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Brand new home and sharp tack strips

38K views 25 replies 11 participants last post by  rusty baker  
#1 ·
Hello! I'm new here. We did a " walk-through" on our brand new house yesterday and we re scheduled to settle next Wednesday. We have carpet in the family room and hardwood in the kitchen. We stepped on painful tack strips where the carpet and hardwood meet. We also felt some on the stairs and by the walk-out basement door. Our Realtor and the builder's Rep keep saying its normal-and that he's just going to hammer the sharp strips down...Is that right?

Im very bothered by this-because I'm afraid hammering the strips down could not fix the real issue and could wear our carpet. I asked the builder if they can install a wood transition where carpet and hardwood meet and they refuse to do it, saying--its installed properly and that they re just hammering it down...

If they hammer them down, is it guaranteed that the strips wont poke through the carpet in the future?
Anybody has any idea on how to deal with this?
 
#4 ·
Really? this is the reply l I got from the builder's rep when I asked for the transition :

"We only use metal transition strips between vinyl and carpet. And only wood transitions between hardwood and ceramic. The transitions between carpet and tile is done correctly in your home with a ceramic threshold. The carpet and hardwood transitions are also done correctly with the carpet being tack stripped down along the finished hardwood edges.
There may be an after market solution that you may be able to install after movein. Our flooring installers currently do not provide any other option. I will go through your home as promised and flatten any Sharp points in all those locations you have mentioned."

I believe that the tack strips shouldn't be hurting our feet if its properly installed. Our Inspector gave the report later today and recommends wood transition-- Is there something they can do about it so we dont step on those tack strips anymore?
 
#6 ·
It will cover them up for sure but the carpet would need to be redone to install them.
Most people do not want a trip hazzard on the floor.
Just rolling over them or tapping then over will also work and do no harm to the carpet.
 
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#8 · (Edited)
#9 ·
It violates carpet installation standards to have tack strip across any opening. If you pound them down, they will not hold the stretch properly. Do not accept this.
CRI 105
Residential carpet installation standards

"Installation of tackstrip across door openings and/or sills should be avoided."
 
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#10 ·
Rusty Baker: Thank you so much. What would be the best solution for this? Does the standard apply to transition between carpet and wood? When I asked them what they're going to do, this is their reply:

"We only use metal transition strips between vinyl and carpet. And only wood transitions between hardwood and ceramic. The transitions between carpet and tile is done correctly in your home with a ceramic threshold. The carpet and hardwood transitions are also done correctly with the carpet being tack stripped down along the finished hardwood edges.
There may be an after market solution that you may be able to install after movein. Our flooring installers currently do not provide any other option. I will go through your home as promised and flatten any Sharp points in all those locations you have mentioned."
 
#11 ·
The carpet and hardwood transitions are also done correctly with the carpet being tack stripped down along the finished hardwood edges.
CRI Carpet Installation Standard 2011
Section 6.2
excerpted

To prevent possible injury to building occupants, it
is required that the pins on tack strip not protrude through the carpet being
installed.

Avoid installing tack strip across door openings and/or sills.​

Section 6.7

Transition Molding – Where carpet meets other floor coverings create a smooth transition and adequately protect edges with a transition molding that meets all carpet manufacturer and ADA requirements.​

It sounds like the builder doesn't employ the best installers. This standard is only 36 pages (total) and is available free online.

The builder's claim that the carpet installation is "done correctly" has no factual basis, since the installation is deficient per industry standards.
 
#12 · (Edited)
You can hammer down the individual tack points. Correctly the tack ends will bend over but occasionally the wood strip will split and a tack supposedly bent over tilts back up.

You can take up the carpet at the threshold, remove the tack strip, iron on a cloth carpet splicing/joining strip on the underside for strength, and tack the carpet edge back in place (tacks pointed down as if you were upholstering the carpet to the subfloor; a bear to tear up years later if needed.) You will need almost as many tacks as there were points in the original tack strip.

You could take up the carpet at the threshold, remove the tack strip, and use a metal threshold carpet edging strip that uses a row of hanging chad instead of tacks to hold the carpet on.
 
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#15 ·
Thank you all so much for your useful responses. I personally contacted the Carpet and Rug Institute and it is indeed a violation of the installation standards
that the pins on the tack strips are poking through the carpet. I forwarded the builder the link of CRI 105 standards and am waiting for him to get back to him. I'm very curious what he's going to say next. Hammering the tack strips down would wear the carpet and would make it difficult for the stretch to hold.
 
#16 · (Edited)
Don't be surprised if the reply is " that's normal and the way we do all of them ".

Here is hoping it is better than that because that phrase is about worn out and builders need to come up with a new one.

If it were me I'd probably be looking for another house built by a different builder because that short cut may be minor compared to others that may have been taken.
 
#19 ·
Thank you so much everyone. I brought the CRI 105 installation standards up and the builder finally admitted it--so they're going to have the carpet re-installed with shorter pins on the tack strips.

But I also would like to see what you guys think about this, the inspector noticed that there's honeycombing or air pockets visible on the foundation walls. The builder, as usual said that this is something normal. I don't trust anything they say anymore, do you think this is something normal or should they fix it?
 
#20 ·
Thank you so much everyone. I brought the CRI 105 installation standards up and the builder finally admitted it--so they're going to have the carpet re-installed with shorter pins on the tack strips.

View attachment 61306
They still need to use transitions in the doorways.
 
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#21 ·
Sounds like a typical New Construction deal... Builders will use the lowest grade carpet which is thin and the tack strip spikes pop through.
This happened at my house when I bought and it was my fault for overlooking the carpet grade. We had so many selections to make that the Ole Lady was more concerned with colors but now I'm concerned that I have a house full of el-cheapo carpet to replace :rolleyes:

Todd
www.aloneeagle.com
 
#24 ·
I'm not a concrete guy, either, but voids like that are caused by not vibrating the concrete sufficiently during a pour, aren't they? I don't think there's a fix for that, since the air pockets you see are just the ones you see. No telling if the walls aren't chock full of air pockets.

I was just wondering what you're going to replace your carpet with in ten years.