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Gone West

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Everything posted by Gone West

  1. Without knowing the layout of the house it's difficult to say, but do you need two doors into the kitchen?
  2. One of the selling points of Icynene foam is it's airtightness. We didn't use any airtightness membranes or tapes in our TF house. We relied on the OSB3 racking board and the Icynene for our airtightness which came out at 0.47ACH.
  3. Are you rolling or vibrating the type 1 flat? If it's way out with just a few big lumps of stone just pull them out and go over it again. It's most important to get the granite fines level.
  4. We found with our cedar that it is the rain that washes out the colour more than the sun bleaching it. The north side of the house faded just as much as the other elevations. The only areas that kept any colour were those protected from the rain.
  5. In the winter we worked in the house with a 2kW fan heater which kept the whole house comfortable. We didn't have the MVHR connected but found we didn't need windows open for ventilation. I think as there were only two of us working in the house and no other source of moisture and with the large total air volume, we didn't need a ventilation system.
  6. When we had our Isoquick insulated slab base laid out they were working to 2mm accuracy for the granite fines finish.
  7. I've got a couple of Fischer resin nozzles, which must be 20 years old, which you are welcome to. They look like these on Amazon https://www.amazon.co.uk/Polyester-Chemical-Anchor-Replacement-Nozzles/dp/B006ZLAKJO/ The threaded part is 20/21mm diameter. If you want them PM me and I'll stick them in an envelope for you.
  8. It was Canadian cedar supplied by the local timber yard. The grade was number 2 clear and better, so had very few knots.
  9. Difficult to compare, but nine years ago we had the plinth covered with brick slips, after I had fitted the board and steel mesh. We also had the rest of the building clad with cedar and it took two men for the cedar cladding and one man for the brick slips. It took around two weeks and the labour was £4500.
  10. We used strand woven bamboo in our newbuild. It was advertised as twice as hard as oak and horizontal or vertical cut bamboo. It was click together and easy to lay and we preferred the look of it to oak. We got a large number of samples of many types of flooring before deciding.
  11. We could have patched ours indefinitely but having inherited it we thought we would dismantle it and replace it with a newer timber frame building. It was over eighty years old and originally built as temporary accommodation, so about time.
  12. It wasn't a turn off when we sold our house last year. We had three people bidding against each other at significantly higher than the asking price. We had an EPC of A95 without renewables which is what people seemed more interested in.
  13. IIRC we calculated a heating requirement of 1.14kW for a 30C temperature difference in our PH. We designed the house so we wouldn't need a conventional central heating system with UFH and ASHP. We heated the house with three electric towel rails in the bathrooms and a 585W EASHP providing warm air heating through the MVHR system when required. We heated the whole house to 23C. In order to compare what level of comfort you would like it is necessary to know the temperatures others have in their properties.
  14. In 2017 I paid £200 for a half day which included finding leaks and doing the test.
  15. Nice house, shame it was orange.
  16. We had a triple glazed Fakro roof window, which we got because it didn't have trickle vents.
  17. Yeah, we used a 2kW fan heater when we worked in there in the winter and it used to be comfortable. Don't remember any magical figures, but I guess if 1.14kW is correct then that is close to half an electric kettles worth.
  18. I remember the space heating requirement was 12kWh/m2a in PHPP and I've got a vague recollection that with a temperature difference of 30C it required an input of 1.14kW, but that might all be BS knowing what my memory is like these days. It's a pity we have to grow old.
  19. I agree, and I live out in the sticks with a maximum of 10Mbps if I'm lucky, but I wouldn't change where I live just to have faster BT broadband.
  20. Yes, it was the first Isoquick installation in England in 2010.
  21. We had Internorm entrance doors which were aluminium on the outside and pine on the inside.
  22. Yes the drill bit should be at least as long as the fixing.
  23. As @joe90 said you have frame fixings so they should be fitted as frame fixings. They are not raw plugs. Drill a hole of the appropriate size through the frame and into the wall and knock the fixing in.
  24. @zoothorn As I posted three hours ago, I can't think of a different way to describe how to do it, sorry.
  25. Put packers between the frame and the wall, above and below the hole, so the window frame is not bendy. The packers can be proper plastic packers or just pieces of wood trimmed to size. As in the video imagine there is a gap between the wood and the wall.
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