Essential Tools for Commercial Floor Fitting
Commercial floor fitting projects present equipment challenges that residential work does not. Larger areas, harder-working conditions, tighter programmes and more demanding specifications all require tools that are suited to sustained professional use rather than occasional domestic application. This guide covers the essential equipment for commercial floor fitting, from subfloor preparation through to installation and finishing.
Subfloor Preparation Equipment
Commercial sites often have subfloors that require significant preparation before any floor covering is installed. A floor grinder with diamond discs is essential for grinding down high spots and ridges in concrete screed. A scarifier or shot blaster may be needed for removing old adhesive residues, paint or surface contamination from concrete subfloors. Both pieces of equipment are typically hired for specific jobs rather than owned.
For applying levelling compounds over large areas, a forced-action mixer (a drill-mounted paddle mixer is insufficient for commercial quantities) and multiple 25-litre mixing buckets are needed. A pump-fed application system speeds up levelling compound application on areas over 100 square metres and ensures consistent mix and application thickness.
Power Tools for Installation
A heavy-duty compound mitre saw with a fine crosscut blade handles the plank and board cutting in commercial LVT and engineered wood projects. For large areas, two saws at opposite ends of the floor area saves walking time significantly. A table saw or track saw for ripping long boards is often more practical than a jigsaw for commercial work.
A professional-grade pneumatic stapler or floor nailer is needed for nail-down engineered wood on timber subfloors. Hiring professional-grade equipment from a tool hire specialist rather than using a DIY-grade tool produces faster, more consistent results. A professional-grade notched trowel set with trowels for different adhesive types and application rates is essential; the correct notch size is calibrated to the specific adhesive and substrate combination.
Moisture Testing
A calibrated moisture meter is non-negotiable before any commercial flooring installation. Both pin-type and surface measurement meters have their uses: pin-type meters measure at depth, while surface measurement meters are faster for surveying large areas. For concrete subfloors, a hygrometer slab test (leaving humidity measuring pods embedded in the concrete for 72 hours) is the most accurate method and is often required for warranty compliance.
Documenting moisture readings before installation is important for commercial projects. If flooring problems develop later, documented pre-installation moisture readings establish whether the subfloor was within specification at the time of fitting and protect against liability disputes.
Floor Rollers and Seam Tooling
A 68kg or 100kg floor roller is needed for glue-down LVT installation to ensure full contact between the LVT and the adhesive bed after laying. A seam roller and awl are used for pressing seams firmly and managing air bubbles at sheet edges. These are basic pieces of equipment but are essential for producing the flat, well-bonded result required by commercial specifications.
- Floor grinder with diamond discs: for high spots and old adhesive removal
- Forced-action mixer: for commercial-quantity levelling compound application
- Compound mitre saw and table saw: essential cutting tools
- Calibrated moisture meter and hygrometer slab tests: pre-installation documentation
- Floor roller (68-100kg): for glue-down LVT installation
- Notched trowel set: correct sizes for each adhesive type
Commercial floor fitting is distinct from residential work primarily in scale and in the documentation requirements that accompany commercial contracts. Having the right tools and using them correctly produces the quality of result that commercial clients expect and that stands up to the scrutiny that commercial warranties require.