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Everything posted by Nickfromwales
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Cooker Hood Ducting (Kitchen Extractor Fan)
Nickfromwales replied to MortarThePoint's topic in Tools & Equipment
Any of this get you out of the đ©? https://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Main_Index/Ventilation_Index/Ducting_Flat_6/index.html -
12mm is the smallest gap I would ( now ) allow for ( after being force-fed window installation doâs and donâts ). It was only after having no choice other than to step in and help a client out with a ( now evaporated ) window companies aftermath(s) that I now know this. The fixings are cranked or nearly straight, so you choose the correct brackets / fixings for the job, simples. Peo0lecoften turn up with whatever theyâve got left over / whatever saves them buying the correct stuff in, so question everything and settle for nothing less than the correct fixings and the job done properly.
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Can RockWool Touch Wunda Metal Spreader Plates?
Nickfromwales replied to Rehan Saeed's topic in Underfloor Heating
Rock wool is fine, the sound issue is non-factual. I recommend installing 20mm too much of the rock wool to make the plates become a little âdistendedâ and promote great surface to surface contact. My preference is to get to the underside and staple the plates to the deck boards, using thousands of staples to keep things in place for the duration. Can you access these from underneath? -
Usually indicates that the openings werenât big enough for windows? Nope. Iâve recently had to organise the removal and refitting of a load of Rational and Velfac units, and the original fitting crew used âuniversalâ plates which were a complete bag of shit. The replacement fitters I drafted in took one look at them and just conformed what I thought. They then produced the proper brackets which actually lock into the frames by design, almost not needing screws at all, by offering them up parallel and then inserting into the profile of the frame, and then the bracket gets rotated 90° to lock the bracket into the frame. Rock solid. Anything less is a huge bodge. Drilling through the frames with concrete ( or other ) screws is the very last option imho.
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Backer boards for large format tiles
Nickfromwales replied to LinearPancakes's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
If you can tell me youâll notice gaining 2.5mm then Iâll buy the drinks đ. Youâve asked about acoustics, the 15mm PB will help. In case youâre snowed under, Iâll put this into context; eg thatâs less than the thickness of 4 credit cards. -
The garage temp wouldn't drop if you vent the 'very cold' exhaust air to atmosphere. You'd need a transfer grille in the external wall of the equivalent size eg to input the equal volume of 'fresh' air as the exhaust expels ( I'd recommend 20% bigger to stave off resistance and risk air being pulled from the house ), and this would then only allow air as cold / damp as outdoors to arrive at the garage interior. To be perfectly honest, I think the heatpump will suck the available heat energy out of the garage in a matter of minutes, and the exercise is flawed / pointless as the CoP will then drop like a rock.
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Backer boards for large format tiles
Nickfromwales replied to LinearPancakes's topic in Bathrooms, Ensuites & Wetrooms
First question is, have the studs been installed at 400 o/c? 600mm centres is no good for a bathroom. If so, Iâd say MR PB at 15mm thickness and tanking will be bombproof đŁ . Thatâs how Iâve done every single bathroom that I have been in charge of the specification for, and thatâs served me well for over 25 years of bathroom fitting / tilling. Just make sure you have a PB ( drywall ) screw ( 32mm long ) going into the studs every 120mm and itâll be rock solid. -
Fernox TF1 was my weapon of choice. Thought the expensive ones arenât worth the money.
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Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
Yup. Hot water via diverter is numero-uno, EV second, batteries last if you can 1000% justify it. -
Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
Likewise. -
Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
Big hairy load of bollocks. PM me your plans and a Google earth image showing north and Iâll work it out for you. Then, you will be buying the beers maâ G.đđș -
Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
If a 4kWp system is generating less than 3.48kWp at year 30 it will be replaced. It is very simple. There is no grey area, just facts. No smoke and even fewer mirrors. The situation is; the panel ( manufacturers ) wonât let this happen. Underwritten by a company which doesnât want provoke disgruntlement, or have to run around replacing thousands of systems at their own cost. -
Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
But very easy to consume the residual ~2kW in winter, that which the 10kW system will then only provide. Or less. Or none. If you want winter generation you have to max out and accept the export in winter, itâs just a matter of finding the âsweet spotâ. Economy of scale says itâs cheaper to put more on when youâve mobilised a company and paid for scaffolding etc, so Iâm an advocate of this policy, and with EVâs on the horizon, or already owned, you cannot have too much PV afaic. If you have âhis and hersâ EVâs then leaving one routinely tethered during the day, whenever possible, is a great way of deleting a domestic battery from the capital expense, and absolutely maxing out on self-consumption. My philosophy on the âbigger is betterâ approach is as so; For all the electricity you then donât buy in summer, plus the hot water you donât heat, plus then the increased longevity of your boiler / ASHP ( from it going into âhibernationâ for around 6 or more months of the year ) all added together goes into a hypothetical glass jar. So you have made yourself energy rich in the summer months / times of discernible generation. You then take that saving and use it to off-set your wither heating costs / inevitable draw from the grid during times of poor generation and reliance on the grid. That âpotâ is as good as cash, so can go towards either gas or electricity based heating systems. After that âpotâ has been exhausted, only then do you go back to absolute grid reliance ( less the 0 - 25% winter solar generation ) making for a very wise investment, imho. Factor in the few quid for export, which can be improved via Agile etc, and itâs a no-brainier to go largeâ. Further consider that the PV will go much further in winter if itâs diverted into a heat pump, so that residual ~2kW could then be producing as much as 8kW of heat energy. If the pockets are deep enough, âgo largeâ. Amen. -
Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
The âpremiumâ panels we use ( Solarwatt ) have a 30 year performance guarantee. That states that they will still be a MINIMUM of 87% efficient 3 decades from now or theyâll be replaced for free. That warranty + guarantee is underwritten by BMW ( as they own Solarwatt ), eg âworth the paper itâs written onâ. So my panels will still be up in the 90th percentile in 30 years from now or theyâll be replaced for free. I expect my panels will still be putting out around at least 50% in a half century from now. The longevity is attributed to the glass-glass design, where the solar element is hermetically sealed away from atmosphere, bonded between two layers of glass ( laminated ). Itâs the only panel I know of that can go coastal without any degradation, whereas âothersâ will state not to install them within 12 - 15 miles of the coast. For a lot of installs the RoI will just get better and better; as the price of electricity goes up, your break even comes down. All the surveys we do allow 50% or more redundancy in the purchase price of electricity, ( IIRC that assumes 17p/kWh ) so a) the breakeven point ( RoI ) is actually much better than we state, and b) the self-consumption figures we state are based on 50%, whereas most are using a lot more âin-houseâ and managing / minimising their export far more scrupulously, FURTHER reduced the breakeven point. The year that youâd break even would be just into double-digits in most scenarios, if youâve a straightforward mono-pitch single array, with prices going up by around ÂŁ1k if the array(s) are fragmented over a couple / few elevations ( so have to be multiples of strings and all optimised ), but as electricity prices go up, your breakeven point comes down. That will continue to get better and better as time goes by. Time for you to dust of what you think is a poor investment old boy -
Solar Quote
Nickfromwales replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Environmental Materials & Construction Methods
About ÂŁ8,500 worth of kit if NOT optimised, so ~ÂŁ4,500 - ÂŁ5,000 installation costs ( not labour costs ). A bit heavy tbh as a standing seam âon roofâ is a pretty simple install if all on a single mono pitch elevation? -
"Modern" radiator design and controls?
Nickfromwales replied to mjsx's topic in Central Heating (Radiators)
TRVâs are cheap and reliable, and reasonably accurate tbh. Been fitting central heating for nearly 30 years so Iâve installed âa fewâ of them. Manifolds are fine, done plenty of them to rads via actuators / wall-mounted room stat per room, but a bit OTT tbh. I mostly employ this type of system strategically in major developments / builds / refurbishments so youâre not continuously draining down and re-filling as the project progresses. Why are you so averse to standard series plumbing? Copper pipe with soldered joints are good for a minimum of 30 years, and I have hundreds of these types of installs under my belt without issue. Yes the odd leak here and there at the point of commission, but no different to any other system. Guys installed with Pressfit for me the other day, 2 failed joints, and a PITA to cut back and re-make the duff ones as the pipe gets compromised with the compression of the joint. Soldered joints; just re-flux and sweat it again ( if it has leaked from the first fill up ). Zero manifolds, additional pumps and controls / manifolds wiring centres etc if you install âtraditionallyâ. Remember that you can go for smart TRVâs and âwhole of houseâ smart heating controls for not much money. -
Dead simple. As you say, it just gets retrofitted. It gets inserted into the correct sized gap and âworks itâs magicâ from there. Your brickie will need to be very meticulous when running / returning the brickwork and they need to leave you the correct, continuous gapping to allow this retrofit.
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On-site storage for clothes, gloves, etc?
Nickfromwales replied to Drellingore's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Amazon for those vacuum sealed big bags? -
Recommend ASHP experts in North Wales
Nickfromwales replied to connick159's topic in Other Heating Systems
I can ask a mate, but tbh Iâve not done a job in Wales for over 4 1/2 years đ”âđ« so a bit âdetachedâ from my old pool of fitter / mates in the trade here theses days. Iâve cut a fresh set of grooves in the bloody Severn bridge. @connick159 what make is the ASHP -
Service penetrations
Nickfromwales replied to eandg's topic in Energy Efficient & Sustainable Design Concepts
Make slightly oversized holes for the flexis, and use Illbruck foam around. Leave to cure and cut flush to PIR. Then foam for bigger / CT1 for smaller, inside the ducts, then tape. -
Self leveling compound for summer house/gym
Nickfromwales replied to Drew1000's topic in Floor Structures
Yup. Defo not good as a final floor surface as itâs typically quite friable. An LVT or mats will give you a nice surface and, as said, take the chill off the concrete. Look to installing a split AC unit for heating and cooling? -
Fully loaded / no satellite manifolds is my go-to for every plumbing installation we do. I wonât deviate from that. I would drill at around a 60° angle and go for 5x 52mm core holes, with the holes ending up tight against the underside of the slab, and insert 50mm waste pipe into each hole as a sleeve. Youâd leave a pier of 150mm of block remaining between each hole for âstructural integrityâ. Youâll get a lot of individual runs through the 50mm sleeve and itâll be easier to drill fewer, larger holes, so maybe drill 5 holes. Use a 16mm or 18mm x 1000mm drill bit to get the angle correct, using it as a pilot / guide only, and have a couple of attempts ( if required ) until you get the entry and exit holes exactly where you want them. Remove the drill bit from the drill and re-insert it into the best hole, leaving it protruding by 3-400mm or more; eg so it gives you a line to use as a visual angle finder whilst youâre core drilling. You then just keep the drill at the matching angle whilst drilling, so you donât go astray. Yes, starting off the core drill at an angle will be a bastard, so, you get a piece of 7x2â timber and pre-drill into it with a wood hole saw, 5x 52mm @ 60° and affix it to the wall. Start the 5 core holes off, drilling 100mm or so into the block for each hole, them stop and remove the timber guide. Itâll make drilling the rest of the way through easier as the dust / debris can fall out sooner. Bingo bango. When laying the pipes through, strategise installing the 10mm pipes first, 2 or 3 per hole, so they can be dressed in into clips. Then have the 15mm pipes lay atop those to make the bottleneck of pipes on the vertical wall better organised / flush to the vertical wall (as the bigger pipes will have the longer bending radius ).
