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Everything posted by MikeSharp01
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D4 glue.. is this a structural glue? Be careful folks!
MikeSharp01 replied to Gus Potter's topic in Timber Frame
We used Resorcinol PRF Resin Adhesive for our work, its a two part so needs carefully mixing. https://woodadhesives.akzonobel.com/en/adhesive-technologies/phenol-resorcinol-formaldehyde -
Yes we should build fast reliable railways with cheap fares so we don't need to drive places.
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Advice please on core drilling a slab
MikeSharp01 replied to saveasteading's topic in Barn Conversions
Yes, sadly, or perhaps not, none of the chaps who took part in the Hatton Garden job seem to be members. Image from the FT. -
Small house using I-beam portal frames
MikeSharp01 replied to pir8ped's topic in New House & Self Build Design
To get the right answer you will need a number of them so the interactions can be accounted for. -
Small house using I-beam portal frames
MikeSharp01 replied to pir8ped's topic in New House & Self Build Design
I think I read of an unwillingness of structural engineers to try to calculate this, as so much depends on the quality of the glue You are right. We had the same plan as you - our portals would have been 9m wide and 5m tall. Our SE worked it out and showed it could not be done as a site build and probably only just marginal for a factory build. Our gussets are 15mm thick, we have a ridge beam supporting the top and has four gluelams / kerto beams across the space to stop it spreading. We built it on site with structural glue and process to SE spec but a portal it isn't. I think @Gone West did manage an I beam portal frame built in a factory IIRC. -
Small house using I-beam portal frames
MikeSharp01 replied to pir8ped's topic in New House & Self Build Design
Looks to me like you need a structural engineer to look at this as I have an odd feeling those gusset plates, screws and structural glue and all, won't be up to the job you are expecting of them. -
would have thought that one 50mm AAV would be enough, its the vac cum you want to break after all. If you are working with building Control you could check with them what they deem acceptable.
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Neighbour's energy usage
MikeSharp01 replied to SteamyTea's topic in Environmental Building Politics
Yes AND having fluffy towels does not preclude you from complaining about your energy bills BECAUSE, after all, you are entitled to cheap electricity so you can waste it fluffing up your towels. -
Termostatic shower trouble since Heatpump installed
MikeSharp01 replied to Sols's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
Was your old boiler a combi or did it feed the cylinder? So essentially what has changed? -
Short term fix needed. Any suggestions?
MikeSharp01 replied to TheMitchells's topic in Electrics - Other
Does the dual ring system not need to switch the power to the second ring so there must be a contactor or some such controlled from the meter not sure if a smart meter has an output for this so not sure how it works the once then never again! Maybe I missed something though it is beer o'clock. -
Thermal bridge calculations?
MikeSharp01 replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in New House & Self Build Design
You can do it with Therm. Here is a natty video on how it could be done. -
If its a well insulated slab and a large area then you have enough output area for the whole house, if you do the sums, 180m2 slab, with UFH gives you 180m2 of heat output to warm the house. We have tall vertical multi hollow pipe rads here, they are good for output area but if you have a 10 pipe version of these 3m tall (ours are 2m) you only have about 5m2 of heat output or approx 3% of the slab area per rad. Ask your plumber to install towel rads in the bath rooms so they can keep the towels cosy and that should be enough. With that much PV you can retro fit some electric heaters but you won't need to.
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Can you build a quality home for £1500 per sq M in 2024?
MikeSharp01 replied to ScottishPete's topic in Costing & Estimating
Sounds like a great project in a truly wonderful place - building in a national park must add some small costs but is neutral in most dimensions assuming labour can be locally sourced. Are there any caveats around affordable housing etc for the build - are they for local people or will the wealthy coves from Edinburgh and Glasgow rush in a snaffle them up for holiday homes? If they are able to do that it would raise the base price, and hence your headroom, albeit at some disadvantage to the local people. -
Sorry I perhaps was not clear. The reason we will have an ASHP is more nuanced than the AECB approach (was a member for about 5 years but have let that lapse.) On our original plan, 2018, we had a gas boiler - no problem getting PH requirements. We decided we didn't want gas for all the reasons we now understand so well. As I was quite taken with the work @TerryE had done with the Willis heaters that was, until late last year, our plan. However, when you go direct electric heating everything else needs tightening up to meet the energy limitations for the house which we did but now as we are further into the build the room for maneuver is limited. Then we noticed that the EPC system trips in and you cannot get a good EPC, see discussion elsewhere on this forum, with direct electric heating! So although we could get PH certification, just, the EPC would have been rubbish and as we feel the need for both we will adopt an ASHP to make it all hang together again - PH certification possible and a, hopefully, better that 100 EPC. For us the spin off will be very low heating bills and a warm airtight home that matches our personal 'machine for living in' requirments - certificate or no certificate. So no different to anybody else really. SO I will now jump down from the head of this pin. Is that the annual cost?
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Tend to agree, although, it rings a bit hollow having spent yesterday at a graduation ceremony for 600 Engineering and Science students all of whom got a certificate telling other people what the students and the staff already know so sometimes it is for other peoples consumption and holding it has a personal value. I also happen to think that the Passive House standard is now getting better understood and much more widely talked about so we may well be heading the way of more acceptability of the certificates value among buyers.
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We did set out to build a certified Passive House (PH) and we are very close now to doing it although we may not certify as we now have other priorities. For us the lower impact on the planet, in the long term, was/is the key driver. I do tend to agree with: while I think any impact is worth while and we will use a lot less of the local generation than many in our all electric house. Can't see how it could be done any other way really. The costs are higher and the challenge more technical, my life partner - wife says she might have thought twice had she known just how technical is has become, because you are working with a bigger number of constraints which often result in difficult compromises. For instance - we, our situation, cannot now get PH certification without an ASHP in the mix - so we will fit one. As a self builder, who did not employ a PH professional at the design stage or an experienced PH Architect there were additional challenges. Instead I did a course on PH and the PH Planning Package (PHPP), read loads, worked with our architect and structural engineer to take their outline designs through the PHPP and make sure it would pass and once the design was finalised we have stuck to keeping the PHPP model up to date and building as close to as designed as we could. I feel that the Cold bridging element is the toughest aspect because the PH certified standard needs evidence of any cold bridges being worked through which we did twice because we changed the windows system during the build. (Went from Rationel to Norrsken) So things have changed a little. We also dropped the gas boiler idea early and changed the insulation from frametherm to blown cellulose which made the overall balance go a little awry, the insulation's U value goes from .35 - .38, but we brought it back by adjustments elsewhere. This, incremental change approach, is quite hard once the house is under way hence the ASHP became a requirement to get us down into the energy demand zone.
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Welcome to THE forum for people like us - but you already knew that.
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Cornish Cottage Renovation and Extension
MikeSharp01 replied to Aggierockdoc's topic in Introduce Yourself
So in this context size, or perhaps volume / form factor, is everything. -
Cornish Cottage Renovation and Extension
MikeSharp01 replied to Aggierockdoc's topic in Introduce Yourself
Very true the problems though seem to come from the Engineering rather that the physics so the machine is more complex, has more things that can go wrong and so costs more and therefore has a longer payback in pure £. Not sure on the embodied carbon side of the equation, or the availability of; support - ASHP's don't have much good support and reliable installers. We chose not to have one because of space. -
When I think about it the CCC report just assumes we are trying to get to net zero - something we agreed to a long time ago. So all they are doing is looking at the road map and assessing our progress. We also might conjecture that switching over to renewable is sensible anyway, we will need them eventually unless Einstein was wrong, because we will run out eventually after all.
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If it fires when you push it against the target woodwork then the thing is basically working. It maybe that the the depth setting is at max and this is making it hard to push down to trigger point.
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Change of mind re planning approval for double garage/annex
MikeSharp01 replied to Deejay's topic in Planning Permission
So is there another owner with the land surrounded bt the red / blue portions ? -
I am sure I don't know. Isn't that what the trick membranes are for in the modern era?
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This whole topic is frightening - only thing that let's me sleep nights is the wufi analysis we paid for. All technical membranes high / low vapour permeable materials makes my head spin.
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Just Finished - Thanks for all the Help and Advice !
MikeSharp01 replied to bob the builder 2's topic in Introduce Yourself
Great work Bob.
