfect example is we got to our boat yesterday and all I wanted to do was have a beer. Five minutes later, the wife yells out from the forward head and says the rug is all wet. A fitting under the sink had started leaking and found it's way under the teak parquet flooring and squeezed through the seams when you walked on it. I have Qest plumbing and am slowly retrofitting sections but I expect leaks to pop up now and again. I scrambled to fix the leak which required retrofitting the plumbing there to the new stuff and half an hour later, bruised and scraped got back to my beer but I can't imagine the work I'd be in for if it was a wood based engineered product. I'm just not going to take that kind of chance so I'm only considering vinyl/plastic and was wondering how it has worked for others when glued down.
- KyleR
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 293
- Joined: July 8th, 2022, 10:50 am
- Vessel Info: MV Verity
2002 Carver 396
Twin Cummins 6BTA 370HP - Location: On the move!
- Has thanked: 119 times
- Been thanked: 119 times
Re: Click Flooring

The reason I posted about that "Loose Lay" flooring was since it is not prone to shrink/swell, I don't see why gluing it down would be an issue. That was my thought as we also have three pretty sizable hatches to deal with.
On a separate note, what we are trying to figure out/decide is whether to put some sort of "trim" around the edges of the hatches or just leave a thin gap. The gap kinda looks un-finished to me but doesn't break-up the overall visuals of the floor, whereas having trim around each hatch looks more polished but draws attention to each panel (see pics below as examples).

2002 Carver 396
Twin Cummins 6BTA 370HP
- bud37
- Admiral
- Posts: 4918
- Joined: April 23rd, 2015, 10:22 pm
- Has thanked: 584 times
- Been thanked: 1226 times
Re: Click Flooring
I still like carpet in a boat ( sound etc ), but that said I don't think this particular stuff would do well over a large area with the seasonal movement due to temp....remember the floor underneath will expand and contract at a different rate than the material applied if they are different.
Good luck man and keep the wife happy here.....


- KyleR
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 293
- Joined: July 8th, 2022, 10:50 am
- Vessel Info: MV Verity
2002 Carver 396
Twin Cummins 6BTA 370HP - Location: On the move!
- Has thanked: 119 times
- Been thanked: 119 times
Re: Click Flooring
Good luck man and keep the wife happy here.....
Definitely the most important part!

2002 Carver 396
Twin Cummins 6BTA 370HP
-
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 6021
- Joined: July 10th, 2015, 9:58 pm
- Vessel Info: 1989 Carver 3807 Aft Cabin
- Location: Ontario, Canada
- Has thanked: 457 times
- Been thanked: 1687 times
Re: Click Flooring
I'm just at an impasse on how to proceed considering they don't want you to glue this stuff down and wonder if anyone has experience with long term results.
I'll have to ponder it over a few more beers

- Delorean6855
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 24
- Joined: November 22nd, 2020, 10:54 am
- Vessel Info: 2004 Mariner Three Sixty, Crusader 6.0s w/225 hours, Koehler 7_3e genset
- Been thanked: 4 times
Re: Click Flooring
- Phrancus
- CYO Supporter
- Posts: 393
- Joined: October 1st, 2020, 10:03 am
- Vessel Info: Sold: Carver 26 Command Bridge / 280 sedan 1992.
- Location: Netherlands, Europe
- Has thanked: 16 times
- Been thanked: 133 times
- Contact:
Re: Click Flooring
Carpet does not have to be there forever though. I would prefer carpet too for sound and cosyness. Many variations, does not have to cost very much, easier to put in. As a boat has relative small areas and has sides, you don't need to glue (much) to keep it nice in place but still have the possibility to rip it out for cleaning our replacement. (Tip: make templates and keep them)
Design them in such a way that you can roll and tuck them off the hatches, not nice if you need to move two pieces just because the edges run over the hatch in stead of a few inches to the side.
I would spend my time, creativity and some money on the hard wearing areas: at the entrances, places where you always put your foot when entering the boat also with rain and so. Same in the kitchen area. nice wood grain, good strip between the two flooring types. Looks good and also tells the visitor: shoes/dirt up to here, not beyond this strip.
As for the hatches: I'm still looking for large hinges (found them) that can also be detached (not found them) so i can open a hatch for a quick check but also lift them off their hinges for more access. Simple for a hanging door but not for a flush hatch with flush hinges it seems. My engine hatches are in the cockpit outside, stupid sized, heavy, no hinges, no place to store when open... Next boat will have that sorted out better. One learns over time... (and boats)
I understand the spills argument but on the other hand: a spill on a plastic floor also requires a very good seal around it to prevent it from getting under and wreak havoc there. Better then to have manageable size carpet that you can pull out and dry outside. You won't have spills for many years I suppose, at some point youll have all the old stuff replaced...
Return to “General Repairs & Maintenance”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 48 guests