Thursday, 18 June 2009

No more Mowing or Hedge Trimming

Out went the lawnmower and hedgetrimmer and in came more relaxing and entertaining time.

This new artificial grass lawn added the finishing touch to this gardens make over. The two tiered garden looks fantastic with its new lush green appearance that reflects beautifully against the recently installed fence panels.

The recent heavy downpours have eased the drainage concerns that the customer had, as the rain simply soaked through the synthetic material.





Tuesday, 12 May 2009

New Garden for Steve And Sally in Wythall

Our latest installation in Wythall Birmingham, involved removing a deep concrete base below the grass level, our team of experienced ground workers tackled the problem with ease and transformed the once baron and unusable space into an entertaining paradise both for Steve and Sally and their kids.

Steve wrote
"Many thanks to the Choice Floors Team. We are really pleased with the garden, it has been completely transformed! Excellent job from start to finish and a great price.

We would certainly be happy to recommend your services."

Before


After






Artificial Grass and FIFA

Artificial turf has been around now for several decades. It can be argued that artificial turf was originally developed to address the limitations of natural grass. However, the earliest versions were not designed for football and changed the game dramatically. Therefore, football never thoroughly embraced the idea of high-level competition matches on artificial surfaces.


The breakthrough came when manufacturers started to develop surfaces specifically designed for football. Manufacturers have now developed a turf that mirrors real grass. In order to get away from the short, tightly packed matting of the earlier generation, nowadays, the concept is to produce longer and more thinly spaced tufts and most of the systems are infilled with sand for support and rubber granules to give bounce. This newest generation of artificial turf has proven to be the most favourable for football to date.


FIFA realised that, as the game’s global popularity increases, so the climate plays a greater part in limiting its development. Players in countries at the extreme ends of the temperature range will not necessarily benefit from the predominanace of natural grass turf. With the deployment of football turf, FIFA has recognised the enormous benefits artificial pitches would bring to the global development of football, not only because artificial turf can be used in more extreme climates, but because where a pitch is used intensively it can be used almost 24 hours a day and seven days a week.


Due to the numerous manufacturers and installers involved worldwide, all using slightly different systems, the performance of artificial pitches could be extremely variable. Therefore FIFA, as the world governing body of football, wants to ensure that there is a recognised internationals standard for football turf pitches and in 2001 introduced, the FIFA Quality Concep for Football Turf. This quality testing scheme uses real turf as its benchmark and awards the FIFA RECOMMENDED Marks to those pitches that meet the very stringent quality criteria.


FIFA now feels it is appropriate to use “Football Turf“ as the designation for products installed as part of the FIFA Quality Concept. The main reasons for this are because it emphasizes the high quality pitches that are certified as part of the programme and because the playing characteristics on “Football Turf“ mirror the quality of natural grass pitches, which is required to play the game on a very high level.

How is Artificial Grass / Turf made?

Background

Artificial grass is a surfacing material used to imitate grass. It is generally used in areas where grass cannot grow, or in areas where grass maintenance is impossible or undesired. Artificial grass is used mainly in sports stadiums and arenas, but can also be found on playgrounds and in other spaces.

Artificial grass has been manufactured since the early 1960s, and was originally produced by Chemstrand Company (later renamed Monsanto Textiles Company). It is produced using manufacturing processes similar to those used in the carpet industry. Since the 1960s, the product has been improved through new designs and better materials. The newest synthetic turf products have been chemically treated to be resistant to ultraviolet rays, and the materials have been improved to be more wear-resistant, less abrasive, and, for some applications, more similar to natural grass.

History

In the early 1950s, the tufting process was invented. A large number of needles insert filaments of fiber into a fabric backing. Then a flexible adhesive like polyurethane or polyvinyl chloride is used to bind the fibers to the backing. This is the procedure used for the majority of residential and commercial carpets. A tufting machine can produce a length of carpet that is 15 ft (4.6 m) wide and more than 3 ft (1 m) long in one minute.

In the early 1960s, the Ford Foundation, as part of its mission to advance human achievement, asked science and industry to develop synthetic playing surfaces for urban spaces. They hoped to give urban children year-round play areas with better play quality and more uses than the traditional concrete, asphalt, and compacted soil of small urban playgrounds. In 1964, the first installation of the new playing surface called Chemgrass was installed at Moses Brown School in Providence, Rhode Island.

In 1966, artificial grass was first used in professional major-league sports and gained its most famous brand name when the Astrodome was opened in Houston, Texas. By the first game of the 1966 season, artificial turf was installed, and the brand name Chemgrass was changed to AstroTurf. (Although the name AstroTurf is used as a common name for all types of artificial grass, the name is more accurately used only for the products of the AstroTurf Manufacturing Company.)

Artificial grass also found its way into the applications for which it was originally conceived, and artificial grass was installed at many inner-city playgrounds. Some schools and recreation centers took advantage of artificial turfs properties to convert building roofs into "grassy" play areas.

In the early 1970s, artificial grass came under scrutiny due to safety and quality concerns. Some installations, often those done by the number of companies that sprang up to cash in on the trend, began to deteriorate. The turf would wear too quickly, seams would come apart, and the top layer would soon degrade from exposure to sunlight. Athletes and team doctors began to complain about the artificial surfaces, and blamed the turf for friction burns and blisters.

Natural turf yields to the force of a blow, but an arm or leg driven along the unyielding surface of artificial turf is more likely to be injured. Since artificial turf does not have the same cooling effects as natural turf, surface temperatures can be 30° warmer above the artificial surfaces.

Baseball players claimed that a ball would bounce harder and in less predictable ways, and some soccer players claimed that the artificial surface makes the ball roll faster, directly affecting the game. However, the National Football League and the Stanford Research Institute declared in 1974 that artificial turf was not a health hazard to professional football players, and its use continued to spread.

In the 1990s, biological turf began to make a comeback when a marketing of nostalgia in professional sport resulted in the re-emergence of outdoor stadiums. Many universities—responding to the nostalgia, advances in grass biology, and the fears about increased risk of injury on artificial grass—began to reinstall natural turf systems. However, natural turf systems continue to require sunlight and maintenance (mowing, watering, fertilizing, aerating), and the surface may deteriorate in heavy rain. Artificial grass offers a surface that is almost maintenance free, does not require sunlight, and has a drainage system. Recent developments in the artificial grass industry are new systems that have simulated blades of grass supported by an infill material so the "grass" does not compact. The resulting product is closer to the look and feel of grass than the older, rug-like systems. Because of these factors, artificial grass will probably continue to be a turf surface option for communities, schools, and professional sports teams.

Raw Materials

The quality of the raw materials is crucial to the performance of turf systems. Almost anything used as a carpet backing has been used for the backing material, from jute to plastic to polyester. High quality artificial turf uses polyester tire cord for the backing.

The fibers that make up the blades of "grass" are made of nylon or polypropylene and can be manufactured in different ways. The nylon blades can be produced in thin sheets that are cut into strips or extruded through molds to produce fibers with a round or oval cross-section. The extruded product results in blades that feel and act more like biological grass.

Cushioning systems are made from rubber compounds or from polyester foam. Rubber tires are sometimes used in the composition of the rubber base, and some of the materials used in backing can come from plastic or rubber recycling programs. The thread used to sew the pads together and also the top fabric panels has to meet the same criteria of strength, color retention, and durability as the rest of the system. Care and experience must also be applied to the selection of the adhesives used to bond all the components together.

The Manufacturing
Process

The "grass" part of a turf system is made with the same tufting techniques used in the manufacture of carpets.

1. The first step is to blend the proprietary ingredients together in a hopper. Dyes and chemicals are added to give the turf its traditional green color and to protect it from the ultraviolet rays from the sun.

2. After the batch has been thoroughly blended, it is fed into a large steel mixer. The batch is automatically mixed until it has a thick, taffy-like consistency.

3. The thickened liquid is then fed into an extruder, and exits in a long, thin strand of material.

4. The strands are placed on a carding machine and spun into a loose rope. The loose ropes are pulled, straightened, and woven into yarn. The nylon yarn is then wound onto large spools.

5. The yarn is then heated to set the twisted shaped.

6. Next, the yarn is taken to a tufting machine. The yarn is put on a bar with skewers (a reel) behind the tufting machine. It is then fed through a tube leading to the tufting needle. The needle pierces the primary backing of the turf and pushes the yarn into the loop. A looper, or flat hook, seizes and release the loop of nylon while the needle pulls back up; the backing is shifted forward and the needle once more pierces the backing further on.

This process is carried out by several hundred needles, and several hundred rows of stitches are carried out per minute. The nylon yarn is now a carpet of artificial turf.

7. The artificial turf carpet is now rolled under a dispenser that spreads a coating of latex onto the underside of the turf. At the same time, a strong secondary backing is also coated with latex. Both of these are then rolled onto a marriage roller, which forms them into a sandwich and seals them together.

8. The artificial turf is then placed under heat lamps to cure the latex.

9. The turf is fed through a machine that clips off any tufts that rise above its uniform surface.

10. Then the turf is rolled into large v/lengths and packaged. The rolls are then shipped to the wholesaler.

Installation

Artificial turf installation and maintenance is as important as its construction.

1. The base of the installation, which is either concrete or compacted soil, must be leveled by a bulldozer and then smoothed by a steam roller. Uneven surfaces will still be evident once the turf is supplied.

2. For outdoor applications, intricate drainage systems must be installed, since the underlying surface can absorb little, if any, rainwater.

3. Turf systems can be either filled or unfilled. A filled system is designed so that once it is installed, a material such as crumbled cork, rubber pellets, or sand (or a mixture) is spread over the turf and raked down in between the fibers.

The material helps support the blades of fiber, and also provides a surface with some give, that feels more like the soil under a natural grass surface. Filled systems have some limitations, however. Filling material like cork may break down or the filling material can become contaminated with dirt and become compacted.

In either case the blades are no longer supported. Maintenance may require removing and replacing all of the fill.

Quality Control

Choice Floors Artificial Grass only uses the best products that have to pass many quality standards.

Because of the high use of artificial turf and the constant scrutiny by professional athletes, new products must undergo a number of tests as they are being developed. In 1994, the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) published a list of standard methods for the testing of synthetic turf systems. It contains over two dozen tests for the properties of turf systems.

As part of ASTM's testing, the backing fabric is tested for strength. The force it takes to separate the individual tufts or blades is also measured. In tufted turf, this test usually measures the strength of the adhesive involved. To test how resistant the turf is to abrasion, the ASTM recommends testing the fabric by running it under an abrasive head made of spring steel, while another ASTM test measures how abrasive the turf will be to the players. The ASTM also has tests that measure the shock absorbency of the turf system, and there are also tests to see how well the turf stands up during the course of a game or even prolonged tournament play.

Several quality checks are performed during the manufacturing process, as well. For example, according to AstroTurf Incorporated, the following quality checks are performed:19 checks for the raw materials, eight checks for extrusion, six checks for unfinished fabric, and 14 checks for finished fabric.

Byproducts / Waste

Defected artificial grass batches are discarded as are nylon yarn that is damaged. Completed turf is generally recycled, but not reused as artificial turf. The earth that is cleared from the installation site is transported to a landfill and discarded. Older turf that has been worn down is typically recycled.

The arguments about the environmental impact of artificial versus biological turf continue. Both create large amount of water run-off, adding to sewage problems. Chemical processes are used in the manufacture of raw materials for artificial turf, but most biological grass in stadium applications requires chemicals in the form of fertilizer and pesticides for maintenance.

The Future

The engineering and design of both artificial and biological turf systems are constantly improving. As new stadiums are built, the owners and architects strive to give a more old-fashioned feel to the structures, which usually means no dome or a dome that allows the use of biological turf.

Recent installations of artificial turf have included new advancements that serve both economic and environmental needs. Large holding tanks are built beneath outdoor installations. The water that runs off the surface is held in the tanks, and used later for watering practice fields or nearby lawns.

Another recent development has been a hybrid of filled turf and biological grass. Once artificial turf is installed, it is filled not with rubber or sand, but with soil. Grass seed is then planted in the soil, nurtured and grown to a height above that of the artificial turf. The resulting combination combines the feel, look, and comfort of biological turf with the resilience and resistance to tearing and divots of artificial turf. Of course, it also requires all the maintenance of both systems, and it is not suitable for most indoor applications.


Friday, 8 May 2009

Artificial Grass Installation & Testimonial in Stratford

Choice Floors Artificial Grass transformed this garden in Stratford Upon Avon from a baron unuseable space to a child friendly haven.

This project took under a day to complete, which involved removing the old patchy grass, levelling the ground, adding and compacting sand, followed by a weed preventing membrane.

The overall result has made a fantastic improvement to the garden, producing an extension to the living space of the house while providing a haven for the children to play in all year round.

Mrs Tedbury said "The artificial grass is great. The children have loved being out in a fresh garden. Friends have said how great it looks and the boys who worked on the garden were great and explained every thing I needed to know.

Visit Choice Floors For more information

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Is Choice Floors Artificial Grass Really Maintenance Free

Artificial Grass Maintenance

Artificial grass really is maintenance free as you no longer need to waste your weekends or evenings mowing, watering or fertilising it. No more tackling dry patches and bald patches with various lawn feeds and chemicals.

No more weeding or adding weed killing additives. Anyone with a shady garden will know of the headaches their real grass can cause, but this is no problem for our artificial turf.

In fact the only thing you need to do is keep it clean, if you happen to have pets, falling leaves or messy children

The artificial grass is cleaned of dust or bits everytime it rains, and its effective drainage system just runs the water away. If you do have pets, then any mess can simply be scooped up and hosed down

In high traffic areas, it is common for the blades to flatten over time, but this can easily be remedied by gently brushing the fibres back into position using a soft brush or broom, brushing them in random directions is recommended to create a more natural look. Another problem in high traffic areas is the ground being compacted, this is usually due to poor preparation or unskilled fitters. To remedy this we recommend brushing the infill into the effected area until the desired level is found.

The synthetic turf should be fitted by a qualified contractor to guarantee the best wear a lastability of the turf, at Choice Floors we spend most of the time preparing the ground before we lay the grass ensuring a longer life for the turf.

All of the above procedures including removing debris, checking depressions in high traffic areas and artificial grass cleaning are all jobs that the homeowner can simply undertake, although on occasion when the damage is on a larger scale it is advisable to contact a professional to come out and repair the effected areas, this is also recommended if you would like to change the style of the lawn.

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

A Guide to Buying Artificial Grass

We like to be as impartial as possible and with this we would like to give you a checklist to make sure you are receiving the best possible service whether it is from Choice Floors Artificial Grass or any other supplier and fitter of Artificial Grass.

Checklist

Once you have decided you want to benefit from Artificial Grass you must consider the following:

• Always request a free sample in the post or when you the job is quoted.
• Enquire about the guarantee of the grass (all grass has a certain amount of years guarantee)
• If you are competent in fitting yourself then ask about supply only.
• Always check what's involved in the sq metre price, Choice Floors always include the ground work, grass removal and preparation when completing a quote.
• Ask if there is a delivery charge on supply only.

Choosing the right grass:

• Looks almost real compared to real grass
• Grass is soft to touch and not rough.
• Good drainage should be part of the backing.
• The grass blades should be very dense and full.

Before requesting an installation service:

• Always request to see a gallery of previous work.
• Request to see a fitted garden if accessible.
• Enquire about the infill for the grass i.e. sand or rubber.
• Ask about costs for groundwork, grass removal and preparation.
• Enquire about a break-down price i.e. artificial grass and cost of installation if separate).

Inspecting your artificial grass installation:

• Artificial grass rolls are glued down in strips so check the seams of your lawn are hidden.
• The edges or your lawn should be consistent and flush against any borders so check for gaps.
• Ask for any problems to be rectified the same day.

Choosing Your Artificial Grass

Now that you are confident that the supplier and fitter of your artificial grass is fully qualified and ticks all of the above boxes you need to choose the grass for you based on the following factors:

• How much you have to spend.
• Where the grass is to be fitted i.e. sports ground, exhibition stand, domestic garden etc.
• Does the grass need to be child or pet friendly
• The look and feel you most prefer.

Artificial grass is available various piles and density, just like carpets and obviously the price is effected based on the density or pile of the artificial grass.

Choice Floors offer a range of different grass based on your budget or requirement, we explain each grade in detail to give you an idea of what you may need. Visit our service/products page here to see

Buying Your Artificial Grass

Once you have selected you synthetic turf and your supplier/fitter now is the time to buy, Choice Floors and an other grass supplier and fitter will come out for a free no obligation quote. Choice Floors never have any hidden costs, i.e. groundwork preparation, grass removal etc. When we give you a sq. metre cost, this will include everything from beginning to end and we will explain every process, view our recent installation and the step by step photos on the process here