Redbeard
Members-
Posts
1434 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Redbeard's Achievements
Advanced Member (5/5)
413
Reputation
-
I have never used them but I believe others on here have used: https://www.daemmstoffhandel.de/de/luftdichtigkeit-dampfbremsen/feuchtevariable-dampfbremsen-73/. I don't know the practicalities, but someone who has used them may chip in.
- 17 replies
-
- building regs
- insulation
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
I'm not quibbling with that as a general principle, but it was my N-facing one which 'died', not the W-facing one installed at the same time which gets extremely hot in the afternoon sun (even as I type, in early March).
-
Oww! Yes, definitely failed unit. I'm gloomy enough about one of mine failing in year 11 of a 10-year warranty 😞, but yes, you should be covered without question. Who installed them - you or the supplier?
-
sliding door threshold detail with external wall insulation?
Redbeard replied to Ed_'s topic in Doors & Door Frames
Any metal fabricator should be able to make you what you need. Try EWIStore: https://ewistore.co.uk/shop/external-wall-insulation/cms-810-120/ -
Definitely sounds like it!! What 'mechanism' are they invoking to claim that interaction/result? Sounds like a possible boat-lifting/dropping device in an area of London in the Tower Hamlets area.
-
Thinks... Or are the tiles on counter-battens and battens so that the vent path is from eaves to top of wall?
-
But the dwg shows a ventilated void. One assumes that is to keep the timber frame 'happy'. You have not got that, it would appear, and the architect, not having seen the builder achieve what the dwg says they should achieve (a ventilated void), as far as I can see, is of the view that it's to a 'satisfactory standard'. I can accept that a cut-in flashing can be OK (though see my earlier comment re render-board and the likely depth of the 'chase') but it neither satisfies you aesthetically nor provides the ventilated void (AFAICS) which the architect specified. The 'finish' may be to a satisfactory standard (to the architect, but not to you, the client) but the 'middle' -the provision of a ventilated void - isn't there, as far as I can see from a none-too-close-up pic. Please correct me if there is some other sort of vent provision in what has been provided. Oh, and almost as an aside, out of interest, what happens at the other end(s) of the 'continuous vent' marked on the detail? To explain, while it appears that you may not have the 'in', do you have the 'out' at the top? The pic does not go high enough for us to see.
-
... or is it just out of sight? There appears to be a slight 'shadow', which might be a flashing, but the camera angle is not quite right to see. Is your architect engaged to draw and specify only, or to have a supervisory role? If the latter then the arch't should be able to tell you what has been built and what should have been built. How was the contractor engaged? If it was effectively 'build this (house) according to these (plans)' then you can reasonably argue that they haven't.
-
I may have misread the dwg. It seems like, as drawn, there's a ventilated void, meaning that the render must be on a renderboard on battens. If a typical renderboard is no more than 15mm thick (and often less) then there's precious little to grind into. Or was the detail changed and the EWI was rendered directly onto the insulant, in which case it is not built as drawn and cannot function (in a 'vented fashion') as intended. Or have I read it all wrong? Is the answer to the mystery in 'E.W.3'?
-
Standing seam vs Slate for pitched roof
Redbeard replied to Mrog's topic in Roofing, Tiling & Slating
Exactly. One more trade to find and wrangle (and worry about if their credentials are not tip-top). Find a good slate roofer and stick to slate. It'll look lovely! (But please don't quote me on that if it doesn't!! 😉). Much more chance of finding a local slater whose work you can look at than a local standing-seam contractor ready to do a small one-off, I would guess. -
Standing seam vs Slate for pitched roof
Redbeard replied to Mrog's topic in Roofing, Tiling & Slating
Judging (only) by a few posts on here re difficulties with quality on standing seam roofs I wonder if you might have things against you - not least a roofer wanting to 'get out of bed' for 20m2, when there are full houses to be done. Or I may be too pessimistic - 20m2 may be just enough to fill that small gap left after the last job... -
That sounds OK, then. How about all the other 'potentially weak' areas (junctions, intersections and so on)? If you've been taping and sealing with a vengeance then you may be OK. I am not sure what you mean by: I think of dry-lining as a whole-wall treatment. Can you elaborate? You say the cavity wall is rendered. What is the internal wall 'treatment' - hard plaster, or dot-and-dab plasterboard? If the latter, is it 'true dot-and-dab', or full perimeter beads and cross-hatchings?
-
If that means you can feel 'something of a draught' (at atmospheric pressure) from the sockets I think I'd be a bit worried about other areas. Who has it been built by? Yourself with a concentration on air-tightness, or a general builder with no specific air-tightness 'leanings'?
-
Full house renovation and retrofit guidance
Redbeard replied to fisnik's topic in House Extensions & Conservatories
I realise you will probably be there for life, but just in case you ever need to sell, might I suggest that you try to 'buy' that 50mm? A client of mine did exactly that, though they at least knew who owned the land. In the case of a 'shared road' it may not be so straightforward to find the 'owner' to buy from.
