All Activity
- Past hour
-
I know that the last 3 treatments are dulux wearhershield, undercoat then top. No idea re the ancient history. I'm hoping to be lazy/ efficient/ economical and paing stripping it all won't be that. Maybe locally.
-
I wonder if someone who has used this firm could advise. Unfortunately I speak no German. There is a 'translate' tab, but it seems to disappear (with no obvious way of getting it to reappear) when I get near paying, so I don't know what to click on to pay... Thanks in anticipation of your help.
-
Have you got any good paint stripper in stock? Try it on a small area, then paint that bit with a good primer then appropriate outdoor paint. Nitromors would be my goto for paint stripper.
- Today
-
I have not appointed the private building regs company yet stage I’m at 1) planning appoved 2) building control and materials drawings submitted. 3) self build mortgage approved and conveyancing commenced./CIL liability form approved (self build) 4) demolition notice submitted 5) contractor appointed and confirmed start date. 6) contractor provided info for private building control firm 7) gas/electric firms contacted to disconnect connections am ready to break ground?
-
Id imagine theres some impervous stuff on that? Are you intending to paint over whats there? And what were you going to use?
-
Are the big boys still able to "get away with" not doing every house? A freind of mine built a small number of houses in shefifeld. They got the guy out to do the air tightness. His starting point was "what number do you want on the report". It took much persuasion to get him to actually do the job. Anyway, we all know what really went on.
-
That always assumes they keep those records. As i found out when in Buckinghamshire, Bucks council dont keep, or register, in any way, completed inspections by private BC's. And assuming of course you can even contact them. Again, not possible in Bucks. Other councils may vary of course.
-
I don't know how you would find who they are. Ask the BCO at the LA I suppose as they should have been informed.
-
As built airtightness test is required for b regs sign off. Go directly to the BCO and ask for the test results which ‘they must have had presented to them’….. Prob be a lot of squirming from anyone you approach, but I’d go directly to the BCO and start there.
-
Sorry (sheepish grin)
-
Your advice please. The photo is the worst bit, randomly in the middle of my spiel. I've painted this once personally, plus once by trusted workers and twice by professionals. It's a big area, perhaps 200m2, so I'm keen to avoid high cost. Some area are absolutely fine, being areas of replacement boards to a higher spec. It needs doing again. Last year's heat caused more flaking than normal and I chose to scrape those bits off and let the heat carry on getting at it. Then the winter has released more layers and areas. It has exposed some bare wood which will be either 10 or 90 years since first painted. Also sometimes a yellowish layer and sometimes a clearly dirty, unprepared surface. In other areas it all stays put. My hunch is that letting blisters come off has released tensions that had allowed the surface to cling on to the dirty layers for many decades. So today I have scraped more off and pressure washed it. I don't mind the indents where up to 10? Coats have been removed ("character"). Obv the manufacturers would like me to buy lots of expensive paint. But I'm wondering if the sheer thickness is an issue. So do you think I can spray paint it for speed and economy. 1 or 2 coats? Perhaps the raw wood needs a brush of primer. Where the timber is clearly cracked or eroded I guess it needs filling. First or after a coat of paint?
-
Of course a simple option is to take one or more sockets out and see if you can see what’s going on behind them.
-
Building regulations after full planning
kandgmitchell replied to PSC88's topic in Building Regulations
You have in effect contracted out of using the Local Authority building control service so they will not be issuing any documentation other than to confirm the Initial Notice from your appointed building control provider is satisfactory. That is a simple administrative process and has no reference to the design. Your chosen private company will confirm their satisfaction with building control matters, probably directly to your architect if they submitted the scheme. -
If you've got breeze coming from your sockets, it's very likely they punctured the membrane while installing the electrics - it happens a lot because the contractors simply don't understand airtightness.
-
The EPC should give the air pressure test result - either ‘as measured’ in this house or based on site average value.
-
Was there anything in your purchase 'stuff' which states an air-tightness test result. If not, ask the developer what is was. It may cost around £400 to get a basic A/T test which will give you a 'number' (in m3/m2/hr or air-changes per hour), or a fair bit more to get A/T and thermography at the same time. De-pressurise the house with the fan on a day when you can get a +10 degree C diff between inside and outside temp, and you get an IR 'pic' of the leaks. If the discrepancy between the developer's stated no. and yours is significant, ask awkward Qs.
-
Inside or outside the frame?
-
A practical option might be a smoke source e.g. incense stick or smoke pen to figure out where the worst leaks are. If they’re small leaks, there’s a system called Aerobarrier that might help. Agree though that a ‘professional’ leak test measurement would be something to go back to the developer with - particularly if the result is outside the building control limits.
-
Tiled? Can we see a picture? It can probably be fixed in the same spot with the right fixings.
-
BC and Planning are separate, so if the amendments you made via Planning are 'material' (my use of the word, not 'Material'), and have an effect on the B.Regs elements (The cladding changes from 12.5mm cement board and render to 100mm wood-fibre and render, say) then that would have an effect on the B. Regs side of things (Part L in this case, but feasibly another Part if the cement board acted as an anti-racking board and the WF didn't) then maybe you need a discussion with your BC body, but as you say, that's a private firm, not the council. So, as far as I am aware, No, your chosen BC body will do that. Note my background is all in refurb, not new-build in terms of direct dealings with BC, but I cannot see LA BC being interested in specifics of a build being 'policed' by A.N.Other BC.
-
It has a continuous foil membrane. I’m assuming it’s not taped well or it’s punctured somewhere
