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I should probably start a blog for this sort of thing, but I just wanted to let y'all know that we finally got planning permission - 4.5 years after buying the site, after one application with a committee hearing, and the latest application that took nine months to determine. Thanks to everyone on here for their help, advice, and nudges on expectation alignment!15 points
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By way of background, I am the very aged IT geek that has done all of the SysAdmin since we first set up BuildHub about 9 years ago. I am no longer involved in Forum Management or politics; I just in keep the forum up and smoothly running, pro bono. i have also administered and run a number of community forums and wikis over the last few decades, mostly using open source forum packages such as phpBB and MediaWiki. However when the founding members set this forum up, we decided to use a commercial Forum package (there was a one-time purchase, plus an annual maintenance fee), because this customer funded business model offers us a better feature set and continuous through life improvement. We chose the forum app from the company now called Invision Community. This a PHP application that runs on a LAMP stack on a hosted Virtual Private Server (VPS). The VPS has grown in cores / RAM / storage over the years as the size of the forum and its user population have also grown. Three years ago, I moved the LAMP stack into a Docker Compose project, and the VPS runs this single dedicated Docker Project which is on open Github. If you want to know more then read the README at Github: TerryE/docker-buildhub which explains the setup. Our Hosting Provider is currently doing an infrastructure refresh so we have to migrate to a new VPS and at the same time I am retiring the use of Docker and switching to the open-source equivalent, podman. See this issue, if you want to know more: A Gemini Conversation about Migrating VPs and switching to podman. Warning: it's a bit long (17 pages) and technical, but it lays out the issues and context. This topic is just to keep interested members informed. Any technical discussion / comment is welcomed. I have opened a companion topic in Forum News and Site Issues: Rehosting the Forum Virtual Server to discuss the more general / policy aspect to allow this thread to focus on the nerdy stuff. š Can I ask you all to keep to the technical discussions here and use the companion topic for general / policy stuff. @TerryE is my user account but I also have the Godlike @Admin account to hide / delete off-topic posts if the mods don't move them to the general topic. š¤£š±7 points
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Brief update on this one just so the thread and any other troubled onlookers are aware. I've now gone through and inspected the eaves detail for everywhere I can for this extension. Found some horrifying things and insulated it the best I can. Those steps being:- :- Remove all poorly seated wool covering wall plates. :- Seal all gaps between ceiling PIR and wall plate with wool / foam/ tape. :- Reinstate PIR insulation where there was none :- Form Wedge to force wall PIR to be uptight against block :- Seal all gaps between Wall PIR and block with wool / foam / tape. :- Reseat wool covering wall plate and all sealed areas. I'm very pleased to report that this has made a huge difference. I have not had chance to put my thermal cam back on, but you can feel it in the room. It's actually retaining heat through the day now, heating on in the morning for a few hours and you could still feel the residual heat in there by midnight. Perhaps i'd got used to having essentially balls-all insulation in there so im hypersensitive, but very promising so far. and that's without any form of curtain / blinds etc. All the glazing (of which there's lots) is still entirely bare. Not to say im going to stop there, I will be still removing all the roof to fully seal it and add more insulation. But atleast now my horrifying suspicion that I may need to add interior insulation in an already finished room... has been quelled. I'd REALLY hoped I wouldn't have to do that and it looks now that i wont have to, so im very glad for that atleast. Id rather spend the time and money on further improving the roof, glazing and adding exterior wall insulation to the walls if I need to. Anyhow, some more images of fixes for future ref for anyone.7 points
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Folks, We are on our self-build journey, we selected timber frame then short listed 4 suppliers and in the end chose MBC. They erect our medium complexity house in 8 working days - very impressive. I think MBC's strength is their experience which shows in the detail / thought in the design office and the efficiency of their erection teams. Our site is constrained so working out the order to deliver materials, how things are stacked, the order that things are lifted by the crane is complex. The team didn't seem to make any mistakes and just kept working, rain or shine. [To confirm I'm just a paying customer and have no other association with MBC]6 points
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Hi all, as the title suggests we are in the Scotland currently completing a conversion/extension/renovation on an old cemetery lodge. My son and I have been doing the majority of the work with the assistance of a few trades where we are lacking in skill or speed. We are a non building background other than the usual DIY so itās been a steep learning curve especially groundworks and structural work. It took a while the get the digger under control though Iām yet to master perfectly level trenches! The lodge is a cemetery gatehouse, more recently used as offices by the council as a base for their park keepers and groundsmen along with associated machinery which was stored in a 175m2 modern unit on site. Weāve added two en-suite bedrooms, a third bedroom bathroom and open plan living space. We also have planning permission to build a good sized detached 1 1/2 storey house on the site of the shed, which we may build in time. It wasnāt very well looked after with the usual council magnolia and Lino treatment to make it usable. We towards the tail end of the work now and are looking for another project to move on to. Planning takes a year or so up here once submitted, so we are actively looking now. The property certainly threw up a few challenges, not least the 2ft thick walls. Knocking through wasnāt easy and we also had to contend with poor previous work and rotten wood lintels. The roof turned into a labour of love with us working with a brilliant slater, sorting, holing and cutting all the bullets from welsh slate for him. The local planning department were totally unhelpful, with us initially treading on eggshells for fear of upsetting them to then telling them what we thought, giving them hard deadlines with consequences if they werenāt met. I use the term ātotally unhelpfulā but there are other words unsuitable for a public forum which are more accurate.5 points
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+1 I think I would just keep quiet about it unless enforcement bring it up. Ask forgiveness etc.5 points
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Weeks 24 to 27 Windows Installation Choosing window style and supplier has been one of the hardest decisions. We finally decided on Aluclad wooden windows from Norrsken. Itās been a long journey and Norrsken have been with me on that journey since December 2022 to installation end of February 2025. A big thank you to Nick at the window company for sticking with me on my numerous window quotes, that took over 2 years to finalise. Due to my architect not thinking ahead how Part O would effect the design, the windows had quite a few changes and quotations from a few companies. In summary Part O (Overheating) was first published in December 2021, we didnāt submit plans until May 2022, we passed planning in October 2022. Then we realised that the original design wouldnāt pass Part O thatās when I started understanding that in my opinion the architect should have been planning ahead and designing with Part O in mind. We had an overhang in the design but not large enough to qualify as shading for Part O calculations. I spoke to a local company who could do the Dynamic modelling route to pass Part O but they had a backlog of customers who like me needed help to pass Part O some of which weāre probably going to end up spending thousands on solar glazing and various other mitigating factors. The company suggested I look at the simplified version first which basically is a spreadsheet on which you enter your room sizes, window sizes and orientation of the building. Although our windows were not too big the daytime overheating looked like it could be managed by tweaking window sizes a bit but nighttime bedroom overheating was more of a problem because we are a bungalow and the windows needed to open for ventilation but also be secure overnight against intruders whilst we slept, Part O offers some guidance and I found future homes https://www.futurehomes.org.uk/library#Guidancetoolsandtemplates particularly helpful. In the end we settled on replacing 4 windows with 6 large Velux windows that allow for more air flow and by changing some windows to tilt and turn inwards this allows the bedroom windows to be safely partially open in the tilt position whilst still being secure at night. We had to go back through planning for the window changes but the architect did the amendments free of charge and the revised plans were passed in May 2023. Iām happy with the end outcome. I still have lovely big picture windows allowing viewing far into the distance and without any glazing bars. The opening inwards will allow for easy cleaning, but cleaning is a long way off. The Velux windows free up room for kitchen wall units where we previously planed to have non opening windows. A Velux in the pantry as well as freeing up wall space for shelves lets more light in and probably will result in less switching a light on and off. The house is designed for us in that our en-suite is larger than the bathroom shared by the two guest bedrooms and by changing that window to a Velux it allows for a shower area that doesnāt have a window sill almost in it. I started researching windows quite early on because I wanted to make the most of the views but also I expected it to take a while actually getting round to see different companies. We moved to Cornwall to start a new business, have a field for our Greyhound to run in and be a bit warmer and sunnier than Manchester. I love living in Cornwall but it does have its downsides in that we live one and a half hours away from a motorway, our local home building shows are smaller than one hall of Birmingham NEC. We visited some of the local window suppliers but we mostly got to see one small window or a cut away demo window for each supplier and they didnāt offer a great deal in choice, mostly double glazed not triple glazed samples. If we went away for the weekend I would try to find a larger showroom we could stop at on the way, luckily for us Norrsken has one showroom in the UK near Bournemouth that we stopped at on the way to The Isle of White. We decided to get the window openings measured by the supplier, it cost approximately Ā£800 for this but it was worth it. I had some questions about window opening sizes during the build before the concrete pour and Nick helped answering all my little questions, he knew how the window sizes had been changed to pass Part O. Even though the person sent out to measure ended up having a hour and half travel delay he still spent over 3 hours measuring and discussing the window location within the ICF opening and we marked on where I was to put the EPDM so it would be under the window and coming up the inside at the window board. The ICF is capable of load bearing the windows and fastening them back to the concrete core but the windows were going to be big and heavy (they come fully glazed) so we decided to use stokbord at the base of each window as our ICF was still soft enough that you could make an indent with just your finger (much like PIR) so when the weight of the window was resting on a shim it could push the shim into the ICF and general handling during installation could cause indents in the ICF. We used 3mm stocbord under the windows and 12mm under the sliding door. The 3 windows that look down the field were levelled and measured using a laser to ensure they would be the same height from the floor, and again a laser was used at installation. On installation day the fitters arrived at about 8am and the windows arrived shortly after, it was a great feeling that we were finally going to be watertight and to see our chosen windows. The installation team were all great you could tell they all had a role during the installation, Illbruck FM330 airtight foam was used and Silka EBT+ sealant. I am now taping the windows inside and out using Pro Clima tapes. We purchased 10 windows (4 non opening, 6 Tilt and Turn) and a sliding door. Windows P33A, 10 windows average uW.80 Sliding door S319A 2m wide uW 0.76 Aluminium clad, Marine Finish, Trip,e glazed. External colour 7030 Stone Grey Matt Internal white stain Breakdown of window costs Windows Ā£11,500 Sliding door Ā£3500 Sills and trims Ā£740 Installation Ā£2600 Stocbord Ā£500 Survey Ā£750 Delivery by small HIAB Ā£1320 Total to date Ā£207,626 I have been continuing the installation of the Rockwool in between the rafters and building the gabion wall when the weather is nice. I researched and purchased a plasterboard lifter that will reach 16ft and a table saw for the insulation under the rafters. The renderer is booked in for May, colours chosen. The wood cladding is ordered and ready for final payment so hopefully the next blog will cover the cladding.4 points
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Working as a chef, the easy way to make a kitchen much more efficient, is to make it smaller. I work in an area not much more the 1m2. Get rid of the clutter i.e. all those containers, gadgets, spice racks etc. Draws are often more useful than cupboards. Put lightweight things higher up. Clean up as you go along. And the big one. Learn how to cook. You really don't need much equipment, or ingredients. There are some dishes you will not create as well as a restaurant. Go to a restaurant for those meals, KISS at home.4 points
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Hello Gaf. Firstly, nothing wrong with your drawing, it's quite informative, well done! Also the photos help back up and provide a bit of context and other info. I've written at some length here as concrete slab floors are heavy. Often in a timber frame the floor dead ( Permenant) loads are modestl and thus a bit more forgiving in terms of safety if something goes wrong. For all, if you are asking question and posting say photos it's of massive help if you can provide enough info so we can see the whole picture. Imagine you are looking at this for the first time! We need to see some panoramic photos and then close up detail. The more you make BH members guess the less targeted info and non specific advice / suggestions you'll get. @GafHope this helps a bit and lets you see how I look at stuff like this, given the info you have posted. I note you mention a certifier, I take it this is maybe a private BC or the like? Also note that "no SE has had eyes on the change." Now there are plenty experienced folk that understand a lot of this but some maybe don't fully grasp some of the nuances. The following is a kind of breakdown and what I can see from your info, what I am thinking initially in structural design terms and why I think this way based on what I see. I won't go into great detail but hope the following helps you identify some of the things you need to check. I look at your drawing and see there are two beams framing in at different levels, thus the loads on the masonry are additive. The beams appear to be simply supported.. individual beams. I can't see how much load is coming from above. The method of support to the beams is important (appear simply supported in this case) and how they are prevented from twisting.. and how they load the supports. Building foundations move about a bit and over time walls get out of plumb., this can reduce the bearing area of some floors for example. What I'm say is that you should not look at each individual element in isolation unless you have an overall idea of what you are designing. An oak framed building is much more forgiving than say a masonry building. The second photo is puzzling! I can see the hollo slabs seem to be loading the L shaped masonry column via a beam between the window and door? To go back a bit. One primary strategy as SE's deploy is to look at the whole building first in a qualitative manner and ask ourselves two questions. 1/ Can the design cope with the veritcal loads and equally important.. 2/ Can it resist the horizontal loads, wind and say heavy floors loading the walls off their centre of gravity.. called an eccentric load. 3/ We then work our way through the design, do further qualitative design, then detailed checks and go back and check everything again. In fairness to say a BC certifier they maybe don't have access or time to really lift the bonnet. But the bonnet must be lifted and any changes understood.. as if not this can be dangerous. Jumping quickly ahead to the element you are asking about. I had a quick intial scan at your info, could see some of the beam supports but I first focused on the masonry column. Is is stable? It looks like a cavity construction? Can it cope with the the possible ecentric loads from the beams and also the potential sideways loading from the glazing when the wind blows. For all, many masonry columns can carry lots of load until you introduce lateral wind load loads and /or eccentric loads from beams..suddenly they can lose 50% or more of their vertical load bearing capacity. @Gaf looks like you have some eccentric loads that you original SE never accounted for... as your builder has gone off and done their thing. Mind you that makes them the latest designer so probably have to carry the can for their design changes. I would want to first make sure that the masonry below the beams is stable as a failure here could be sudden and unpredictable. If you get you bit of local crushing at a beam ends or rotational deflection (torsional twisting) in the beams over the glass it may crack the glass say but no one tends trends to get hurt. But twisting of the beams is bad when you have say Hollow core slabs! Your builder may have significantly compromised the beam strength in terms of lateral buckling capacity. Placing the Hollo slabs with a full bearing on the top flange often allows you to treat the steel beam as being fully laterally restrained. Moving the Hollo beam rest postion to the bottom flange may have compromised the beam performance. I don't know enough about the loads from above but this is something I would want to know more about. The Hollow Core slabs. The bearing may be ok if the the beam flange is wide enough. Go and check if you have enough bearing.. and remember that the walls may be moving about on their founds. The steel beams must be checked again for lateral torsional buckling not least and the twisting effect needs a look at to see if it impacts on the padstone (missing) and the masonry column stability below. You builder is unlikely to be able to do this.. Now as the Hollow core slabs have been sat inside and on the bottom flange then they will introduce a twisting effect in the beam which will add local stress to the inside face of the masonry column.. which will tend to bend it outwards.. add the wind to that.. it needs checked. Lastly the padstones. Chances are you'll need them or maybe Engineering brick. But first I would want to make sure the Hollo slabs have adequate bearing and go from there. If I was you i would get an SE to check this and make sure it is all safe. It maybe will require some tweeks if it turns out all is not as it should be so doon't panic!4 points
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Padstones are needed under all structural steel. All elements of structure need FR. Any changes made by a contractor need to be approved by your SE.4 points
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@flanagaj, it's a rite of passage. It's a hardening (cintering?) process. On hearing of our application - and subsequent success, our immediate neighbours Were gratuitously rude - in person - in public made ridiculous Trump-like baseless claims about our intention to build told lies about our intentions to anyone who would listen made false representation to the Planning Process at an open public meeting nailed a communal gate shut, denying us access to a communal pathway across his property ( photo here on BH somewhere) trolled me here on Buildhub Eight years later they have forgotten their behaviour. Speak civilly, wave occasionally, chat now and then. One neighbour came to apologise, and ask for help. That took guts, and I admire him for it ( posted here on BH about that discussion) They embarrassed themselves, and want to forget. To me behaviour such as theirs is a simple symptom of their lack of emotional intelligence. And thus need to be forgiven. But not forgotten.4 points
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Chances are youāve got a plasterboard tent then especially with how much air flow you are getting through your sockets. itās very hard to resolve this once itās been fitted, you can try injecting flexible foam behind all around the perimeter at 100mm intervals, but itās not easy to get a perfect seal. either wet plastering the walls or having a properly airtight service void is the only true way of resolving this, but it would mean removing all of the wall boards and starting again.4 points
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Roof complete! Major relief. Third baby is due on the 16th of March. Scaffold came down yesterday. Next job is to finish building the porch, install the rest of the windows and complete the outer membrane. we have been lucky with the weather low wind and not much rain. Need to wind proof the membrane in case we get another storm soon.3 points
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RIGID INSULATION BOARDS ARE NOT SUITABLE BETWEEN TIMBERS OR IN CAVITY WALLS!!!!!!!! I must have said this maybe a bizzallion times !!! Hard to fight a billion pound industry, even if they do lie and burn people to death in their sleep.3 points
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Strong argument for cut roof and ridge beam separate to floor joists. Everything can be lifted one at a time by hand at those sizes.3 points
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Hi all I stumbled on some articles on heat pumps and thought this would be a useful group to join, to hopefully get some direction as possibly add things I have learned along the way. We have been living in Rural France and have found it impossible to get reliable people to finish work, be it electrical, plumbing, building etc. Much of this is a language issue, but even for the locals, they have similar difficulties - so doing what I can, myself. It is turning out to be quite a learning curve, which can be quite daunting as well as rewarding. Anyway looking forward to the ride3 points
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In that case I would have expected them to build the inner leaf first and then set the insulation boards clipping them tight to the inner leaf. How exactly are they fitting them at the moment? In my view they should be foamed to the inner blockwork, to eachother, around the wall ties, the foam trimmed and then all joints and exposed edges taped with foil tape. I've never seen it done though.3 points
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There is your answer. the conduit is probably crushed by a stone somewhere and sadly useless. For anyone reading, only use a much larger smooth sided rigid conduit. 50mm absolute minimum.3 points
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OK. One more turn at being reasonable. Respond to say their message has been received. That you believe you have dealt with all their issues but they have not responded to them. That If they have any new argument then you will be happy to receive it. Small claims judge is a proper judge. It is a small process but no less forbidding. The jusge will not look kindly on any new argument or evidence. It should all have been argued out already. They will look at each item in turn, not at the whole. Make sure you have easy- to-demonstrate proofs of every one of your points. The judge then adds up the sums and tells one of you to pay the other the difference, and who is to pay the court cost. The judge is perfectly happy to score 20 : nil. They don't get soft come item 20 unlike an adjudicator might. BUT if it gets remotely technical they will decide it needs expert reports and is not a small claims matter. Thus try to have a layman's argument plus a technical one. If any of your arguments are weak, compromise on them (only) pdq. Equally you must be ready to summarise your contra-costs. Don't put your papers up on here....they might be watching.3 points
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Get a quote. One thing electrical technicians hate doing is verification and sign off of others work.3 points
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The 'modern' kitchen design has been around since the late 50s/early 60s when exciting things like fridges started turning up. Is it time for us to re-think things? Looking around our present kitchen (and thinking about our new build kitchen design) I can't help thinking it's an ergonomic and design nightmare. Low cupboards 600mm deep that require you to get on hands and knees to empty stuff out so that you can reach the thing you want. High cupboards that you can't reach/see into and which require you to lean over the aforementioned lower cabinets, thus shortening your natural reach. Kettles/toasters/coffee makers/air fryers that have to either litter the work surface or hide in cupboards and be brought out each time you want to use them. And, perhaps the ultimate design failure, never a suitable place to put all those plastic Tupperware boxes and old Chinese takeaway containers and their lids that cascade out of the cupboard like an avalanche of plastic - regardless of how carefully you stack them. I don't have an immediate answer to all these issues but they annoy the hell out of me. Hopefully, someone with a more creative mind than mine can offer some suggestions...3 points
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An update (after the fact) Plastering finished in the open plan area this coming week (by others) DONE (see above) Remainder of stone cladding arrives and work begins to get the most inaccessible (high) parts put up before the scaffold gets taken away - this means cladding two 7m x 2m wide walls. It arrived and I did get the stonework done on the high parts Plumbing pipework ready for ASHP installation DONE Gabion basket and pad for ASHP to be installed on DONE Mist coat and first coat on plaster (SWMBO is at the ready) DONE Begin fitting upstairs UFH (Not done) Front door being fitted (January) by others DONE Take 3-4 days off for Xmas DONE and appreciated ASHP installation (January) by others, that will allow for hot water and the downstairs UFH to be available ... DONE Fit a temporary bathroom ... DONE Fit out utility room as temp kitchen ...DONE Its been a comfortable month in the house (in fact we are staying an extra few days while it is cold overnight!). We fitted an over bath shower, and done a lot of other work since. and that'll be part of the next blog entry.3 points
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Just wanted to send a message to say you seem surprisingly chipper given the absolute sh*t show in evidence here. So many people would just accept this as 'what it is', so kudos to you to get sorting it! I hope you retained a significant chunk of the Ā£Ā£ against the builder.3 points
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Hello Everyone, 66 year old avid DIYer here. Had a stab at most things over the years, mostly successful (but with the odd exception!), including framing, carpentry, floor-laying, electrics, plumbing, etc. Contemplating the purchase of a derelict croft house with some land a bit further north from where we live. Itās a wind and watertight empty shell / blank canvas in which I can see loads of potential, but needs a lot of work. Internal floor area is 36ā x 12ā, enough for an open plan living/kitchen area, one bedroom and a shower room. The small scale of it appeals to me, as Iāve not done a full renovation before. Iāve been googling loads of questions, many of which kept bringing me to this forum, so I thought I might as well join the conversation. Thanks for having me.3 points
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By thickness EPS gives 60% of the thermal insulation that PIR does, so to achieve the U Value that 300mm EPS provides, you need 180mm PIR. I said 200mm PIR as I'd personally be buying that in 2 x 100mm sheets. When I cost compared for bulk order, I could get 100mm EPS100 sheets for half the price of PIR sheets and I was comparing BBA Certified EPS100 (load bearing) with an equivalent, but not load bearing, PIR. Looking at what each are retailing for today it still seems to have the same price difference. At the time (2016), and apparently still the case today, EPS formwork are not priced publicly by the various suppliers, but are offered as part of an Engineering & Supply bundle. For me prices varied widely between the companies offering such bundles and if the bundles included installation the incremental cost for installation was far higher than you'd expect to pay with local resource. The price I ended up paying, after looking at all options available, was the equivalent to paying around 10% more for the same mĀ³ that I could purchase directly in sheet form, once I'd allowed a reasonable Engineering fee, so felt it not unreasonable as it included the EPS300 formers. I can see the benefit of buying a full package: Engineering, supply and installation, especially if it also includes the house frame on top, as that totally de-risks that structural build, but, you have to expect that to come with a large premium attached, and you'll be paying that premium on everything, ie the insulation, steel, concrete, UFH and labour. The best "full bundle" price I could get, including installation, was over 100% more than the price I paid using a local ground works company, PM'd by me, to install the Engineered raft by AFT, who supplied me the insulation from Springvale EPS.3 points
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I had a 5m tall almond tree growing right in the centre of the plot where my house is now situated. I got my groundworker to dig it up with his jcb, move it with a sling & replant it in a large hole elsewhere on the plot. It looked absolutely knackered - large vertical split on the trunk & many damaged branches. I gave it a severe pruning and next spring it flowered beautifully (similar to cherry blossom) & now 2 years later it looks remarkably healthy.3 points
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Cut it down now otherwise they might put restrictions on it. If they ask say it was damaged in the last storm.3 points
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Following the 2 excellent posts by @DOIGAN and @Stones Iām posting this as our Vent Axia model (408451) is different again and it might help someone else to be able to order the bearings before starting to take apart the unit. We are half way through. Bearings now on order 608-2Z from Bearing King (thanks for the recommendation). We heard a noise (humming, but way louder than normal) and had a weird smell (like burning but not quite, though could be the failed fan in the network switch - both problems turned up on the same day). Thanks to googling āMVHR weird noiseā this site came up! You canāt get to the fans without taking off the side panel. You canāt take off the side panel without taking it off the wall. And to do that you have to disconnect all the extract / intake ducts. The photos below start from once we got to this point. We identified which fan had the problem. When spinning them both one of them stopped a lot quicker. Was an effort just to get the fan housing out due to it being stuck in with lots of sealant. But here it is, finally out. Prised out with a flathead screwdriver. Then we removed the black rubber bit on the top. That took some prising out too once the screws were out. Then we pulled the section housing the circuit board off. Again, it didnāt come away easily. Then we popped the black button bit off The next bit was surprisingly hard as @Stones had said - the c-clip was really hard to remove. We used a couple of screwdrivers to force it open and a third to pop it up, and it bounced around the plant room fortunately landing at our feet. The first bearing took some effort to get out but it looks alright - we will still replace it as maybe the dirt around it is early signs that itās done. Part number easily seen. 608-2Z Then the magnet holding this section in was so strong it took a fair force from the other end to get it out and see the other bearing. This bearing was so hard to remove. Others have said they just popped out. Not ours. But this might be whyā¦. So weāve done as much as we can today. Hopefully the bearings will get here soon so we can rebuild it all whilst we sort of remember how toā¦ For interest, just out of 5 year warranty period, installed in 2018/2019 and powered up for the first time in November 2019. Huge thanks to previous posts without which weād not have known where to start and would have been buying an expensive replacement fan or, worse still, paying a Vent Axia engineer to replace the fan. Hope this helps someone with this model as it does look a bit different inside. Will update when we put it back together again.3 points
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Update: Bearings arrived yesterday (3 day delivery - excellent service from Bearing King) and last night after work both fans were fitted with new bearings (2 in each). Unit put back together and now back on the wall, in full working order. Thanks again for great posts to help us DIY fix this. No hideous noises. Runs smoothly and quietly again.3 points
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PIR avoid. Easy to do badly, difficult to do well. Would look at EPS beads, fully fills all voids, all gaps etc. make cavity as wide as practical. Minimum BR is pants3 points
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Yes, you call the installers back and tell them that the workmanship is shocking. Those frames should be arrow straight, zero excuses.3 points
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Ahhhh, the relaxing calm of the sabbath. Ok folks, this has been decided to be genuine enough, and anyone who isnāt interested please just click on something else, simples. No more head shaking, please. The mods will decide what stays or goes and what is or isnāt spam. Weāve been doing this reasonably well for many years, and our regular members report improper content and it gets flushed as required, and this means that this forum is quite a nice place to hang around on. All good, chill out folks, go get a roast beef dinner, andā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦..ābreatheā The management.3 points
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@Bramco @Big Jimbo WRS regs can be misinterpreted, but ultimately they do say any pipework through a wall has to be sleeved as noted above by @Nick Laslett However, much of this is now a moot point as the installation criteria laid out by the Heat Pump manufacturer specifies pipes do indeed have to be sleeved and insulated when going through walls At least that is good news...for me anyway ! As for the MCS, well what can I say! I recently spent a lot of time reading through their self promoting high standards material. I've concluded that almost any DIY person who can hold an hammer in one hand, and a lit ciggie in the other could install a heat pump to MCS Guidelines whilst reading a copy of the Beano. I was amazed that BC accept they have to leave standards in the hands of these kwangos as it's become so complicated and time consuming to enforce 'any' standard these days. There is a wide gap between bodging and satisfying regulations. If my example above is within any guidance then no wonder new builds from the large corporates are in such a state. I'm now on a long road seeking redress that I expect will take at least a year and involve various regulatory bodies. As I've already said, this is just one element from a catalogue of errors. Perhaps one day I can tell the full story. From your responses so far, I imagine jaws will hit the ground. Where I can, I will update this thread along the way.3 points
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We bought some of these for insulating the loft. Was very impressed with them. interms of comfort and efficiency. Can work out cheaper than using a decent disposable mask. JSP Force8 Half-Mask with PressToCheckP3 Dust Filters,Size medium,Conforms and Complies with safety standards EN 140 / EN 143,Suitable for: Construction,DIY,Water based Paint Spraying (BHT0A3-0L5-N00) : Amazon.co.uk: DIY & Tools3 points
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Electric boilers have always struck me as the most stupid idea. Why heat water with direct electricity in a big box and then pipe it to rooms via pipes into radiators? If you are going to heat with direct electric, just fit panel heaters. WHY the complication of an electric boiler? And most installs of an electric boiler just use a direct heated HW tank with an immersion heater, the boiler play no part. It would be just as absurd to use the boiler to pipe heat via an indirect coil to a hot water tank. The only electric boilers that make any sense are electric storage boilers and only if combined with something like an E10 tariff so you can heat the water at cheap rate and draw it at any time to heat the house. I suppose the only good point is having the pipes and radiators there, then there is a chance of relatively easily converting to an air source Heat Pump?3 points
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Hello all. I'm renovating, or more precisely completly rebuilding, a 300 square metre house in mid devon. 2 years in, about a third of the way through. Also currently building a garage /workshop in the garden.3 points
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I think you have two problems here. A large room with a floor like a sponge for absorbing the heat. Once up to temp it might not feel like it drops too much, but it's going to take a while to get up to temp, not having underfloor heating in it. That seems to be the preferred method to most. The detailing around your insulation at the joints seems poor (see picture). Foaming up the gaps like this would have made quite a difference. I'm guessing the cold spots are from gaps like this, From there it will travel down the walls behind the plasterboard, and put through the sockets.3 points
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Still up at roof level but I see light at the end of the tunnel with the roof. A couple of weeks and I should be able to get rid of the hire scaffold and then switch over to my own. last week I installed my first window, 1 down 23 to go.. What this project needs is a one man band joiner. I need someone I can work with together. What I find is most companies work as a pair which leaves me redundant and paying twice as much. I would rather employ one person for a long time rather than multiple people for a short time. This is especially true with theses passive house style builds as a lot of time can be lost scratching heads with unfamiliar details.3 points
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Hello! Thank you very much for your participation! It was actually deliberate. These are called "attention checks" and these checks help us determine the percentage of participants who are carefully reading the questions, which directly impacts how reliable our data is. If a large percentage selects differently, we know we need to be cautious about the overall results.3 points
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If these are not wet rooms, and the shower trays are modular (vs wet-room formers under tiles) then just use MR plasterboard and tank the bejesus out of it. Tanking kits are cheap as chips and offer outright resilience to any water ingress beyond the tiles / grout / seals. @BotusBuild Have a scoot through a few of these, saves me getting a sore thumb and there's a load of gold in them there hills for ya :2 points