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Everything posted by Iceverge
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Whatever you do it's better to do it outside the glazing. I've heard story of sealed glazing units cracking when they are blocked on the inside.
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Run 10mm Hep2O pipe for everything except the cold kitchen/utility taps, outdoor taps and hot+cold bath and showers feeds. Heat the hot manifold by convection by having it just above the outlet of the UVC. Don't bother with pipe insulation outside the plant room. It makes no difference. I assume home run is having all pipes directly individually leading from your manifold to the destination. One pipe to one outlet?
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Europe’s heatwave is the hottest and most humid ever
Iceverge replied to SteamyTea's topic in Boffin's Corner
The impact we can have on our own lives, especially as self builders is pretty big. Some of the first things that come to mind are 1. Designing in good passive means to heat protection. Lots of insulation with good decrement delay. Limiting glazing, espically in bedroom's. Appropriate shading. 2. Active colding, even a fused spur and a short 70mm duct will allow an A2A unit to be installed at a later date. 3. If opting for batteries get a change over switch to cope with power outages. 4. A store of water, even a rainwater butt will allow toilet flushing if the mains is cut off. 5. Raising the floor level well above current food level. 6. Shuttering for windows is something t.o would like to have e done. Maybe PVC rollers but even a stack of appropriately sized OSB sheets stacked in the garage would offer a a lot more protection than glass windows from extreme weather. -
Europe’s heatwave is the hottest and most humid ever
Iceverge replied to SteamyTea's topic in Boffin's Corner
To probe further, at what point are those of us without a scientific qualification allowed to access, interpret and comment on published science? -
Europe’s heatwave is the hottest and most humid ever
Iceverge replied to SteamyTea's topic in Boffin's Corner
Does it require years in university to understand the scientific method? Being human they are not immune from bias. Even if personally incorruptible, scientists are subject to the whims of political and commercial funding. What results isn't necessarily bad science, but it does skew the volumes of papers and reports published on a particular topic leading to incorrect a public perception of its relative importance. -
What you suggest can be done. It'll take 4 times a long as a main contractor unless you want a gash result.
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Sound proofing portion walls.
Iceverge replied to Russell griffiths's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Yet another building job limited my by my fundamental lack of arms. A water leak and the bean sprout might make itself known! In seriousness, one thing I would consider is buying a 110mm hole saw and making osb or Ply "gaskets" to slide on the waste pipes before plasterboard. Then secure them to the back to the plasterboard with a few screws through from the room side. You'll get a much more perfect air seal than anything you'll attempt with cutting a hole in a sheet of plasterboard and sliding it over the pipe. -
Sound proofing portion walls.
Iceverge replied to Russell griffiths's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Air paths. every one. Seal them up with acoustic sealant . Be picky around pipes etc. Noggins between roof and floor joists above and below too and more acoustic sealant . Then add mass. Simple rule. More is better. Plasterboard is cheap as is OSB per kg. Anything would work mind you. You could fill the wall with gravel or magic beans. Mass is mass . Mineral wool will help with the reverb. The extra dense stuff is an expensive way to add mass. More plasterboard is cheaper. Break any noise travelling through the structure itself by breaking the solid path through. Double studs. Resilient bars. Rubber strips on the joists. -
Love the idea of earthen floors. A far more human material than concrete. An old shed is my total experience with it though. We have a single A2A into for our passive class house. Measuerd 17kWh/annum/m2 space heating demand. It lives in the hall downstairs. The house is comfortable. It needs to run maybe 9-12hrs per day at a low level to achieve this mid winter. Dryness hasn't been an issue. House plants can actually help dryness though transpiration. You cannot bank heat like a slab does with UFH so often use it outside TOU tariffs. It would be annoying in a bedroom re noise as the house is so quiet otherwise. It is simple to use. App on my phone and simple to install apart from here F Gas requirement. Ours cost €1200 from ebay and €300 for install. I drilled holes and did the mounting Daikin Ftxm-25r. If we needed it for cooling I would put another unit on the upstairs landing I think as cool air descends and warm rises. I have never needed it to cool yet but will update when I do. The bathrooms need a fast boost for a shower. Having tried a few types of heater pull chord fan heaters are the fastest and cheapest and work best for a short blast of heat. TLDR. 1. Do a single or possibly double central unit for the absolute cheapest lifetime heating and cooling costs including install cost. 2. If you go down the route of ducting every room or individual wall units for every bedroom you're probable better off going UFH + cheap mono block A2W with slab cooling and electric under tile heating for the bathrooms. It'll be quieter, cheaper to run (banking TOU heat in the slab) and more comfortable (no moving air or noise) .
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Fine tuning my IWI Solid wall (Warm Batten) design
Iceverge replied to Annker's topic in Heat Insulation
Top class. That's a pucker job. Keep the pics coming. -
https://youtu.be/lsOVb0BipAw?is=E_-NANuc_YEXu2A3
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Maybe so called under tile heating with electric elements just for the 10 mins you're in the shower might be an option.
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I think it's a good idea. More comfortable, dries the tray (slightly) faster. The UFH pipes will only be at 20 something degrees so I doubt they'll have enough punch to dry out the trap.
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Commercial flying is mass transport and ballpark similar to an ICE car with one person on board in terms of CO2/Km . It's just that someone rarely drives the equivalent distances. You could probably half CO2 of airliners by having a large and much slower turboprop aircraft but the idea of taking 24hrs in an economy seat to get to New York won't make you many friend's among the travelling public.
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Get up there with a penknife and poke at the timbers. The chances are that if it's survived so far it'll be fine long term. If you buy I'd upgrade the bathroom fans to dMev to ensure moisture gets extracted at source. If you upgrade attic insulation it'd be worth sealing all penetrations in the ceilings to, to limit the amount of humid internal air making it's way into the attic as the he more insulation in there the colder the rafters and sheathing will be.
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It's the seals. Brush and sliding seals just don't work anywhere as well as compression seals.
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Fine tuning my IWI Solid wall (Warm Batten) design
Iceverge replied to Annker's topic in Heat Insulation
A laser level head and sole plate and stand them studs between them. Shims behind and concrete screw through the studs to the brick wall intermittently to brace it. A parge coat will dry very quickly. You could do it straight away. -
Radial plumbing & fire stopping near the manifold
Iceverge replied to Dunc's topic in General Plumbing
10mm should be fine for everything other than baths and showers. 15mm to the kitchen sink if you want to recreate a waterpark. 10mm is fine otherwise in my experience -
https://www.proair.ie/products/proair-pa600li-2/ That's the one. I just took it apart and cleaned it and pulled out the fans and found some you tube vids to take them apart. The bearings are a common item. No rocket science. Ebmpapst make most of the fan units so something like this will show you.
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I think that was @DannyT restricted to 350mm. Maybe OP is too. I would just do a 200mm cavity with stainless ties and 036 batts. Should be able to pick them up for £15/m2 for 2 x 100mm. Or 175mm and EPS bonded beads.
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What do you think of this window section? Worth worrying about? 😬
Iceverge replied to fatgus's topic in Windows & Glazing
I'm glad you've found a good company. That's probably more important than anything. I know I'm banging a PVC drum here but I see they do Veka profiles. I would price Alphaline 90 and Softline 82 and go to see a house with them and alucald both installed after 10 years and compare. You could see a £30k swing the other direction and a lower maintenance better performing window. -
What do you think of this window section? Worth worrying about? 😬
Iceverge replied to fatgus's topic in Windows & Glazing
Apologies for my hiberno slang. Just glancing at the section of the window I wouldn't be sure it was a top performer in terms of air sealing and thermal conductivity. I would like to see more seals and insulation. Something like this with 4 seals and thermally broken too. The Uw figure looks fine as a whole but just be cautious of it as large areas of glazing with a low Ug can hide poorer Uf figures. -
What do you think of this window section? Worth worrying about? 😬
Iceverge replied to fatgus's topic in Windows & Glazing
Those frames don't look hectic. What's the Uf value? -
Wider cavity. It's not rocket science. We have 250mm.
