At Home In The Woods

   / At Home In The Woods #1,761  
You could you staple screening material on the top floor joists before you put your flooring down. This would keep the bugs out and allow the spacing that you need.
Rick

Rick, that's not a bad idea.

Has anyone out there built a screened porch with the flooring boards spaced 3/16" or more apart? Are biting insects become a problem?

Obed

My only concern with putting screen between the floor joists and decking would be dirt that gets between the cracks. Normally this dirt would just fall through, but the screen will allow it to accumulate and fill the crack. Might be a pain for cleaning?
 
   / At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#1,762  
My only concern with putting screen between the floor joists and decking would be dirt that gets between the cracks. Normally this dirt would just fall through, but the screen will allow it to accumulate and fill the crack. Might be a pain for cleaning?
That's the objection that my wife is raising. As an alternative, I could attach the screen material to the underside of the floor joists. Dirt that falls between the boards would not be trapped between the boards; that dirt would land on the screen material below the floor joists.

But do I need to go to that kind of trouble? I hate to spend the extra money and effort unless it is needed.

Obed
 
   / At Home In The Woods #1,763  
The screen on top of the joists is pretty much the standard method of dealing with this. Use fiberglass screen, not alum. Much easier to handle and not a problem in this low abuse environment. Pull it tight as you staple. Compressed air can help blow stuff out, but yes, it can accumulate. The other thing to think about here is that, since this is a screened porch, you will get a lot less debris on the deck boards that could fall through and get stuck there. Most of the coarse stuff like leaves, tree seeds, cottonwood/dandelion fuzz, etc won't get to the deck boards as you have a perimeter screen on the enclosure. So it comes down to dust and whatever bits of food and stuff people drop. You may have one really bad cleaning session at the end of construction where you need a day , a compressor/blowgun and a vacuum, but after that it gets a lot easier.

If you want to go underneath the joists, screen will look really bad down the road. As crud builds up there, it will look like a series of crud hammocks that you made. A better choice might be to make the underside solid. Slope it well to one end for drainage with tapered shims or something, and then tack up plywood to the bottom of the joists. You can use the space for running wires/lighting for below the porch too. Make sure the drainage openings are screened somehow too. Probably with a frame you can remove from the outside for cleaning. And if you are really thinking ahead, you can create access at the top of the slope so you can get up in there with a hose to clear out crud down the road....

Neither method is painless. The screen makes it much harder to lay the deck boards on an elevated deck as you can't poke your body up through the joists from below to work on decking since the screen is in place, so you have to step carefully on top with staging etc. The below joist method is much more expensive, and a lot more total effort.


Edit: One more point - you are building this in the high heat of summer. You probably will not see much more expansion than this, so perhaps 3/16" is too much given the current conditions? It will only shrink from here, unless you are in a real cool spell when it is installed. If so, then the screen on top is looking even more attractive. IMHO
 
   / At Home In The Woods #1,764  
You could you staple screening material on the top floor joists before you put your flooring down. This would keep the bugs out and allow the spacing that you need.
Rick

Wouldn't that just catch all the dirt and debris, i.e., pine needles, leaves, etc.? But then, cleaning it out would be better than putting uo with the 'skeeters.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #1,765  
Screened Porch Flooring Question
The composite flooring manufacturer instructions indicate to leave 3/16" to 1/4" gaps between the boards to allow for expansion. Will mosquitoes come through these gaps? If so, it seems that screeing in the the porch would be useless. Please help.

Thanks,
Obed

I have built a few of these and bugs weren't a problem.
I don't know how bad your bugs are but I think the trick was to have no grass or any vegitation for that matter under the deck. We will put down fabric and cover with stone to keep under a deck or porch clean.

Also on high decks I have covered the bottoms with the cheapest vinyl soffit I could find. Just slope it a bit away from the house and it will actually keep it dry also
 
   / At Home In The Woods #1,767  
Just make sure you build it so you can repair it. Now with a kid I am sure that scrreen will be toast....
 
   / At Home In The Woods #1,768  
I rent homes a few times a year down the road from you at Lake Norris. All of them have had screened in porches and non have had screen on the bottom of the deck boards. I never remember bugs being a issue.

Another thing I have found is of the few homes I know of with removable screens on the porch non end up doing so. It seems like a great idea but just never gets done. They just leave them in place. Keeps birds, critters, bugs, and leaf debris off of the deck.

I think you will find you may remove them the first year then just end up leaving them in place as most do.

Chris
 
   / At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#1,769  
The triangle area above the beam at the end of the porch has been closed in with sheathing and vinyl siding like I described yesterday. Most of the soffits have been completed. One of the pictures shows the framing the vinyl installers added before attaching the soffits. The roof overhang is 2 feet. With the added framing for the soffits, each soffit can be nailed at each end and in the middle. Sagging should not be an issue. Also, no vinyl will be nailed into the brick. We believe vinyl will be completed tomorrow. Guttering will be installed tomorrow. Drywall installation is scheduled for next week.
 

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   / At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#1,770  
I rent homes a few times a year down the road from you at Lake Norris. All of them have had screened in porches and non have had screen on the bottom of the deck boards. I never remember bugs being a issue.

Chris
I think I may have the decking installed without screens under the floor boards and see if bugs become a problem. If bugs become a problem, we can add screening on the underside of the floor joists later.

Obed
 

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