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Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/11/18 in Posts

  1. Oh god I have a funny one about sacking a painter, it probably won’t sound as funny in print, but I still chuckle as I think about it. So the painter had well and truly annoyed me, so he was going to be leaving from a top floor window if he ever showed up, i spent an hour going around the house and collected all his tools and stacked them in the drive for if he ever showed up, an hour later he appeared so I made a sarcastic remark about being 2 hours late, he made the mistake of saying something stupid back, so I picked up his tools, buckets rollers steps and proceeded to throw them at him across the road, tools flying everywhere the road littered with rollers and brushes, I launched a couple of milk crates at him but he was managing to bob and weave as the barrage of things rained down. As I was in full flow a van pulled up with the carpet layers on board, one of them lent out the window and said to my mate who was leaning on a shovel watching “should we come back later “. Cool as a cucumber I turned round and said, hang on lads I will be finished in a minute. Well You had to be there to appreciate it. One of my most outstanding moments in life.
    4 points
  2. Very good it reminds me of Micheal Atherton had just gone out to bat for England His wife answered his phone Told the selector he had just gone out to bat But added I’m sure he will be back in a few minutes
    3 points
  3. Why would you not worry about items you couldn’t see? If they have an important function they are surely just as important whether you can see them or not? Form over function? Plus things you can’t see are often more hellish to correct later if there is an issue.
    3 points
  4. For England see page 30 of Approved Doc B: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/485420/BR_PDF_AD_B1_2013.pdf Either the garage floor needs to slope toward the outside and away from the door into the house (no minimium slope specified) or you need a step of at least 100mm. The idea is to stop spilled fuel flowing into the house.
    2 points
  5. I solved this with rolled up balls of chicken wire, with a bit of heavy gauge fencing wire threaded through the centre and twisted back in itself. What you do it feed the pipes, cables etc through the ducts, then poke the ball of chicken wire down, with the heavy gauge wire poking up. Then use expanding foam to seal the duct on top of the chicken wire, again with the heavy gauge wire poking out. Do this at both ends of every duct, although there's no need for foam on the outside ends. The ball of chicken wire should act as a pretty effective rodent barrier. If you ever need to run another cable or pipe in the duct, you can just pull the ball of chicken wire out using the heavy gauge fencing wire as a handle. The foam seals the ducts up reasonably well, but doesn't adhere that well to the inside of the duct surface, so can be pulled out (I've already had to do this to one to run another cable in). I finished off over the foam with some airtightness tape inside the house, but I don't think it's really needed, the foam does a good enough job.
    2 points
  6. It isn't just developers. I suspect that the small family firm I engaged to do the plasterboarding at my house cut corners when fitting ceiling insulation. It's an attitude - they either have it or they don't. If you find someone with the right attitude, stick to them like glue, and cheerfully pay them a bit more than the alternative if necessary.
    2 points
  7. If he’s rough after 40 year It’s a good job you didn’t get him a few years back
    2 points
  8. We're about to open our holiday let and need to decide what we're offering in the way of TV. People are only going to be staying for a few days at a time so simplicity is key. A good proportion of visitors will be from overseas as well which could complicate things and make written instructions less useful. Terrestrial reception is very poor and a dish sounds like too much trouble- no guarantee of getting a good line of sight anyway. We use a Fire Stick ourselves and find it very intuitive. Not without its glitches, and removal of support for YouTube is a big step backwards. Any other streaming devices to consider? As I said, ease of use is everything. I'm told people will often want to log into their own Netflix accounts, so actual content provision isn't that important and I'm sure free to air stuff will be good enough.
    1 point
  9. You can buy an MVHR core for about £150 that just needs fans adding. You could use that as the basis for a home built MVHR that you can expand over time.
    1 point
  10. 1 point
  11. agreed I would level it on the grounds of a crime against architecture. It looks like a 1990's office entrance ..that some donkey has added a few bay windows by accident. and as for them dorma's ..they look "stuck on" ...they appear to be manufactured with the same material as a stealth aircraft ...(intentional?) ...but sadly it failed will this be on grand designs ? ....not as long as i have a hole in my ass-phalt suggested improvement option 1
    1 point
  12. I had a conversation regarding this with a BCO and they said as long as the fire door has a threshold that would stop spills he would be happy (this was for a Scottish property).
    1 point
  13. Being on site as much as possible is critical, otherwise its all on faith, a faith and trust which needs to be earned. Don't be afraid to state at the outset that you'll be on them like velcro, and tell them loud and clear that you'll only accept the very best of quality and finish. If their top lip starts to quiver at that point, its bye bye. Clearly and firmly set out your expectations at the very outset, before a spanners been turned or a single nails been knocked in.
    1 point
  14. Get the architect to add a paragraph to the tender that states to each company “please include a list of any items you would normally include with a price breakdown for each item” That means if anyone has missed anything - or you want to compare additional items - then you have the info.
    1 point
  15. Never noticed...it's all about the choonz!
    1 point
  16. Great advice all! I've been talking to a few builders / timber frame providers off the back of recommendations only and plan to get out to visit / see their work while I wait for planning to come through. I'm happier that I can specify a preferred timber framed provider despite what the Architect stated so I'll be sticking to my guns there. Then I plan to be onsite every day to check as far as I'm able that there is no messing around. Getting that tender specification right sounds like I should pay careful attention there.....
    1 point
  17. I'm concerned about a smart tv becoming obsolete very quickly. The one I have was my in laws' and is already outdated. We have a Nespresso and the local broadband is being upgraded a we speak. Like you,I don't really rate TV- more of a Radio 4 type
    1 point
  18. @Nickfromwales and @SteamyTea this is all remarkably helpful. A lot of homework you've set me. thank you.
    1 point
  19. Luke @ MPC Services very helpful - 2 separate units best bet he says. Thanks @PeterW
    1 point
  20. I like the Roku box, I use it connected to a Samsung TV. I found it better than: Roku Stick - it's faster Amazon Fire - Roku box has more channels that I wanted Apple TV - Roku box has ore channels that I wanted Samsung Smart TV - Roku box is far quicker/responsive
    1 point
  21. I thought this was an establishment for selling tap water by the £5 glass in Notting Hill ?.
    1 point
  22. Or as therapist’s notes.
    1 point
  23. A lot of the plastering companies have an army of fillers that go in after mist costing and fill everything i skimed our five bed bed in a week Paited our last weekend Just a couple of knocks to fill were the skirtings have pushed the corner in
    1 point
  24. I need to have serious words with the person who recommended him, or send her to Specsavers
    1 point
  25. Nooooo, that's not right. Make sure you get an architectural specification telling the builder exactly what to use. [Link to specifications article by architect removed] But we've done a couple projects one without the specification and one with. It makes so much difference to have a spec as it dictates the quality of your build. Your builder will always use the cheapest materials otherwise which will kill your project... But! The only items which were up to the builder in the project we did with the spec were items we couldn't see and did not worry too much about in terms of quality e.g. pipework, underfloor heating system, type of studwork. That way we got cheaper spec and items on things that didn't bother us.
    1 point
  26. Another attempted piss-taker, clearly. Should have dug down and lived in peace. Tit.
    1 point
  27. Something dropping from a great height? This then. A tenuous link but I just love the track. It gets me "going":
    1 point
  28. Take the lid off the manhole whilst your doing it and plug the outlet to the sewer with a couple of bin liners folded into a ball / plug . Leave that off to ensure any stench stays outside. Dont do this if anyone's needing to send U571 to a watery grave .
    1 point
  29. We are rarely asked for sand and cement now Simply because most jobs are specified Breathable Which sand and cement isn’t ive used 300 bags of K tend on ours A weeks work for two of us With my wife taping up Quoins and stone cils most St will tell you that you need a base coat and mesh which will rack up the cost If you are on concrete block You are wasting money We never have any problems with K rend colour match or Stucco Manache We don’t quote for jobs that are specified Webber Batch colours vary wildly Go for a company that are using these renders all the time Not some plasterer that will gain exsperience on your pride and joy
    1 point
  30. We give a ten year guarentee But it’s a product guarentee Agaist discolouration If it any consolation It’s rare to have any problems with through coloured render after six months On the rare occasion that we get a bad colour match We Persue the supplier for the materials a stand the rest
    1 point
  31. Have you chosen the noise for the flush yet?
    1 point
  32. Like I'd have something as naff as that in my bathroom!
    1 point
  33. And here is just the thing to complement that! ? https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/B074P3F7JL/ref=mp_s_a_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1525987374&sr=8-5&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=toilet+light&dpPl=1&dpID=51hSF7zH6uL&ref=plSrch
    1 point
  34. You don't want to go above 1:40 as it will be too steeply sloped, or below 1:80 as it won't be steep enough, so aim for 1:60, but be flexible depending on obstacles etc
    1 point
  35. Hmmmm. Two boilers in a house with an ACH of 1 or less ?!? . Decide if your going with PV before deciding anything else. It's a complete game changer for the space heating and DHW system design. You could go ASHP > UFH & ASHP > UVC and just leave it at that, but if gas is available I'd say use it. A decent high-flow gas combi will give 2 reasonable showers simultaneously, but they won't be blasting you for sure, but then you have nowhere to store excess PV generation. Sunamps are great for storage of PV / E10 and they're compact too, around 3-4 times smaller than the equivalent cylinder. Capital cost is higher, standing losses considerably lower, but in a passive level dwelling they can be the only wet heating device you need. Weigh up the cost of the gas install, standing charges, then you'll need a buffer tank for combi > UFH, or gas system boiler > thermal store ( TS will buffer the heating and provide DHW in one device ) plus annual servicing for life, life expectancy of the boiler and its service costs over 20 years and you soon have good argument to stay clear of gas unless you ABSOLUTELY need it. ( Cooking on gas is still achievable by using a single 47kG bottle of LPG ). PV or no PV, that needs to be decided first. .
    1 point
  36. These would look amazing sat in the floor beneath some walk on glass ...
    1 point
  37. I'd take a step back here and think about fundamentals first. If you haven't worked with them previously: Can you see his three most similar projects to the one you're proposing. Can he provide three names and contact details for references should you need them. Are they RIBA / ACA registered Will they provide Building regulations issue drawings, or just planning (the difference is enormous). WHich RIBA stage will they be working up to. What form of contract. Will they project manage. What form of construction are they comfortable with. Have they tried modern forms, or have only done two-skin masonry. Then if they haven't got nervous answering all those, move on to discussing your design. Hope it helps, and hope you get what you need.
    1 point
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