Gus Potter
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About Gus Potter
- Birthday 09/20/1964
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Signed up after having reviewed the questions, comments and responses. Very refreshing and positive. The enthusiasm and knowledge of the contributors to this site is infectious!
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Raft foundation - close to existing structures
Gus Potter replied to WisteriaMews's topic in Foundations
I design stuff like this. There are many options. Best advice I can give you is to get an SE on board now, even if to provide a watching brief. If you don't then you introduce significant cost risk and uncertainty. You know there is a potential issue so the sooner you get that under control the better. -
I can see where you are coming from. The main drain run needs a rodding point at the top end. Where it changes direction, down the side of the house at the corner you may want to select a chamber of 600mm dia. Set this a bit away from the wall so you can rod back along the rear and down the side. There is no requirement to have a chamber at each branch line unless the drain line is long, yours is not. Take your AAV postion, I assume that is your kitchen sink. Now the sink has a grill, then a 40mm trap, then say 50mm ABS pipe that runs into the 110mm dia pop up. Any blockage is going to happen at the trap. Have you had a look at the regs and the diagrams yet?
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Ok that sounds like a good move. Here is what I would do if I was you. Find the best and well repute self employed 3CX digger driver with their own machine that works local. Pay the extra. Get them round and ask them how to do it! Ask them how they want the found marked; inside, outside, centreline or all of the preceeding. Assume the weather is going to be pish and some marks get lost by accident. Set some pegs well outwith the dig so if the marks get lost you can run a string line to get you back on track. Work out what you are going to do if you hit soft spots. An experienced digger driver is going to be your best friend here. They may also say they will pitch up during the pour and can use the back actor to get the concrete in place. Make sure you take plenty photographs. Be careful not to over dig. There are some horrible examples on BH where over dig happens and it just makes things ten times worse, they fill with water, hit even softer ground deeper down. Go and have a look again at what your SE is expecting in terms of ground conditions. If in doubt ask. Ask your SE if they can be on the end of the phone or just come to site if you get stuck. Yes, I know you probably don't want to pay for an SE visit but at the end of the day it can save you a pile of worry and cash. You only get one real chance of making a good job of this so don't take daft risks. Take time placing any reinforcement mesh.. many ground workers just fling it in.. and you pay for it.. but it is worse than useless if not properly placed.
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Bottle gullies are generally frowned upon these days. Ok you have posted a sketch but it's not enough detail. Think about how folk that have never seen this before can get their head around things. You can see it but we can't quite get our head around it all. I've, based on the sketch you have posted, over marked a suggestion for your soil drainage. Let's try and simplify that first. Here is the theory that lies behind my over marking. When you flush a toilet a "plug of water" goes down the pipe. It causes a vacuum behind it that sucks out water traps, say a sink trap. But that plug in a 110mm dia pipe rapidly flattens out and let's air pass backwards..reducing the suction. The stack balances all that out as the main thing. If you look at BS codes and the Eurocodes if gives minimum distances between the points of inlet between say a wash basin and a wc connection. This is generally between 150 and 300 mm depending on the type of connection (vertical / horizontal etc. @flanagaj. You have a much greater spacing between the connections. So that problem goes away. Next is to look at this from the other direction. Say you want to connect a kitchen sink waste into a 110 mm dia soil pipe. The sink pipe after the sink trap can be 40 mm dia or 50mm dia. Here if you chuck a bucket of water down the sink it causes this "plug effect" in the msaller pipe, that breaks the water seal in the trap. The codes say if a 40mm pipe run is more than 3.0 m it can cause this problem. But it looks like where you show an AAV (air admittance valve) the run of the pipe is nowhere near 3.0m thus a standard trap with a 75mm seal and a 40mm pipe at the sink trap should be fine. You have a pop up above the floor still in 110 mm dia and only then change from below ground drainage pipe to above ground pipe, 40 or 50mm dia. Thus here you can omit the AAV. If you introduce a rodding point at the end of the drain line you can then omit chambers with INV ( Invert level, the height of the bottom of the pipe called the invert) 122.09m and 122.0m. If you can, move chamber INV 121.69 beyond the corner of the building. This lets you rod in both directions. Go back and check your drain falls. See, if for the soil the fall is more than 1% ( about 1:50) and for the rain water no more than 1:80. If your workmanship is good then you should be good to go. Next plot this on a long section. If you set the soil pipes below the rain water pipes by the time you get to the corner the rain water pipe should be above the soil pipe and it can cross over the top of the soil pipe. Just a last couple of caveats. If the base of the gravel bed under the pipes is below the top of the foundation then check with your SE this is ok. If the top of you pipes are less than 600mm below the ground surface then check the regs in terms of how you protect the pipes. This can be by way of concrete paving slabs as it only looks like domestic foor traffic. Once you have done that then with a fair wind your Acco channel should sort itself out. You can take it past the main rain water drainage and then return it back and tie into the RWP drainage where it runs down the gable end.
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Own tools on day rate?
Gus Potter replied to flanagaj's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
This is a fair point. There are indeed many who trade below the vat threshhold. But the bonafide ones pay their taxes and keep their insurance up to date. Unless you are a sole trader, just yourself then it's hard to not breech the limit for registration 90k at the moment. There are a few (often older) trades folk that are really competent, above board who do this. But they are few and far between. They do have their own tools though in my experience. Now there is an advantage in keeping below the vat threshold as when doing domestic work it gives you a striaght up 20% advantage over larger firms. -
Post a sketch of what you propose.. that is worth a thousand words. Draw it on a bit oif A4.. take a photo and post. We won't test you on your drawing skills! I think you are getting yourself in a bind, the solution is probably simple. This is confusing. Let's see a sketch first.
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Own tools on day rate?
Gus Potter replied to flanagaj's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
The question I ask is are you paying cash in hand? Now we are all adults and know if you do this then there is a risk attached and you know you are winging it and you have to take the extra associated risk. It's not just the tax man, it's the fact that if they cock it up you will have to pay to demolish, buy new materails, the delay, the hurt you'l have to go through when you reralise you have been ripped off. That is the big boys / girls world. You can mitigate by standing over folk all day long and if you do that then you lose time / income so why not pay a little extra? I've said this many times before but quote Ruskin. “It's unwise to pay too much, but it's worse to pay too little. When you pay too much, you lose a little money - that's all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do. The common law of business balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot - it can't be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well to add something for the risk you run, and if you do that you will have enough to pay for something better.” Now in mitigation there is are still a FEW folk that just do work on a labout only basis, they do a good job. But unless you are an experience self builder then it's NOT for you! Maybe the easiest way to explain this is to put yourself in the position of a Dad / Mum that runs a building business and wants to hand that down to your kids. I have on my tender list a builder who's daughter is on the tools at the moment and he is wanting to pass the business onto her. She works her arse off, the reality is that she is not as physically as strong as the men.. but she has a great brain. We often have discussion around how much profit you need to add onto the basic labour cost to make a small buiulding business wash it's face.. it's around 40 - 50% just to keep the show on the road. Now this Contractor is not special.. I do get on well with him. I like him personally as he is honest, will fix his mistakes. but business is business and I'm not here for him.. I'm here to represent my Clinets. It's time for you to have an open and honest convesation with the folk you are dealing with. The labour only market is very much tough love. There are suggestion from other members about expectations.. have none.. you need to grow a big pair of balls! You have two choices.. get down and dirty with the dogs, maybe catch fleas or pay a bit more. To be blunt I suspect you are playing with the dogs and they are going to pull your trousers down. Now on the upside.. there are Contractors that may say to you.. we will pitch up.. get you out the hole for now.. we will charge you bit more . but be fair with you. They know they will get the rest of the build. I work with Contractors like this.. they know it's in their long term interests. The funny thing is. I have a list of Contractors on my tender list. The great thing for them is that as a desinger I get to meet the Client first.. I do some design.. I get to stress test my Clients.. if I smell shite then no way will I put the builders that I trust and who trust me to be fair and impartial at risk from a dodgy Client.. -
If you have a timber frame structure it's prudent to insulate the cold water pipes.
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Recommendations for a Structural Engineer - Scottish Borders
Gus Potter replied to Stewpot's topic in Building Regulations
Can you provide a bit more info for example: 1/ Do you have an "Architect" that is taking the lead on the warrant submission? 2/ What are you building / designing? 3/ What is your time progamme / expectation in terms of getting warrant approval? Borders Council are small, but cover a big area, they don't have a lot of resources compared with South Lanarkshire for example. The key here is to first identify what your issues are. -
Agree this is the probable cause. Can of worms here. I've noticed that the adverts say 10 year guarentee.. but in the fine print often now there is a caveat of 7 years on the glass units, both 2g and 3g. For all. I often post about taking a pragmatic and philistine apporach to say underfloor heating, I recollect that I've said similar applies to glazing in the sense that we are looking for the things that "are built into the house" to last the design life of the house. Now it's true glazing units can last a very long time. I've seen some still hanging in there 20 - 25 years or more. But the reality is that a lot of glazing units are going to have to be replaced at some point often before the rest of the building fabric does. This is a hidden cost, you could call it a maintenance cost that comes around every decade or so. In summary, when desinging buildings I make my Clients aware of this "hidden cost"and let them make up their own minds. I have Clients that say.. this is our "forever home". OK, but if it is you have to be aware that if you select really high end / expensive glazing then there is going to be a sting in the tail later on when they fail. One way to reduce the long term cost risk is to use a lower spec glazing system and spend the money on the wall, floor and roof insulation that we know will last the lifetime of the building. I have some Clients that don't have a bean to rub together, others are well funded and happy to take the risk. It's a personal choice, so long as I inform them then it's up to them how they spend their money. You might get lucky as you might be able to slide the new glass in from the casement side? Hang fire taking off the cladding for now!
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It is a bit. I see that on the inner leaf just above floor level you are maybe changing the material or masonry unit aspect ratio... be careful here as you may get longitudinal differential shrinkage.. this might result in a very nasty longitudinal crack in your wall just above skirting level with a plaster finish. I can see that you already have much of the substructure in place and it's much like trying to work with what you have. It's going to take a bit more thinking through. Is the insulation EPS boards or beads? My inclination is to have some form of barrier between the zone that could be saturated ( of partly) and the dry bit above.
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is there a better kind of roofing / cladding batten?
Gus Potter replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Building Materials
For all as a cautionary note. Selecting screws / nails can be a bit of a minefield. Screwfix for example say "corrosion resistant".. but how resistant? All fixing have generally some resistance. We often spend lots of time designing fixings and connections so we need to know the right fixings are getting used and we can have some data on their corrision resistance as that gives us confidence. In my specifications I often ask for a screw fixing corrosion resistance of Service Class 2 (SC2). I've copied an explanation from Rothoblass which explains it in lay terms: The reference standard (EN 14592:2022) classifies exposure conditions into service classes and corrosivity classes, helping engineers and builders make informed choices. Service class The service classes (SC1, SC2, SC3, SC4) describe the timber’s moisture content based on the temperature and humidity conditions of the environment: SC1: elements in indoor environments with low and relatively stable humidity levels. Moisture fluctuations are minimal. SC2: elements in partially covered areas or exposed to moderate humidity. This includes porches or semi-protected structures, where timber can occasionally absorb moisture. SC3: elements exposed to the outdoors or high-humidity contexts. Temperature and humidity fluctuations are significant, and the moisture content in the timber reaches high levels. You can find out a bit more here: https://www.rothoblaas.com/blog/timber-screws-corrosion-factors-and-durability -
Upgrading rafter ties to proper joists
Gus Potter replied to SimonD's topic in Garage & Cellar Conversions
Looks like you are your way to a cost effective solution. Watch these masonry bolts as if the expansive anchor type or say Thunder Bolts you can easily disturb / crack the masonry at the top of a wall. If you use the wrap over type hanger then then the wrap (if of say 70mm) does most of the work. Have fun! -
Good first go. A few comments: 1/ Your cavity tray is only one course above finished ground. BC will and I will pull you up on that. 2/ The insulation shown as a triangle just below the cavity tray is unbuildable as detailed . You are concentrating on the technicalities rather than balancing this with what is buildable, the cost and how you are going to make sure that what you are paying for actually happens on site. Don't blame yourself.. as unless you do this as a day job and have a feeling of build cost there is no way of you knowing this. 3/ You have a wide cavity. Why not thicken the perimeter insulation up to 100 or more thickness. Have a look at how MBC do an insulated raft slab and pinch their ideas. Then you can omit the Marmox block unless you want to spend money. You could be pragmatic and use the same money in a better way and in the round still achieve what you are looking to do.
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Watch this like a hawk. You TA is probably in a loss position. Double check if you have any fire protection and if any changes alter the design intent. Check if you are changing the exposure rating and make sure this is ok in terms of your detailng and wind driven rain. Go back and just have a look at what you have done so far. You have learnt a lot. Don't bury you head in the sand and hope it will be ok. If it turns out you have dropped a bollock then now is the time to address.
