Mr Punter
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Everything posted by Mr Punter
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Yes, you could do it in natural slate. Won't fade or warp and will last longer than most of us.
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Wet weather, BC, SE, Drawings, cost and more wet weather
Mr Punter commented on LSB's blog entry in Little Stud Barn
Mistakes like this are easily done. From the drawing it looks like the top of the cellcore needs to be level with the top of the foundations, so there may be a fair bit of infill to make up. -
Justifying the cost of stupidly expensive toasters
Mr Punter replied to Adsibob's topic in Kitchen & Household Appliances
I guess B&Bs may. The only safety issue I have had is when the timer clockwork spring lost its mojo and the toaster got very hot before I realised. -
Justifying the cost of stupidly expensive toasters
Mr Punter replied to Adsibob's topic in Kitchen & Household Appliances
I have a Dualit 3 slice (2+1) and it is about 30 years old. If you must put it under a wall cupboard, bring it towards the front and if you are doing a massive toasting session, relocate it. -
Conditions to be satisfied prior to start
Mr Punter replied to Post and beam's topic in Planning Permission
You can't always satisfy all the conditions in one hit. Things such as archaeology and contamination are often in several stages, so will need to be discharged in stages. -
You are doing the right thing going around with a foam gun and perhaps some decent tape. Look out for boiler and extract holes, overflows, condense drains etc. Trades very rarely make good around these. Bear in mind that not every day will be cold and windy, so you may find it performs OK for much of the year.
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Fabric and ventilation heat loss calculator
Mr Punter replied to Jeremy Harris's topic in Heat Insulation
Yes, external heat loss walls only.- 204 replies
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Built-in fridge with ice dispenser
Mr Punter replied to puntloos's topic in Kitchen & Household Appliances
I have a Samsung and the ice maker needs attention about every 4-6 weeks. Also, water from the ice / water runs down the outside of the door, which starts to rust. This must be commonplace as when we reported this the engineer turned up with a complete new freezer door and swapped it out. Also, out of 5 I bought for a development, they all had issues with the plastic surround on glass shelves cracking. Annoyingly we got the same 3rd degree each one we reported, where clearly it was a manufacturing / product defect. -
Perhaps don't bother with UFH. Cover the slab with, say, 40mm PIR type insulation and top with 22mm chipboard plus your choice of floor finish. You will lose 60mm headroom. You can either have radiators or heated skirtings. For a heat source, you may find that oil is cheapest per kWh. If you oversize the rads and plan ahead you could swap out for a heat pump in the future. If / when you ditch the staircase, look at whether the replacement can be located to make better use of your space. It is often quite easy to cut out and trim a timber joisted floor.
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I think you are being a dick to stake so much money by "accidentally" demolishing parts of the house. The downside risk is enormous and I cannot see much upside. Just get a fresh consent, knock it down and build from scratch.
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I understood that part E only applies to new build, change of use and conversions. I think that @andreas is working on an existing house.
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I don't think this is one to lose sleep over. As long as the cables are not buried in the middle of insulation you are unlikely to have an issue with them overheating. They can be better (cooler) clipped to joists. Unless BC have requested derating it or you have used cable smaller than 2.5mm2 I would just ignore this. There is no requirement to fit thermal insulation other than on the bottom floor and none to fit acoustic insulation in an existing house.
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Airtightness tips for dormer loft conversion
Mr Punter replied to ectoplasmosis's topic in Heat Insulation
You would need long screws for the plasterboard. Not sure why @Iceverge is against PIR between rafters and OK under. I would just PIR as the rafters are quite skinny. -
Roof ventilation help condensation and mould
Mr Punter replied to Looba45's topic in Roofing, Tiling & Slating
Yes, ventilation will help. Also you need to prevent warm moist air getting into the structure. What type of insulation? Is it all boarded and finished? Where is the mould? -
Paintballing & planning implications
Mr Punter replied to waylanderUK's topic in Planning Permission
The owner of the woodland may not need to apply for consent as it may be allowed as PD under the 28 day rule. Even if they wanted to use it for longer, as long as there are no permanent structures, they may well be granted consent anyway. -
Bad luck. Are you going to appeal or fresh application? Sometimes the appeal can be useful to pin down which refusal grounds are relevant, so any subsequent application can focus on addressing those. It all takes time though!
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You see this sort of thing a lot when bits have been added. It will make life much easier if you lose the cast iron soil pipe and replace with plastic. I would also be tempted to run the r/w downpipe to the right of the soil pipe and connect the bathroom wastes into the new soil with strap on bosses. It is a bit of messing and you will need to alter the gutter. Someone else may have a brighter suggestion.
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Yes no issue. The lids on the inspection chambers are screwed down and airtight. This sort of thing: https://www.sumpsandpumpsdirect.co.uk/acatalog/Mini-Sewage-Pumping-Station-5m-Lift.html
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A pump station is a good option. You will only need a single pump. You don't need a macerator. You can get ones for indoors or out. Include for non-return valve, high level alarm and discharge pipework minimum 63mm HDPE. The pump will fail at some stage and need replacing. Don't get a big chamber as when the pump dies there will be more to empty. Consider not having it serviced and just save the money for when you need to swap out the pump.
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The email was really good.
