Author: Flooring Restoration Specialist | Last Updated: 2026-02-26
‘Checking’ involves small cracks opening along the grain of hardwood floorboards. It is caused by Over-Drying—removing moisture from the surface of the wood faster than it can migrate from the core. This stress fractures the face. To prevent checking during restoration, we must use controlled humidity reduction (not max power) and ‘acclimatization’ schedules to lower the moisture content gradually.
When hardwood is saturated, the cells expand. The restoration process aims to return the wood to its Equilibrium Moisture Content (EMC). However, if the vapor pressure differential between the air and the wood surface is too high, the surface cells collapse while the core remains swollen. This imbalance creates a physical tension that literally pulls the wood fibers apart.
‘You can’t microwave a steak, and you can’t microwave a floor. If you pull the water out too fast, the wood snaps. Slow and steady saves the grain.’
It is vital to distinguish between mechanical damage (scratches) and structural failures (checking). Checking presents as fine, vertical splits that follow the natural grain of the timber. Unlike cupping, which is a moisture excess issue, checking is a symptom of aggressive dehumidification.
| Drying Speed | Risk | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Too Slow | Cupping/Mold | Warped Floor |
| Too Fast | Checking/Splitting | Ruined Finish |
| Controlled | Stabilization | Saved Floor |
Restoration professionals must manage the “Drying Curve.” This involves staging the dehumidification process to ensure that the moisture deep within the wood planks has time to move to the surface (capillary action and diffusion) before the surface becomes brittle. This cautionary approach is the hallmark of expert flooring restoration.
This is called ‘checking.’ It happens when the floor is dried too aggressively, causing the surface to shrink faster than the core.
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