Jump to content

jack

Members
  • Posts

    7431
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    41

Everything posted by jack

  1. That still leaves the problem of getting them to actually use it when you aren't watching! We built a nice, easy to install frame that I put in place each morning to protect the main door when I arrived on site. Worked a treat, until one afternoon when I was off somewhere, and someone decided that it would be easier to remove the frame to get a big bit of heavy machinery through the door rather than spend a few minutes breaking the machine down so it would fit through with the frame in place. Bingo - nice big gouge in the powder coating on the door frame. I suppose I should be thankful they didn't deny it when I saw it on the way back in.
  2. This is probably the best place to start: http://forum.buildhub.org.uk/ipb/forum/66-roofs-general/
  3. Welcome to buildhub Jazzy!
  4. This agrees with our experience. In our house, downstairs (where the UFH is) is always warmer than upstairs, despite us having double-height areas and a massive space for the stairs (which themselves are open tread).
  5. One thing to consider is some sort of enclosure for deliveries. I haven't had a chance to look more closely yet, but I'm thinking of building a bin enclosure (a more stylish version of this) near the pedestrian gate at the end of our drive and incorporating something like this at one side. Remains to be seen whether it can be done without looking shite.
  6. I got a lump in my throat reading that.
  7. Ah, interesting, thanks.
  8. Pleased I got a 5 year warranty deal on the AEG dryer I bought last year then!
  9. It really doesn't take much, does it? We all understand that stuff happens. It's how suppliers (and tradespeople, etc) respond that determines the impact of that stuff.
  10. Agree with all that. Although our house is very modern, it's not particular challenging from a design or construction perspective. I'd have loved to do something challenging on both counts, but there's no way we'd have gotten away with it in our area (and that's before discussing costs and delays).
  11. I never said otherwise. If you want to discuss historical exchange rates and what rates you happened to get several months ago, have at it, but I personally feel that information is of pretty limited use to people looking for bathroom suppliers today. My main focus was avoiding off-topic political discussions from derailing a useful thread.
  12. Sounds good to me, assuming you usually have the same person delivering your post. Maybe a discreet sign somewhere near the front door? I guess you could add that if you find you're having problems with mail deliveries.
  13. It was very useful for us. Our first architect designed something that we subsequently learned would never in a million years have been allowed by our local planning department. The local guy we subsequently engaged was extremely familiar with the local department's foibles. He ended up getting us planning permission first go for a very, very modern house in an extremely conservative (both kinds) suburban neighbourhood. There isn't a house within a mile of us that looks like it's been built less than 60 years ago, so I think this was a pretty good result. I'll add that it wasn't just that he was local: he was also a better architect, in my opinion, and also better at the planning side of things generally. Agreed on Jamie's comment about access, too. While ours wasn't engaged after planning, he only lived a few blocks away, so occasionally dropped in just to say hi and see how things were going.
  14. Please all, let's not take this useful thread any further off topic. The markets and exchange rates are what they are, and there's nothing to be gained from rehashing the hows and whys of Brexit. Thanks
  15. Amen to that. I thought I was going made recently when I tried to buy an extension reel. The one that was in the catalogue just didn't come up in any word-based searches, and I could only get to it by using the part number. Crazy.
  16. According to the guy who runs this youtube channel (which I highly recommend recommend more generally, especially for those not easily offended by swearage), Milwaukee's quality has been falling for several years following its acquisition by Techtronic in Hong Kong. +1 on that. They really don't make it easy to compare, as newer models seem to have almost the same features as the old ones, and there doesn't seem to be much rhyme or reason in the numbering scheme. Their range is too big, imo.
  17. The merchants. They pay a percentage (in the case of Amex, a relatively high percentage, I believe) of the purchase price to the card provider (eg, the bank), which I believe is split between the provider and Amex/Mastercard/Visa etc).
  18. Makita for me, all the way. As to what to go for, I've gone with the cheapest brushless model, usually at ffx tools or similar. I buy bare tools (no battery or case). I've had good results with a 4Ah non-Makita battery from eBay. In the general "drilling" area, I have an impact driver (amazing bit of kit if you've never owned one) and a one of the larger cordless drills. Between the two of them they've handled all of the jobs I've had to do onsite, including light masonry drilling. I've always had cheap tools in the past, but now that I've had quality I could never go back.
  19. Pleased you've kept it to only 3. Many more than that might be considered excessive!
  20. ... that you know of!
  21. I had grand plans to bring control of the ASHP into the home automation system, but I suspect that would cost several hundred quid due to the cost of the interfaces that are required for both the ASHP and the home automation system. In the end I just went with the bog standard controller that came with the unit. The instruction manual (which is available online) told me in advance everything I needed to know about connections, programming and info like temperature ranges. Have you narrowed down the likely unit(s) yet? I must say I found Panasonic's tech help line very helpful (we went with an Aquarea)
  22. Nope, I don't have one and have never planned one. The only tank I have is a 250L UVC for DHW.
  23. Excellent question, with a simple answer: "I don't"! If you only ever supply, say, 25C water, then the hottest your rooms can possibly get is 25C. Warmer than ideal, but not the end of the world. If that were to happen I could back off the amount of time per day the system is running (or find a mixing valve that allowed for a lower temp, ideally one that's controllable via my home automation system). It goes back to someone's earlier comment about unstable systems - this system can't go out of control because it has a hard limit on its upper temperature that is acceptable (if not ideal). My recent introduction of a weather compensation curve may possibly challenge this, because the water temp starts increasing from 25C when its 8C outside, until it reaches a maximum temperature of 28/29C (can't remember exactly) at 0C. Once the insulation is back in the roof, I'll be turning this down a bit, because we really don't need the slab to be sitting at 23-23.5C as it is at the moment. That said, it's presently -3C outside at 9:30am, and has been even colder the last couple of nights, so it's lovely coming back into the house at the moment! In case it helps, when we turned on our heating a few weeks ago, the slab was at 18C. It took just under 12 hrs to raise that by 0.5C, which was the fastest rate at which the temperature increased. The maximum temperature change is therefore pretty-well bang on 1C per 24hrs, with 25C water (no weather compensation) Once the system is up and running each heating season, and ignoring weather compensation, the temperature differential will generally be lower, so the rate of temperature change should be lower too. What rate of change did your concrete people recommend? If it's okay for "ordinary" UFH systems, surely it should be fine for a well insulated floor which should have far slower temperature fluctuations with lower temperature differentials?
  24. PMSL - genius! "the constraint is the planning system".
  25. Welcome to the forum!
×
×
  • Create New...