Noisy stairs-which Glue and Screws
Noisy stairs-which Glue and Screws
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xyz123

Original Poster:

1,097 posts

150 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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Hi, we have some noisy stairs in the house and am looking to fix it while the carpets are being replaced next week.


Saw couple of videos on YT which recommends to use watered down glue and screws.

This maybe silly but will any screw and wood glue work (one video mentioned e, landing polyurethane glue) or should I get some specific screws /glue?

Thanks

JoshSm

2,813 posts

58 months

Monday 1st September 2025
quotequote all
Depends on the construction? Modern machine made or vintage with wedges & stuff.

An expanding PU glue (like flooring glue) will take care of any gaps and movement *if* you can get it to where it needs to go.


xyz123

Original Poster:

1,097 posts

150 months

Monday 1st September 2025
quotequote all
Thanks. Staircase is abt 50 years old so definitely not fully Machine made.

Mazinbrum

1,155 posts

199 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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Can you get underneath them? Mine’s like Blackpool pier (sans water) under mine. Lots of props made them solid.

paulrockliffe

16,301 posts

248 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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JoshSm said:
Depends on the construction? Modern machine made or vintage with wedges & stuff.

An expanding PU glue (like flooring glue) will take care of any gaps and movement *if* you can get it to where it needs to go.
Definitely want this, maybe fill a syringe so it can be injected into the gaps. If you can't get to the gaps you could drill in from the tread, inject the glue, then screw through the hole to pull it tight and squeeze the glue into the spaces, where it'll expand and tighten everything up nicely.

awd2000

42 posts

173 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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We’ve just finished dealing with a whole lot of noisy flooring using these Optimaxx flooring screws - self-drilling with a T20 head, easy to use and no squeaks so far…can definitely recommend.

https://www.screwfix.com/p/optimaxx-tx-countersunk-flooring-screws-4mm-x-50mm-500-pack/226ty

skilly1

2,825 posts

216 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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How do you know you’re not going through a water pipe or electric cable?

Little Lofty

3,765 posts

172 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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JoshSm

2,813 posts

58 months

Monday 1st September 2025
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The gel stuff is a bit too thick and fast setting to be easy to get in where it needs to. I've used it but wouldn't try it on stair treads as it'd be a pain to get in anywhere. Also at least some of these gels dry flexible not rigid & are a pain to tidy the excess.

Egger D4 floor adhesive is great stuff though, thin enough to flow or inject with a large bore needle, fast setting but not too fast, sets rigid, decent expansion ratio, easy to tidy. I've used it for a few things.

Unless the boards were flapping about instead of just creaking I'd have thought glue should be plenty. You could make a hole for glue in the tread if you want just don't screw it.

Adding some moisture first aids bonding & expansion.

dhutch

17,442 posts

218 months

Tuesday 2nd September 2025
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awd2000 said:
We’ve just finished dealing with a whole lot of noisy flooring using these Optimaxx flooring screws
Pros and cons to all, but for floorboards and a host of other things, my go to following a recommendation is 'spectra' from Toolstation.

For a screw that pulls things down, rather than buries its head while leaving a gap under the board as so many do.

Cow Corner

680 posts

51 months

Tuesday 2nd September 2025
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skilly1 said:
How do you know you’re not going through a water pipe or electric cable?
When I redid my creaky upstairs landing at our old place, none of the services where marked but due to the location of the heating and hot water tank, I knew they were there somewhere, so I painstakingly removed the existing nails and put the screws in the same holes, which was a ballache, but avoided an unwanted water feature in the room below.

JoshSm

2,813 posts

58 months

Tuesday 2nd September 2025
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Cow Corner said:
I painstakingly removed the existing nails and put the screws in the same holes
In my bitter experience that doesn't necessarily mean either missing the services or even hitting the joists when you put something back in the same hole.

The location of the nails usually seems to be 'best guess' not necessarily where they should be.

Plus flooring screws can be longer than the nails which causes its own issues.