• old floor asmr power walk
    10 replies, posted
[video=youtube;H60JDpIYWQs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H60JDpIYWQs[/video]
My ass was clenched because I thought this was going to be a jump scare.
jesus christ is he walking on corn flakes
I think the parquet is just poorly done. Like, that creaks more than the floors in our house, and those are of large wooden planks from around 1930.
what kind of apartment has a fireplace in it
[QUOTE=cdr248;47142399]what kind of apartment has a fireplace in it[/QUOTE] A fancy one
[QUOTE=kazookie;47142393]I think the parquet is just poorly done. Like, that creaks more than the floors in our house, and those are of large wooden planks from around 1930.[/QUOTE] This statement isn't entirely true. The creaking is due to the geometry of the parquet in the video. When you place your foot on the parquet and apply pressure it sinks down, which in turn causes the creaking due the the planks clashing together. As such, when the person is walking around, he will shift pressure and step into different positions on the parquet, and depending on the added pressure, position of feet in between planks etc. different frequencies of creaking gets produced, which is what you hear in the video. As a practical example, when you place your heel in between two planks on the parquet with this geometry, it will produce a loud creak due to the two planks clashing together.
fuck that woodfloor layout, i would go nuts
[QUOTE=nigrakiller;47146305]This statement isn't entirely true. The creaking is due to the geometry of the parquet in the video. When you place your foot on the parquet and apply pressure it sinks down, which in turn causes the creaking due the the planks clashing together. As such, when the person is walking around, he will shift pressure and step into different positions on the parquet, and depending on the added pressure, position of feet in between planks etc. different frequencies of creaking gets produced, which is what you hear in the video. As a practical example, when you place your heel in between two planks on the parquet with this geometry, it will produce a loud creak due to the two planks clashing together.[/QUOTE] Yeah, but still, if the parquet was done neatly it shouldn't creak that much. It looks like pretty new parquet too. The "creakyness" of the parquet would have been much smaller if it was done properly, depending on what's under the parquet and probably the thickness/sturdiness of the parquet itself. I just don't think "old floor" is what's causing it. When even ~70 year old parquet is less creaky, I doubt this parquet creaks because of age. Then again, it really depends on the parquet. This particular parquet was probably laid to last just some amount of time, with normal use, while the parquet in our house was laid in a ballroom.
My feet are tingling
[QUOTE=booster;47143020]A fancy one[/QUOTE] It's not that uncommon in older apartments, even if they're not fancy.
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