Can you offset these problems by using a thermal underlay.
Vinyl flooring cold temperatures.
Vinyl floors provide you with insulation but thicker underlays can retain more heat.
Well vinyl flooring does get stiff and brittle in the cold.
Vinyl plank flooring and cold temperatures do not go hand in hand.
Therefore you have to be careful.
If you are thinking about thermal underlayment for vinyl flooring this might cause instability to the flooring.
Because of its multilayered construction the planks will not expand and contract as much as a solid hardwood floor.
It will look and feel like someone put sand underneath your floor.
I would expect 7 10 years out of a floating vinyl floor.
Adhesives become brittle and then crumble below 40f some can get to 28f but then you are done.
Vinyl is not made from wood and requires a sturdy subfloor with little cushioning.
Vinyl plank flooring is engineered to look like wood but doesn t expand and contract as oak or maple would.
It is not recommended to use underlayment for vinyl flooring.
Amid changes in temperature and humidity all flooring materials are susceptible to expansion and contraction to some extent but engineered hardwood flooring is going to be the most dimensionally stable material you will find.
The cold winters will probably be too much for an adhesive to deal with.