Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/09/19 in Posts

  1. Why make it so complicated? Willis heaters go in, paralleled up in qty to match max heat demand + 50%, on a recirculating loop ( or through a small low loss header for a very small dwelling ), and just let the dwelling suckle heat from that loop as it wants. Call for heat kicks in the heaters, and they go off or into 'satisfied state' until the recirculated water temperature drop low enough for the willis stat to kick back in. Done a few like this recently where there was no gas, no room ( or desire ) for an ASHP, and low / infrequent demand. Works really well. Keep it simple here Heating; Electric panel radiators are cheap as chips, and will heat the place almost instantly / on demand, and are very well suited if infrequent use is typical. Something as small as ~2kW units ( x2 for even spread of heat if more of a spread of heat is necessary ) which will kick in / out thermostatically as required. I'd buy the ones that have separate wall mounted wifi room stats / timers for ease of control & to prevent overheating the space aka economic running. These can run off 13a plugs with no special needs for a big electricity supply. Forget UFH unless you go for an ASHP, but that would seriously have to be justified by the usage of the dwelling mandating such a complex and costly setup? What is it's intended long-term use? Hot water; Fit a size 6 Uniq ( Sunamp ) and you'll only need a 3kW electric supply to get high pressure DHW on a 22mm supply That will tee off to do basin / sink / shower from one source and no need for a discharge pipe and G3 annual inspection. Note: the Sunamp isn't a hot water tank it's an instant water heater / thermal store, so no actual 'stored water' to speak of. Next to no losses in comparison to an UVC, and a far, far more simplified installation with prob half the space or less taken up. It'll go into a kitchen unit as its only ~580mm deep x ~370mm wide x ~650mm high. Near zero maintenance too, as its only requires a single tiny expansion vessel that can be checked in minutes ( by anyone who's competent to do so ). Electric boilers, and even worse electric combi's are very electricity hungry. If you had an electric boiler and a big electric shower you'd need a big electricity supply to match. Fit a big electric shower and it'll also be massively dependant on cold mains pressure / flow rate. It will suffer to a point that it's useless if anything is running off the same cold mains supply ( in the main building ) at the same time, and you'll end up running it on it's lowest setting most of the time just to get a decent stable temperature out of it. God help you if someone goes to use the kitchen sink whilst you're in the shower!!! The only way to combat that issue is with a 100-200L cold mains accumulator, which is a BIG vessel to try and integrate into somewhere where space is already tight.
    4 points
  2. Forgot to update you with the finished result. Very happy!!!
    4 points
  3. that works both ways --they can,t make you put a tree back up --only make you plant another one do what you need now would be my view and course of action if no TPO in force
    2 points
  4. It's not 'burnt' and it's not exactly 'wood' but we've used a wood/plastic composite cladding from Envirobuild. It's not far off being black and, we think, looks pretty sharp. It's also a good 'wood' imposter.
    1 point
  5. For ease of installation you could hang the posi's by the top cord directly onto the steel. No need for any timber packing then. Top chords are 35mm deep. That will give a void top and bottom. This is what I did and its worked well. My posi's were 195mm, steel was only 162mm. This means the steel is below the bottom of the joist by 2mm which will require a bit of work come plasterboarding time but I think that is easier than packing the steel and 60+ hangers. I wouldn't worry about people telling you need a professional to spec this. My 'professionals' weren't paid enough to think about this level of detail.
    1 point
  6. South would be preferable as you will be forever cleaning filters otherwise.
    1 point
  7. If you don’t ask you won’t know!, if you offered to “sympathetically” repair the wall at your expense and in the process lower just the last bit to aid visibility everyone is a winner, if they refuse you have lost nothing, at least you know where you stand. Edit to add, if you offered to do this work on their wall to aid existing visibility (before applying for planning permission) they may be more responsive.
    1 point
  8. flow switch needs about 1.5 litres per minute to trigger a combi - it’s a flow switch not a pressure switch.
    1 point
  9. Then fell what you want before getting the council involved.
    1 point
  10. I was going off point 6 ... details not submitted ... plus the fact of Approval, and thinking that that left Reserved Matters for those items. I guess that that it could be that there are conditions we have not seen. Though I think the same points about timings probably apply if Detailed is in place. F
    1 point
  11. Secondary heat Ex is pumped, so no pump = no hot water too
    1 point
  12. IMO the convert to resi for 18 months is a red herring for reasons you state. If you want some revenue before the project I would say rent it out to someone for storage or storage + admin office, which the Council have probably acknowledged as an existing use by granting you Outline on that assumption. That will bring maybe 5-10k in Enfield for no trouble on your part. I would worry more about the Outline Permission expiring, if the chap still has that stuff to do. If the PP runs down to 6-12 months left, it is arguably worth less. Have your Detailed Application ready. You probably need to speed him up. Ferdinand
    1 point
  13. How big is the studio and how often will it be used ..?? Also, how well insulated is it ..? I would go with a small under sink unit feeding kitchen sink and basin in the bathroom, and a decent 10kw electric shower. For heating I would swap to a split air con unit that can do both heating and cooling, and an electric towel rail in the shower room to keep that warm. If you stay away from cold tiles and go with a vinyl/Lino type product for the bathroom too, then tile heating wouldn’t be required.
    1 point
  14. Buildhub loan one out primarily for people doing UFH runs. I made mine:
    1 point
  15. Not a criticism but I'm guessing you didn't use a decoiler? Pipe having it's own natural lay etc (like cable).
    1 point
  16. I fitted downlights in my soffits and clipped the cable to the rafters.
    1 point
  17. +1 In addition to planning permission I suspect there will be a lot of other issues just to make it habitable and legal for renting out.. New water, gas and electric supplies and meters needed. Electric circuits need separating from existing house and connecting to new meter and Consumer Unit. Heating system ? New boiler required? New sewer connection (existing WC uses sewer connection of existing house) Possibly other things to meet building regs such as... Exterior doors (fire regs). Sound proofing of wall between new and existing house. EPC (needed for renting)
    1 point
  18. Your right Russell, just wish people would do what they promise and crack on.
    1 point
  19. We did the same Peter. He/she has been sleeping in the house for several weeks, after initially adding leaves to the hay we'd provided. Last night we had a our first frost of the year and for ten minutes (just before 3.30am) he was in and out every 30 seconds or so with mouthfuls of leaves.
    1 point
  20. For anyone considering electric heating, you should look at Air Source Heat Pumps rather than resistance heating. For every KW of electricity they use, you get between 3 and 4 KW of heat.
    1 point
  21. You might be right. Forget leading or trailing, does it say suitable for LED?
    1 point
  22. I would get them to remove it as it would be un-enforcable. give the tossers something to do.
    0 points
  23. Good point. You never know,it might be filled up with hard core. Or another sub genre of rave music:))
    0 points
  24. I don't think you realise just how restricted a badly designed, 48 square metre, 2 bed, terraced house can be. Even windows get in the way.
    0 points
  25. Ours is an extra wide one bedroom model which makes space for a bath plus a separate shower cubical. It is too nice hence a lowered incentive to complete the self build.
    0 points
  26. It’s kind of like pubic hair . It’s all a bit of a mess but no one sees it so you don’t straighten it all out .
    0 points
  27. Welcome to THE forum. Just in case there is any confusion / concern you dont need to lay the bricks upside down just because you are on the otherside of the world?. (We are mostly NOT flat earthers here.)
    0 points
  28. Actually that's got to be a "bitch" doing it on your own?
    0 points
  29. "begging" to be covered by a suspended ceiling? ?
    0 points
  30. I think it was more like thermal moss ?
    0 points
  31. you got any herons?--they love ducklings
    0 points
This leaderboard is set to London/GMT+01:00
×
×
  • Create New...