Spinny
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Anyone have any ideas of rooflight / Part K situation?
Spinny replied to GEO-PAR's topic in Building Regulations
I have sunsquare rooflights. For standard sizes on their website the cost for walkon seems to very roughly double. The weight also goes up. Whatever the cost impact, I would say think carefully when you are making decisions which will have a very long life and impact maintainability. An extra £8k on rooflights may seem an awful lot, but over 30 years, it is just £266 a year which could easily be exceeded by annual additional cleaning/maintenance costs if you cannot walk on those rooflights. As stated above you are going to need access to clean the outside of those windows (and the rooflights). That means standing on the glass rooflights - anti-slip considerations maybe too. Alternatively some thought to a design where you can temporarily install weight bearing boards over and across the rooflights for cleaning and maintenance. -
Changes to planning once house is built!
Spinny replied to squealeyhealey's topic in Planning Permission
Did neighbour not speak to you before calling in planning ? Seems a bit unfriendly. If there is a fence or hedge it is difficult to understand why it would need to be opaque, unless you are both 8ft tall surely you can't see into each other's houses. There must presumably be some reason the Planner thinks it should indeed be opaque - severely overlooking to their property in some way ? Raised up 4ft ? Funny L shaped plot ? We debated having a frosted side door, then decided on partly frosted but found it would cost a lot, then chose to splash out on a venetian blind inside the double glazed clear glass door. This works well because you can keep it down or up as suits for light or privacy. Our neighbour has now built a 4.2m high wall at the boundary anyway. Maybe if you talk to the neighbour you can understand his specific concerns, explain why you havn't frosted it. Neighbour relations can be tricky - did they object to your plans ? Don't forget you can get stick on frosting sheets to create frosting on any parts of a clear door. Then if the neighbour moves or dies in a strange incident involving poisoned vegetables, you can take it off again. -
Thanks Conor, yes that's an idea too. We have laptop, tablet, and phones - always seem to have charging cables trailing about the sitting room. (Not to mention rechargeable tools and stuff - but those are probably a seperate question. Can't see SWMBO giving me tool space in the kitchen.) (Numerous USB powered Smart Hubs which I will put in the network cupboard when it exists) Possibly need a charging drawer or cupboard too TBH. Phones seem to be always out in case they go off.
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Possibly. Although I believe they detect whether a phone is present or not and shut off when phone is fully charged. Google AI: "...it continues to consume a small amount of electricity (about 0.2W) to constantly "ping" the surface and detect when a device is placed on it." So pennies a year only on that. Yes perhaps somewhat less efficient while charging but still seems pretty good through 12-15mm quartz etc at 85-90%, and apparently the quartz won't get hot. I wouldn't want to find the quartz was effected long term - e.g. by causing it to fade/change colour leaving a surface shadow. Anyone tried it or done it with a worktop/desktop/furniture top ? Ikea type is cheap as chips but somewhat mixed reviews on their website. I am not very good at plugging my phone in every night I am afraid, and given phone addiction I frequently find myself on low charge. Was thinking maybe one under the island, one under a shelftop in the hallway. Apparently... Common everyday items you can charge wirelessly include: Wearables: Smartwatches and fitness trackers. Audio Devices: Wireless earbuds and their charging cases. Computer Accessories: Select wireless mice and mechanical keyboards. Electric Toothbrushes: This is actually one of the oldest and most common uses of wireless charging! Vehicles: Many modern electric vehicles (EVs) can be charged wirelessly when parked over a special induction pad, and the technology is actively being tested for in-motion highway charging.
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Yes a consideration. Have one in the car which I find really useful and have used for 4 years now though. It is surprising how much difference it makes not having to mess around with trailing wires and sockets and connectors that always seem to become 'dodgy' within a couple of years of use. Worse case would seem to be that it goes obsolete a few years down the line, in which case I can just turn it off and ignore it I suppose.
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Yes a recess would need to be rebated/bored out from the underside of the quartz. Our quartz is 30mm thick. We wouldn't be intending to mark the exact position on the topside as that would obviously ruin the worktop aesthetic. But we would know the measurements for the position from the edges of the quartz (our quartz is not veined, just mottled) and I don't think your phone needs to be positioned with mm accuracy. presumably you would be able to see via the phone whether it is charging.
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Thinking to have a mobile phone charger recessed into the underside of the island worktop (quartz). Anyone done this ?
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Take a very close look at the MLCP connectors because they choke down the bore of the pipe to a huge degree at every connection. I think I measured the internal bore of a 16mm MLCP connector as just 6mm diameter. You might like to take a look at this system which flares the ends of the pipe and avoids choking off the flow... https://forum.buildhub.org.uk/topic/47102-elbow-fittings-flow-loss/#findComment-658055 As I have said before MLCP is an attractive system for plumbers, but not for end customers given the risk of flow problems.
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It is not just British Gas unfortunately. 88 year old family member with dementia had a boiler breakdown with a service contract. As his boiler was old he asked them for a new one and was passed onto the sales team. Next thing they send a salesman around to his house, who then sends him a quote to replace his UVC system with a combi boiler. Was a hell of a job for us to get things unwound and sorted for him - endless phone calls, emails, medical documents, LPA documents. Fortunately the subcontract maintenance plumber (who had once been a carer) knew what they were like and was very helpful. Too many companies are happy to rip off the elderly it seems.
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Noisy clicky corrugated metal roof- please help!
Spinny replied to jakeR's topic in Roofing, Tiling & Slating
Maybe you can try to identify exactly where the noise is coming from, does it eminate from the fixing points, or the overlaps, or movement against the battens etc ? Not sure how you do that, but maybe you could rig up a test piece at ground level replicating the roof structure, then apply heat ? Maybe you could photograph/measure the sheets/fixings etc when cold and hot in different places ? I can only say plumbing felt helps a lot with noise from copper plumbing/heating pipes expanding and contracting as they get hot and cold. They eliminate the friction between the pipes and the joists they pass through. So if you could identify the exact source, you might be able to insert some felt or other material which allows movement without noise -
As any limit will apply to any one single door with the total width of the opening being irrelevant, and you said 3.5m, I assumed you must be referring to a minimum opening of 7m with two 3.5m wide sliding doors. With a sufficient number of doors, doubtless you could do it in PVC e.g. 7 sliding doors each 0.5m wide. Probably going to look a bit shit though. Are you thinking of two doors each 1.75m wide and 2.7m high ? Or perhaps 3 doors each 1.2m wide, requiring three tracks ? Maybe type ''how wide can a upvc sliding door be'' into google AI ?
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Texecom home security products
Spinny replied to SilverShadow's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
i'd have thought start with a list of the objectives that you are actually trying to achieve. What is the goal of this security system ? We appear to live in a world where the police are more interested in responding to thought crime accusations than actual break ins. The prisons are full and so there is limited interest in punishing offenders. Security systems are typically about monitoring and response, but don't necessarily substitute for high levels of physical security measures. There are a plethora of DIY solutions around. If really going the professional route then an overall assessment from a security professional might be better than just selecting an alarm vendor. -
Bad roofing job: how should I proceed?
Spinny replied to David001's topic in Roofing, Tiling & Slating
I know nothing about slate work, but in Pic 6 shouldn't each layer of slates sit flush and against the row below. Rather looks like the wind would get under some of those slates and potentially pull them off. And have you tried putting a hosepipe over it ? Every sympathy as I know how challenging it can be to find good tradespeople. At least you have a chance to get it redone before winter.
