office chair wheels for laminate floors

Truck & Tool Rental The Home Depot Logo DIY Projects & Ideas Flooring & Area Rugs Lighting & Ceiling FansFloor-Protecting Rubber Office Chair Caster Wheel (Set of 5) Get full swivel action and floor protection without the need for big plastic floor mats. These rubber casters are the office wheels of the future. Perfect set of 5 replacement caster wheels for office chairs with hard plastic wheels. Scratches, scuffs, stuck wheels and noisy squeaks will be a thing of the past with these rubber caster wheels on your chair. Install them quickly and easily (no tools required) simply pull off the old and snap in the new and you're ready for sturdy support and stylish presentation a set of 5 caster wheels can offer. Designed to hold a maximum of 66 lbs. each or 330 lbs. total weight chair and rider. Heavy-duty rubber caster wheels designed as replacement wheels to protect floors Protects hardwood, laminate, tile, slate, and all other hard floor surfaces

Eliminates the need for ugly expensive plastic floor mats
single chair bed navy cotton Features standard 7/16 in. (11 mm) office chair diameter stem and easy-rolling 2 in. (50 mm) wheels
futon chair bed plans Each supporter cone supports 500 lbs. maximum weight
cheap office chairs newcastle does this product come with a threaded stem Is the cost for the set of 5 - $17.50 or are they $17.50 each castor? set of 5 is $17.50 do you get 5 casters for $17.50 What is the load rating? Back of box states load capacity for all 5 wheels - 330 lbs. moving load, 385 static load.Floor-Protecting Rubber Office Chair Caster Wheel (Set of 5) Questions - page 2Floor-Protecting Rubber Office Chair Caster Wheel (Set of 5) Reviews - page 2

New (2) from $28.95 Sold by RokHardware and Fulfilled by Amazon. Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) is a service we offer sellers that lets them store their products in Amazon's fulfillment centers, and we directly pack, ship, and provide customer service for these products. Something we hope you'll especially enjoy: FBA items qualify for FREE Shipping and . If you're a seller, Fulfillment by Amazon can help you increase your sales. We invite you to learn more about Fulfillment by Amazon See more product details Office Chair Floor Protectors - Felt Casters Pkg of 5 Slipstick CB680 2 Inch Floor Protecting Rubber Office Chair Caster Wheels (Set of 5) Standard Stem… FREE Shipping on orders over . Dual wheel casters with permanently fused felt. Directions: Push caster stem into hole. *Note: For 7/16" diameter hole only. We understand these do not fit some Ikea chairs. Load capacity 375 lbs. per set. 12 x 7.2 x 2 inches #68 in Office Products > Office Furniture & Accessories > Chairs & Sofas > Desk Chairs

1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies) Product Warranty: For warranty information about this product, please click here 5 star 60% 4 star 10% 3 star 9% 2 star 12% 1 star 9% See all verified purchase reviews Top Customer Reviews no more grooves Save your laminate floor and buy these casters Floor protection + Stability for you; protection for your wood floors. Been using them daily for over six months The work great and roll with easy Office Wheels for Hardwood Floors Most Recent Customer Reviews Search Customer Reviews See and discover other items: best office chairsA very important factor to consider when purchasing an office chair that often gets overlooked is whether your chair will be used on a carpeted floor or on a hard surface floor such as wood, laminate, tile or vinyl. Today’s office chairs come with many options, arms or no arms, standard lumbar or adjustable lumbar, and even the type of caster. Hard casters are standard on most office chairs and are made for carpeted floors.

However, not all offices are carpeted. If your floor is a hard surface such as hardwood, laminate or tile, you will need soft casters on your chair. Many people prefer to use a chair mat to protect their carpet. Soft casters should also be used with hard plastic chair mats. Soft casters are typically offered at a small upcharge but sometimes at no difference in price depending on the chair and the manufacturer. But whether offered at an upcharge or not, it is well worth it to have soft casters, if you will be using the chair on a hard floor. Using hard casters on a hard floor is actually quite hazardous. A chair with hard casters will scoot very quickly on a hard floor sometimes catching an employee off guard and the employee may find themselves on the floor. It is not worth the risk of injury to the employee and liability to your company. You should always take the type of flooring into consideration when selecting the options for your chair. Written by Karen F. Workplace Interiors Consultant

how to choose an office chair, My wife's office has solid hickory hardwood floors, and I'd like to protect the floor from her rolling office chair. What can be done to protect the floor? Should I even be concerned about the chair damaging the floor? In two old homes now I've shredded the wood floor under my chair, monster splinters eventually emerging. I work at home in semi-rural New Hampshire. I think they're very old pine floors, so softwood. I plan to try Shepherd Brand Urethane Casters after putty and repainting. From the manufacturer's site, "Nylon tread for carpeting, and urethane tread for hard floors." Much buzz on Amazon about these. Edit: After months with the new casters there are no new paint flakes or splinters. I haven't repainted the floor yet, but it appears these casters will do the trick. Replacing your chair's casters can help. Most chairs come with hard nylon casters, but softer rubber/polyurethane/neoprene casters are less likely to scratch or damage your floor.

I live in a house full of wood floors (engineered hardwood). If the floors are kept clean and the wheels of the chair also are kept clean, every little damage will ever happen to your floors. If your floors are perfectly smooth and any imperfection will bother you, I do recommend either a low pile or woven rug under the desk and chair. I say this, because if some sand or small rock gets between the chair caster and the floor it will mark it. You can always fill the small imperfection but a rug is a small insurance plan for that area of floor. I was initially worried about this, but I've had my office chair on hardwood for about 2 years without issue, with generally at least an hour to 4 hours use every day (and more when I occasionally work from home). It's a pretty typical chair with fairly hard plastic castors. I would either get some sort of "mat" or area rug. There are some plastic mats that are sold without the plastic spikes. There are also 'floating vinyls" or fiber floors that come in rolls (often at Home Depot) and they can just go on top of floor without adhesive.

You can cut them to size. Usually, their weight holds them down. I would not use a plastic mat, as I did because a tiny piece of something got under it and I must have rolled over it a dozen times and it left a bunch of annoying marks in my beautiful hardwood floor. I would use some sort of sacrificial mat, either a pre-made mat or a section of some laminate flooring material to cover the area that you will be using the chair. Of course I have bamboo floors so it blends in. The trouble is, no matter what you put down there, if it's a sunny room, your floor will age unevenly. I had one of those clear plastic mats down and when I removed it after a couple of years, a huge light spot was left behind. I have recently refinished the floor in this room and I'm reluctant to put anything down on the new floor--though maybe with the modern tools & chemicals it's fade-proof I don't know. But I think I have to expect some change of color over time. It's a very sunny room. Kept hoping I'd find something like casters with felt coated wheels.

I had no luck. Maybe I should invent such a thing, Lol. Bet they'd sell well. My office chair is also terribly loud rolling across the floor. If you're really really into a solution here, you want a Flexible Glass Chair Mat. It's that: glass you lay on the floor to protect it. Just Google that term. The first results lead to solutions. The chair mat is the way to go. You have to use roofing tacks hammered into the corners to hold it down, otherwise it will slide around and be annoying. Getting a mat is a good idea. If you don't do this what will happen is that dirt and sand particles adhere to the wheels of the chair and grind ruts in the wood creating bare spots. Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count). Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?