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Ramps & the like to join thick tiles to floorboards

Specialist carpet door bars to transition between different floor levels

A common problem is what to do where two floors meet and, for whatever reason, they are not level or flat with each other. How do you transition between different floor levels and bridge from one to the other without it looking a mess? Few people want a step, as they can be a trip hazard, visually unattractive and plain annoying.

Avoid ugly steps in doorways

Annoyance, frustration, disappointment…they all describe the emotions of customers who explain how, having had a lovely new bathroom installed they discovered an unwelcome step had been created by the builders, onto the landing. Similarly, the customers who go to work, leaving the fitters installing a lovely wooden floor in their house, only to return in the evening to find it sits 4mm higher than the tiled hall floor it joins onto.

Thankfully, there are some great specialist carpet door bars, which solve all these floor level problems AND look smart.

Transition between different floor levels such as thick tiles to floorboards
Specialist carpet door bars and ramps bridge floor level height differences

Step 1 – what type of floor-covering?

Determine the type of floorcoverings you wish to bridge e.g. carpet, laminate, LVT, concrete, rubber, ceramic tiles, carpet tiles and the like. Therefore, if you are joining a laminate floor down to a carpet, you could also describe this as transitioning from carpet to hard flooring. Alternatively, if you are joining wood to ceramic tiles, you would be joining hard to hard floorcoverings.

Terminology: a “hard” floorcovering refers to most floor types which are not carpet, such as ceramic tiles, wood, LVT, laminate. They feel pretty solid and rigid when you touch them and these characteristics influence the type of transition door bar you will need.

Step 2 – determine height difference

Measure the height difference between the two finished floor levels. The easiest way is to mark a piece of paper and then measure it in millimetres, precisely.

Tip: When a carpet is involved, it is best to lightly compress the pile and then measure, to replicate how a door threshold typically compresses the pile and so avoids an obvious edge.

Step 3 – choose appropriate design

Choose the product option that best suits your installation from the height compensating profiles and solutions listed below, which are all sold from CarpetRunners’ online shop. To make it easy, click on the product to see full product details and diagrams on each of the product pages, plus pictures of all the attractive finishes available. Scroll down each page for full details.

Product options Floor level height difference Suitable for flooring types Choice of finishes Choice of lengths Special design features
Premier Posh 0-8mm All 10 3 Inlay hides fixing screws
Premier Cover 0-8mm All 10 3 Visible, matching screws
Premier Single 9, 4 or 13 4-13mm Carpet down to floor-boards or thin vinyl 10 3 Curved edge
Premier 2 Way Ramp 2-9mm Both hard flooring 10 3 Solid bar, self -adhesive
Premier Ramp 10-20mm Both hard flooring 10 Solid bar, self -adhesive
Premier Compres-ion Ramp 5mm Carpet to hard flooring 10 3 Solid bar, self -adhesive
Ali Tramline Reducer 2-9mm Both LVT 10 1 Inlay LVT to match floor
Easyshim 6-15mm Slides in under carpet & underlay n/a n/a Hidden beneath underlay
All the above door bars create a smart transition between different floor heights or levels

Step 4 – shop online

Place your order and we will direct ship to your home or work address, typically within 4-5 workings days.

Premier Ramp antique brass ramp from wood to LVT
The Premier Ramp is an angled door bar that bridges up to 20mm height difference between the two hard floors
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