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Everything posted by Russell griffiths
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Evening all, I need a double pocket door set, I’m not after cheap I want good, hassle free smooth running. Im looking for the Mercedes version if there is one. The klug ones are around £250 and the eclisse ones about £400. What have you fitted ? and what did you like/ dislike. Cheers.
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Bricklayer's Invoice - Reasonable or Expensive?
Russell griffiths replied to Fiddler's topic in Brick & Block
I think it’s about £300 to much but apart from that 2 trades and a labourer plus tools transport insurance I think for a company it’s about right. If he’s just a bod from down the pub who owns a trowel then it’s a bit high. But are are you paying him by the day or by what he achieved. Up to dpc floor in for £3300 seams good to me. -
Bricklayer's Invoice - Reasonable or Expensive?
Russell griffiths replied to Fiddler's topic in Brick & Block
Don’t be silly. -
Thank you @Mr Punter kind words. After today I just feel like some bad diy er,
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Evening @ZacP I’m just outside Cirencester, building in Nudura, there are two builds going on at the moment in Stroud/ Minch area both cut back into the hill, both in Nudura. Looking at your plans will some of those walls be waterproof as below ground, I’m not sure if durisol can do this as it isn’t a monolithic type concrete core, but I stand to be corrected. I noticed you need a bit of tree removal, that used to be my game so I can put you In touch with some good lads in Stroud. Are you aware how close the nudura rep lives to you, very handy chap always popping in to drop bits off, probably saved me a good few quid in transport costs. If you need some contacts let me know and I will sort out some numbers for you.
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No they are a funny sized sheet, probably something like 1200x 600 x80 with a half lap type joint on the edges. I just pushed them through the table saw.
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That board is 80mm thick, if you stood it on its side and had a 10mm x 80mm wide strip of fibreglass on top glued on I don’t think you will ever need to work out the load, the car will glide over it without hardly touching it.
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its All about force over area isn’t it. If you put your best high heels on and stand on that eps you will make a big hole in it, but if you stand on a chunk of 4x2 your weight will not have an impact. I also slid a 6mm cement board on top of the XPS, forgot to mention that, just to help with any point loads that the door might have.
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@SuperJohnG metal roof, cannot go on battens needs full support. Main roof is I joists.
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so by altering the floor height you can bring the insulation up, at the moment you only have the perimeter strip between cold brick and your floor, that strip is normally only 25mm thick.
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Sort of but the levels need a bit of adjusting if you draw a diagonal line from out to in there is a cold path through the brick into the concrete floor. You also don’t need the screed, just finish the concrete better and no screed needed.
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If I did it again I would use sarking boards but with 10mm gaps one thing I wouldn’t do is the design method that all the roof companies specified and that was ply wood with no gaps, didn’t make sense to me.
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Have a look at this, but ignore the block n beam and substitute that for a slab of concrete on the ground. Theres many ways to skin a cat.
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under my sliders 460kg I used strips of xps500 cut to the width of the wall, the door sits directly on this, rock solid stuff £70 a pack has done one slider and two doors. Under the windows I just fitted them straight on top of the icf cavity closers, after Jeremy’s mathematics it looks like there is t that much load, my big windows are 240kg.
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I have two lots of membrane, metal roof but similar, membrane counter batten, sarking fitted hit n miss style membrane metal roof.
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You can never have too much insulation, but it becomes pointless if cold can get in somewhere else.
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If you are fitting it from outside hack of the render to reveal your old frame size.
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Busy this morning, but that needs a re, think you have loads of insulation in the floor but have missed any cold bridges from the footings up to the sole plate, will be large condensation issue, and massive cold bridge at skirting board level. Have a read back on some previous posts, regarding garden rooms and foundation, loads been discussed recently, you would be better of with an insulated slab.
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If it’s terraced house, how will the tiles tie in with the neighbours, do they have a small plain tile or are they concrete ? lots more work with plain tiles, concrete interlocking are quick, but if your neighbours are still on small tiles you will need a hidden gutter join where the old meet the new.
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Leaving a block and beam floor over winter
Russell griffiths replied to Fiddler's topic in General Construction Issues
Drill some holes in it to allow any standing water to drain through, that’s what I did before the roof went on, you will need to poke a stick in them every now and then as they fill with crud. -
Irregular window/door spacing in ICF
Russell griffiths replied to gavztheouch's topic in Insulated Concrete Formwork (ICF)
Another icf builder here, I’m not seeing your problem, I have windows all over the place and I think not one of them line up with block ends. Just cut the blocks to suit. -
Concrete quality assurance - what do you do?
Russell griffiths replied to Adam2's topic in General Construction Issues
I thought about this and worried for a few days, I then changed my foundation mix to the same mix as the walls to see how it pumped C35 10mm aggregate, it pumped well with no added water and set up absolutely solid, I thought back to how many times I have had a truck of ready mix and how many times it hasn’t set correctly, and suddenly dismissed the test cubes as just another thing not needed. If it was coming out of a batch mixer on site I would be less confident, but never had a problem with a plant mix. -
Joining PIR insulation under floating plywood floor
Russell griffiths replied to Hastings's topic in Heat Insulation
All sheets foamed together, but I buy better foam than is available in the shops. ILLBRUCK air sealing foam. I wont ever buy a tin of the normal cheap shite again, like chalk and cheese. -
Joining PIR insulation under floating plywood floor
Russell griffiths replied to Hastings's topic in Heat Insulation
I used two layers of insulation so I couldstagger the joints. -
I have a house with no felt, it isn’t an issue as the roof is in good condition so it’s water tight and allows it to breath. Its really down to if the actual roof covering is in good repair as the felt acts as a second weather proof layer. Its impracticle to fit the felt from underneath so would require re roofing. Really down to if you feel the slate layer is doing it’s job or not.
