I'm currently having some Internorm replacement windows fitted. All was going well when I saw them being fitted with compriband round the sides. However, once they were in I was concerned by the 4cm gap at the bottom between the frame and the blockwork below. The window is sat on quite a hefty plastic rail, and in the pics you can see the gaps in the corners to the outside. The exterior sills are yet to be fitted so I am hoping this might close some of the external corner gaps.
The window fitters are planning to fill these internal gaps with expanding foam and then add a plastic trim at the bottom to conceal this. All three of our dormer windows have been fitted like this, with gaps ranging between 2-4cm.
For context these are replacement for old dormer timber windows, and the surveyor who did the measurements mentioned there are often problems sizing for existing dormers. The window fitters have assured me this is normal for replacement windows and they've fitted many Internorm installations like this without issue.
To me it seems pointless to pay for expensive passivhaus standard triple glazed units like this and push for compriband, only to have foam used in a large gap at the bottom. I've requested the fitters to try to use a piece of wide compriband at the bottom in addition to the foam that will go behind the trim.
Is this gap acceptable and normal for a retrofit of Internorm or any windows for that matter? Thanks