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Everything posted by Iceverge
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Fine tuning my IWI Solid wall (Warm Batten) design
Iceverge replied to Annker's topic in Heat Insulation
Sell the PIR again or put it in the floor. Airtight the house rigidly, (can be done room by room) Parge for the walls, tape the windows, airtight paint for joist ends and anything tricky. Ensure you return the parge to all internal walls too by at least the thickness of the wall. Build 63mm CLS studs internally independent of the wall. Fit mineral wool batts and plasterboard. Provided yiu do a good job with airtightness its's a very safe, cheap and easy install. The PIR is really not a good idea. -
membrane/drip tray/fascia detail on cassette roof?
Iceverge replied to junglejim's topic in Roofing, Tiling & Slating
Picture/sketch please. -
Exhaust and intake through soffit
Iceverge replied to gambo's topic in Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR)
And a selection of appropriate straight sections should work. 220*90 is about the same as 160mm diameter in cross sectional area. I'd prefer soffit vents. Fewer holes in the roof the better. -
https://polyroof.co.uk/system-applications/simulated-metal-finishes/ Or fake the metal roof effect with GRP.
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MVHR Options
Iceverge replied to Johnnyire's topic in Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR)
We have no smart controls. I can boost the unit manually if we need to but TBH I never do. I will turn it up a notch if we have a party.(Depressingly rarely!) -
The Makar designs have a lot going for them too. Probably more from a practicality point of view. Usually sensible simple pitched roofs with plenty of overhang. Cellulose filled wall panels. Excellent airtighess etc.
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Beautiful stuff for sure. I think they do the HebHomes Designs which @Kelvin has and was happier with the overall design rather than the detail. Maybe I'm mistaken.
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I would be worried about some future owner running a car in there on a cold morning to warm it up and the fumes getting drawn into the MVHR. Could a stand alone structure work? Or you could always extend the MVHR inlets out to the fresh air above the new roof .
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Again I think your thinking about this in the incorrect way. Rather than "sealing" it you should think about how you allow it to "dry" Ensure the water table around the house is low by digging a french drain. If it is damp it will dry out assuming the conditions in the house are appropriate (warm/ventilated). Then you can lay your floor. Ideally something that isn't too vapour impermeable itself like cork or carpet.
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Ok. You really need to think about removing the conditions which moisture accumulates and promoting it's dispersion. Sealing anything is risky, espically when you do it at both sides of an old wall so in principle would avoid this Here is where I would start. 1. Bulk water. This means french drains to lower water tables. Functioning guttering, appropriate pointing externally. Silicone brick creams. Eliminate leaking pipes etc. 2. Ventilation. Mechanical ventilation internally. A couple of dDCV fans as a minimum. These are cheap ~£70 and swap straight out for a bathroom fan. These will pull damp air out of your house and allow the structure to dry to the inside. Additionally you'll get fresher air inside. Other methods of ventilation like heat driven stack effect and manual opening of windows are typically very expensive or just don't get done. 3. Airtighess. Believe it or not almost all the moisture problems that originate in a building are from the inside out. Vapour from breathing, showering, cooking etc. When you have cracks in your structure. Gaps and cracks around fixings, joists, windows, outlets all allow this to get "blown" into the wall where it risks condensing and causing issues like structural decay and mould. 4. Insulation. In your case internal insulation which is a double edged sword. On the one hand it'll keep the internal temperature higher promoting drying towards the inside but on the other hand it'll make the actual structure colder promoting condensation on the stone wall. If you avoid rigid boards of very low permeability like PIR and make an excellent job of the airtighess you'll mitigate most of these issues. Ok my suggestions. 1. Deal with Bulk water as above. 2. Buy some greenwood cv2GIP dDCV fans. 3. Use a parge coat of sand NHL cement 3:2:1 to form an airtight layer on the stone. It can be trowelled or brushed on. Tape all windows to the parge coat with appropriate tapes. Similarly joist ends, pipe and wire penetrations. And seal to the floor and ceilings too. This is critically important to any internal insulation job. 4. Install some 63mm stud walls internally to the stone walls with 70mm insulation in between the studs. (You can vary depth depending on your circumstances. 5. Plasterboard and skim.
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Any Ply is a mould magnet. Can you get up on a ladder and prod at it with the pointy end of a screwdriver or a penknife. If it's not showing any signs of rot I wouldn't be overly concerned. You could get them to clean off the mould I suppose.
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Very similar detail to ours but we filled the cavity completely EPS beads which was super easy to do.
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Something simpler would do me. Is it any good for detail drawings?
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More blasphemy from you @saveasteading!!! I would very much go the other direction. It's not a "I spent less cash that you" competition. Nobody buys a Rolls Royce because it's cheap to run. But because it comfortably, quiet, and (maybe not these days) well built and reliable. Passivhaus is super cheap to run but it's the comfort, the ability to retain heat, the lack of drafts, the fresh air, the quietness that make it worth the extra effort. Also if done properly you can ditch complex central heating and it's actually quite economical. Back to the build, strip foundations perform excellently if done right. I would go to the local builders merchants and attempt to only build my house from stock items. The only exception being blown cellulose I think.
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Internal Walls - Marmox Thermoblocks & Concrete Blocks
Iceverge replied to Mulberry View's topic in Brick & Block
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Ok. Just to be sure. Tile. Tile batten, Membrane Counter battens running along the line for the rafters. 150mm PIR. 200mm Rafters with 200mm mineral wool in between? Any further layers of OSB or membranes in there?
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I was always of the impression that in a horizontal "I* beam that the top and bottom sections did all the work. It's how in my head I explained this. The bid in the top was being squashed together, the bit at the bottom was being pulled apart and the bit in the middle was just making sure they stayed put. Without knowing the different yield strength of metals in compression and tension I do wonder why beams aren't built asymmetrically to gain maximum strength for minimal material.
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Congratulations on your purchase. Perhaps consider baking a few cupcakes and knocking on the door of your farmers neighbours and saying hello. Us country folk can be very suspicious of newcomers but if we're assured you're reasonable and kind we will bend over backwards to help you and happily turn a blind eye to any minor planning infringements etc!
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Only if you raise the flow temp. You wouldn't need to do this if you just tripled or quadrupled the amount of radiators. Roughly 50m² of rads at a flow temp of 70 degrees would deliver the same amount of energy per second (power) as about 170m² of radiators at a flow temp of 35deg. This is what I mean by increasing the power of the emitters. And higher power emitters will always allow for a lower flow temperature.
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Unless you had appropriately powerful heat emitters that could ensure a low enough return temperature. Like very closely spaced UFH in a highly conductive screed or multiple fan coils or giant radiators.
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Adding MVHR late in the day
Iceverge replied to bmj1's topic in Mechanical Ventilation with Heat Recovery (MVHR)
To beat the same drum again. How about ditching the idea of MVHR and using a couple of dDCV fans instead. They're cheap enough that you could buy them and give it a go to see if it helps. -
Insulating a (presumably hollow) metal door from within
Iceverge replied to Garald's topic in Heat Insulation
This sentence feels likes it's only a slight spelling mistake from @Pocster levels of innuendo. Back to the door. The simplest thing I can think of is to buy some more adhesive backed cork tiles and fit them as neatly as you can. Or a far greater concern would be and draughts so make sure it seals excellently. -
I would argue this only a consequence of the power output you can buy them in. If someone made a 40kW ASHP as accessable as a 40kW gas boiler people would probably use them in the same way. (Lots of technical and cost roadblocks with that approach I know). Most houses don't need heating 24/7 as people go to school, work, the pub etc and even a very low energy demand house will use less energy if it'a one heated intermittently. To allow for this you need high power heat generators and emitters to get up to temperature quickly and this is where a 5kW ASHP with widely spaced UFH pipes just doesn't cut the mustard. However get the biggest A2A unit you can fit with a appropriate fan coils and I don't see why it wouldn't work.
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I normally use Sketchup on my laptop for drawing but would like something for my iPad when travelling. It doesn't need to be 3d. Just something that I can accurately draw dimensioned plans and details in 2d as well as handwrite notes on the page etc. Basically the technological equivalent of T square, ruler, paper and a pencil. Also I'm debating an Apple pencil to compliment it. Any pros/cons.