Jump to content

Redbeard

Members
  • Posts

    1402
  • Joined

  • Last visited

2 Followers

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Redbeard's Achievements

Advanced Member

Advanced Member (5/5)

403

Reputation

  1. But it easily could with a heavy, out of balance thud. The proper fixings aren't expensive at all, allow you to tighten it fully and I'd think add some hygiene advantage too. I am wholly in agreement with you. I was not suggesting that screws-only is good practice; simply that it doesn't always go wrong - immediately. The plastic 'hats' (less 'top-hat' than the description I gave) are the right thing.
  2. I have seen 'upside-down top-hat' plastic washers used, but equally I have just had steel screws. Not had a pan break yet...
  3. I may have misunderstood, but if 40mm is limited to 3m, how is your 4.5m run (with a 90 deg bend in) OK? And is the length limitation about potential siphoning, or about the need for a rodding eye? If the latter then I can see how you could 'engineer' a rodding eye at the 90 deg bend so that it truly is 3.1m and 1.4m, but if it's about potential siphoning then you still have at least a theoretical problem...? Can you clarify?
  4. 'Weld mesh' to me summons up a picture of 100mm squares. This won't be what you mean, I think. Do you mean 'expanded metal'? If so (based on 'mice men' having told me on the past that mice can squeeze through a hole the diameter of a ball-point pen) that may not keep mice out. I was considering it recently re rats. I definitely do not think an extra layer of PIR will help keep rodents out. If they will eat one layer they will eat 2. I am not 100% certain I have seen mouse damage to PIR (maybe they don't like the foil?...) but maybe I have. I would not risk it with the foil/PIR itself as the only barrier below the floorboards.
  5. Definitely not normal. I have only ever fitted one, and cannot remember how the top trim went on, but it was solid when we'd done it. I hate 'instruction pics' with no words. My brain just does not work that way!
  6. As others have said, too late if they do, as you have already started, but I had a look on their site too and they don't *seem* to have one. On the other hand probably quite a few LAs have websites which are unclear w.r.t. the CIL. I have only had experience of one, but that was not abundantly clear. Even that is fine if you can get to speak to a human (with the right knowledge) but it can be so hard actually to get to speak to someone...
  7. Not used the makes you refer to, but many years ago (30-40) we used to use a lot of Alumasc cast alu guttering and alu fall-pipes. Brilliant stuff. A quick search suggests it still exists.
  8. Your red flags could be justified or you could have a very helpful architect trying to 'get you ahead'. In the latter case the fault would be not to have explained that to you. Not sure what 'analysis', but do you mean the arch has given your personal details to someone without your permission?
  9. Cut the hole - seriously. (I suppose it does to some extent depend what the construction is but I am guessing that making a hole and subsequently making good will be easier than explaining to a twitchy would-be buyer why you've only got 90% of a warranty).
  10. Who is providing the guarantee? Internorm (the 'kit' supplier) or the fitters? If, as I hope, the former, then they should inspect and sort.
  11. I don't know EPS200, so I don't know for certain whether it wouldn't 'suck' at all in adverse conditions. XPS definitely doesn't, though, AFAIK.
  12. Ah! That's different to mine. We trowelled on and textured (plastic trowel, flat, 'rolling on the aggregate beads') almost immediately, so the 'visual test for 'patchiness' ' was done as we went along. Edit: So as not to mislead, ours was not K Rend, but another, not dissimilar, product.
  13. Ah, there's the rub. If I am seeing pic. 2 correctly then at least 1 joist (and how many more?) does not extend across the cavity. (a 'missed trick', perhaps, as the OP says (I think) that it is a newly-laid floor). Looks as if some brickwork and floor will maybe have to be removed in order to be able to 'sister' a new oversailing piece of joist alongside. Not knowing the nature of the sub-floor (is it moist, for example?) I would not risk suggesting some sort of load-bearing/insulating fill to that cavity.
  14. Did they not sheet it up? When we did ours in an October, much later (as ever) than originally planned, we were watching the weather like hawks, and sheeting up with hessian after every pass.
  15. Agree wholeheartedly. Always a very huge way outside my price range. Ultimately had my V twin the across the frame, and no chain! Please forgive the M/C-related hijack!
×
×
  • Create New...