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The purpose of this endeavor was to stabilize the floor -- to reduce the amount of "bounce".
The best place to put a front-loading machine is on a concrete basement floor. I have a concrete basement floor, but do not want to go down to my partially earthen basement to do laundry, so the washer and dryer are in the kitchen.
The kitchen was added to my 1920 bungalow sometime around 1950 and I joke that it was added by the ne'er do well son-in-law of someone who must've worked with the people who owned the house at the time. The kitchen has the crappy "foundation" one would expect of a kitchen 3/4's of which is actually an enclosed back porch. When I bought the house 3 years ago, I ripped down the 1950's paneling in the kitchen and found: studs. There was an aluminum-foil "weatherizing" barrier between the paneling and the studs, but absolutely no insulation in the walls.
The section of the kitchen where the new washer will go is the 1/4 of the room that contains the stairwell to the basement and the floor in that location is 1/2" wood suspended over dirt. The purpose of attaching the 3/4" plywood to the subflooring with a ridiculous number of screws is to stabilize the floor so there is much less bounce -- leveling of the washer will have to happen, too. And, eventually, I need to add some more supports under the floor to brace the joists to keep the floor from sagging (further).
Thanks for replying to my post, it is nice to commiserate with someone who has an old house.
:hi:
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