Jump to content

Gus Potter

Members
  • Posts

    2055
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    25

Everything posted by Gus Potter

  1. Have a read though this old manual. TRADA Timber decking The professionals manual 3rd edition.pdf
  2. Hope you can get your hand sorted out. That sounds like a bad accident, don't blame yoursefl, it could happen to anyone. To business. I think you likely have enough to evidence against the standards, so not subjective. Unless you have over egged your post. But you have not provided that many photographs. Your sarking boards are treated, so not rotting, so I would not want to hang my hat on that as as a basis. But here is a question. If the roof has a breathable membrane then we need to have gaps between the sarking boards. I specify 100 mm wide boards with a 5.0 mm gap. You don't seem to have this. A competent roofer should know that this is a general requirement and check that the membrane is ok and the sarking gap. As an art of slating the slates at the verges are not tailed to shed the water back towards the roof. But you have plastic verges, just a symptom of decreasing skill level in the slating trade. My gut feeling is that if I and others on BH were to look under the bonnet we would come up with evidence that supports the arguement that you should not pay this contractor the balance. I trust you have photos from the inside of the roof. Lets have a look at the Velux trimming and so on. What nails has the roofer used? Let us know so we can check they have used the right ones. How close are you to the sea? Legally what you might want to ( I'm not a Lawyer so don't come after me!) is confirm if the Contractor intends to return or not. If they say they are going to return then you need to spell out the defects you want addressed, at their expense and when they are going to do that. You might want to say that if you can't agree then you will both agree on an independent arbitor. Now there is a good chance that the Contractor won't come back as they have chucked their toys out the pram. But you have to go through the process so protecting yourself. The contractors wife may be a Lawyer and work pro bono.
  3. Each time you use an abbreviation, use it then in brackets, explain the abbreviation, you only need to do this once. For new folk to BH this is important, as an SE I think it's just poor commuication. If you want to get your point over then follow this format, otherwise folk will lose interest. I agree the English planning system is a mess, the Scottish system is much further developed. It's still not easy, but much easier to navigate as it gives everyone, including devleopers better guidnce. It still has some major pitfalls for self builders. In summary it's about time the English system sorted it's self out. It's going to take time and some horrible things are going to happen.. but any reform of the English planning system is going to be painfull. The chances of delivering enough housing is limited, the best way to control this is to stop the population from rising! While this new document seems encouraging it does not address the elephant in the room which is the supporting infrastructure.. the drains, hospitals ect need to keep up. On a personal note. The strategy seems fundamentally flawed to me. This idea that you have to travel to work is mental. It does not make for social cohesion. I live in East Kilbride which was one of the first new towns, the idea started in 1947. The plan really started to work in about the late sixties when they thought.. lets build some industrial units and offer grants to multinationals to set up shop. The offer was, you come here and we will build the houses that provide the workforce. Motoralla were one of the first, Rolls Royce, the Department for international Development followed. The jobs were well paying, folk built lives and family in East Kilbride, small busdiness units were offered to provide the secondary support mechanisms that we all need. My father in laws dad ran the local shoe shop. Unfortunately this fundaments concept has been lost. Now I know lot's of folk are enthusiastic on BH about this change in the English system.. but what if it later this works against you and you ideal plot gets blighted by someone next door.. be careful what you wish for! In the round there is no point in building your dream home if the surrounding area has no community or just turn into a shit hole.
  4. The key qeustion here is do you still own the Contractor money and if so how much? That will drive the rest of the conversation. Make sure you write to the Contractor and confirm that he has confirmed he is walking away form the job. I used to be a building Contractor in my last life, once I had a customer that was basically an out and out chancer and I wanted to leave the job. My QS told me.. on no account Gus chuck your tools in the van and walk off site as you will get absolutely hammered! The law rests firmly on the domestic Client side and they have an Architect who will back them up and they won't want to put themselves in the firing line. Make sure when you write to the Contractor, use the postal method also, don't just rely on email. This is a key step. If he is using wats app / text then say I've sent a letter and email to you, keep a copy. Ah.. best not to mention this anymore, it kind of undermines you taking the high ground. Ah... now the first response from Contractor on the defensive is to say "its my site" and you are not authorised to access the scaffolding and you inspected the work illegally! I have actually had similar from a major warranty provider where they asked me how I got record photographs without accessing the scaffold. I told them I'm an SE so qualified to make an assessment of your scaffold. I consider this a matter of saftey and it turned out I was right also, your ticket was out of date so lets start from here! Your case is a little different, but if the Contractor has previously allowed you to go up the Scaffold without supervision at all times, induction, then they are pretty much stuffed.
  5. @Daniel H Have copied the link again from you other post. Well done with the commentry. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6941965758a21370f58f304e/Draft_NPPF_December_2025.pdf It's heavy reading, not in my immediate bag as based in Scotland. That said, still interested in what is going on in the south. As a quick skim though the authors have possibly been infected with the woke mind virus and have lots the art of communicating in plain English.
  6. Yes I know I'm based in Scotland but similar rules apply UK wide re permitted development. One thing I often point out to Clients when you come to sell. The valuer etc might ask, what about this extension? You say.. it's under PD, they say prove it was ok at the time you did it. This can often cause delay in the sale or worse as you have to go back and demonstrate in full that you complied. In Scotland we have a process called the certificate of lawfulness which is a legal document that says what you are doing is withing your PD rights. Are you sure? https://www.elmbridge.gov.uk/planning/trees-and-hedges/building-near-tree Their link says this: Planning permission You must get permission for any permitted development scheme that may affect protected trees, which includes their root systems. If you want to build near a tree you will need to provide information in line with the British Standard – BS 5837:2012 ‘Trees in relation to design, demolition, and construction – Recommendations’ to support your application. Without this information, your application is likely to be invalidated or refused. We encourage you to seek professional advice from arboricultural consultants who will provide the necessary information and reports in line with the British Standard and our requirements. If you have confidence in your planning consultant then they should have no problem putting this in writing and signing. Mind you, folk don't live forever so if they pass and you come you come to sell then you'll maybe take a different view at that time.
  7. I undestand you frustration. But this can be tricky work. The flashing details and how you marry that into the existing can be complex and very time consuming = cost. The you have the drainage.. do the levels work ok to make the roof work. The base can be easy or hard. If you have a vented solum to the existing house then you need to maintain that for example. It's probably not if you want a durable job executed by skilled trades persons. All companies need to make a profit, if they are turning over more than 90k then they should be vat registered so 20% goes on the labour plus profit margin as well as the materials. Most companies allow for a bit of contingency in the pricing. Very roughly if doing a very fag packet analysis of a price you have been given, say 14k then to strip out the vat, profit, contingency their in house cost will be roughly 40% less. So 14000.00 / 1.4 = £10000.00. Taking your cheapest material price of 3.5 k leaves 6.5k for labour but you still have all the flashings, mastic, fixings and so on. You might have to strip out some of the existing to make the weathering details and then reinstate. Once you put all that together then you might conclude that the lads are not on a CEO salary. If they are sub contractors / self employed then they also have to make their own pension provision.
  8. I've started using AI more and more, mainly to help job my memory. I bit the bullet mainly due to encouragement form other BH members. Sometimes I ask it to do some calculations, often just to see the format or to see if it flags up something I've not thought about, or give me another verified reference I've not looked up. In that context it's a great aide memoir. BUT you have to really watch it! As an SE I've recognised that it can be downright dangerous in terms of safety. I was looking to calculate what sort of torque I might want to apply to resin anchor ordinary bolt the other day to generate a bit of pre load in masonry. I wondered if AI would offer up an alternative approach for example. It came back with some calculations.. they looked odd. I checked against my standard method and found AI was exactly a factor of 10 out on the unsafe side! I then told it was a factor of 10 out, it ran again and said your right, it often only appologises if you threaten to pull it's plug out!
  9. I sympathise! What's you budget? In Scotland on something like this we have the Planners, who are interested, in not least, in what it is going to look like from the outside, how big and how high. Then we have Building Standards. On something like this one main thing they will look at are the fire boundary conditions. It's your responsibility not to set light to an adjacent structure. It would help a lot if you can post some photos of the site so we can see a panoramic view.
  10. Don't know as can't quite visualise what you have. Can you post some hand sketches of the elevations of both houses. Others on BH will likely chip in so you'll get a variety of views and comment. Glad the documents helped. Thee BRE on can be a bit heavy reading. For all. One way of keeping the professional design fees down is to try and get an understanding yourself of what he issues are and this save time / cost when discussing with your designers. Remember that designers need to know and remember a huge amount, it's just not possible for them to retain all that at their fingertips. what they do need is a big library and know how to find specialist documents when they need to. A well informed Client can thus often prompt designers and engage in a healthy discussion... you all end up working together as a proper team, sharing and discussing ideas and solving problems.
  11. I've recently been working with someone who has been using Protek. I have to be very careful about what I say here as I use my own name. One miss step from me here and I'll get sued and will probably lose any case. It's not just Protek it's also the NHBC, both will take my trousers down if I slander and rightly so. That said the rep from Protek told me the MD was a hands on guy and he would phone me. He did not and that was not good form! I'm not taking favour as many other warranty providers make caveats and have "fine print", insurance is a business, a very competetive one. I kind of know a bit about this as from time to time I advise Clients when they are claiming against warranty providers. To do so I have to understand just what was the policy covers and what it does not. To put this another way.. I pitch up on BH and folk are chipping in to say that SE's are crap, Architects are crap, builders are crap .. and we are all over charging you and not taking on any, or, reducing our liability. The warranty providers are fighting back to keep their premiums competetive. One way they are doing this is to pass the risk on to other designers, so thier risk is less and they can reduce the premium. As above I need to be really careful about what I say. My own view is that the warranty providers have recognised that self builders often just want to get cover so the can get lending it's almost akin to selling car insurance. Providers caveat this as the market is competetive. It's a race to the bottom. As a self buider you need to ask yourself. Do I want cover so the bank will lend to me or do I want cover that actually secures my assett and investment. So I'm going to quote Ruskin here: mull this over. There is hardly anything in the world that someone cannot make a little worse and sell a little cheaper, and the people who consider price alone are that person’s lawful prey. 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 is 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.”
  12. Hi all. From time to time I commission a CCTV drain survey to get build over permission. It comes with a report and a video, attached. Once the works are complete we do another survey which shows we have not damaged the water board assets when executing the works. As an SE I'm responsible for designing the foundations so they don't damage the drains in the long term. Now, there are more explicit videos... but as BH is a family site... The video goes blank at times, even the camera has moral fibre. We can see quite a lot of ground water ingress at one of the joints, the water board still passed this as the structural integrity of the pipe was ok, I think. If they had admitted their joints were failing that could have opened them up to claims.. it's a weird world. Build over permissions can be serious if you come to later sell your house. Drain Survey 1 (Subclip #1).mp4
  13. I got timed out on adding a bit more so here it is which should be apended to my last post: To add a bit! Lots of younger designers, Architects included, have great ideas, some have good old common sense. But they lack the strength and depth of experience to comminicate that to you and then be able to present the business case to you and then explain how they are going to present a planning application, they forget who is paying thier wages... you! One fundamental that you need to instill in young designers is that.. you can be as talented as you like, but if non of your stuff can be affordably built then you are on a sticky wicket! But on the other hand if you sell yourself too cheep then that also leads to a hiding to nothing. I'm ah.. a little older, my problem is keeping ahead of the game as all these young folk are taking no prisoners! The rules change regularly, I have to keep up.. I can't claim grandfathers rights, it's an open competition. @SilverShadow Have confidence in your own ability. From experience I can tell you that many desingers will embrace an informed Client, builders also!. Yes, they may ask you for a bit more fee money but that is a fair days work for fair days pay. Builders like certainty.. if you have Client that keeps changing thier mind the cost often goes up, then they have the hassle of try to get paid for the extras. If the Architect /Designer has not done a detailed job then it all becomes tricky. Builders know this, I used to be one so sometimes added on a "fanny" factor if I though the Client could be a dick head. If I got the job and they turned out to be great I would often do some extras for free, then I stood a better chance of getting recommendation as.. everyone loves a builder that comes in under budget! Now if you think ahead to the build. By going through this process you'll possibly identify other potential savings. A good trades man costs say £ 250.00 - £300.00 a day. If you hit it off with your designer they could easily wash their face fee wise. Think strategically.
  14. I've got a couple of projects on my books at the moment, one is a new build the other is a refurb / extension. The planners on the new build have opened the gambit by saying, they think the garden will be over shadowed, the planning officer said they had just been promoted, but here were initial comments essencially pre the formal application ( it's complicated at the council admin went of piste) it was a can kicking excercise. One the other project I have a privacy issue as I'm relocating a conservatory. Below is the kind of extra work I've put into my planning submission. Don't forget I had to survey the site so I could produce a drawing that will become part of the legal planning submission, that takes time and a lot of thought as the levels are not horizontal. One part of the art here is to recognise the obvious things the planners will clock, but not be too technical and indavertantly introduce things they have not thought of which can then invite them to use you as a "free training " excercise, part of their CPD. What I do in these cases is to lead and inform my Clients, each time I say, "I think this might work" I back it up by evidence. I provide info such as the attached so the Client can read and see for themselves the aguements I might want to put forward. I've attached two typical documents I sent to my Clients, one is Scottish based, don't knock it! It's easy to get your head round. This "easy document is based on the UK guidance, BRE 209 which is quite technical so to get your head round that you need to read the easy document first. Now all this does not come for free. There is mention of say getting an Architect for a few grand. But many desingers have special skill sets you need to be prepared to pay for and recognise that this strength and depth of design skill takes many years to develop. Best thing you can do is to read through what I've attached, use AI to help you on terminology, but always check? it's not always right! It's incorrect as it seems no one has spent the time or effort to put together and evidenced based design. At the end of the day you will probably kick youselves if you later find out you chucked in the towel before you even got started. You designers should know enough to say, this has got no chance, if so then why are you taking the risk. OR they should say we think this can be justified, there is latent risk and, refer to the documents I've attached. Now don't forget the Planners can't just run around being loose cannons. Some planning decisions go to appeal, this costs the councils lots of money in hours spent. If they keep losing appeals then their bosses hold their feet to the fire. In summary if you inform yourself a bit more then you'll find a design that embraces your enthusiasm and you'll likely make great progress. All the best and keep your heads up! Daylight and Sunlight guidance 17-06-21.pdf BRE 209 Site Layout Planning for Daylight and Sunlight BRE 2022.pdf
  15. I'm going to be the devils advocate here and assume that the window installer thinks they are not to blame, they have engaged me to defend them. First I'm going to put my SE hat on. With that hat on I want to see if your house is a bit "flexible" and prone to sideways movement. @Balou can you post some full elevation photos. Now if it turns out that your building is flexible then I would, in the installers defense, start asking the SE type questions.. in other words is the building moving sideways as designed by the SE within limits and also vertically (withing limits) and causing out glazing to fail? as the glazing contractor has not accounted for the SE movement in their installation. I can't easily see how the bricks are supported over the bifold doors. Again here if defending the glazing contractor I would want to know about this and cavity tray design. I would also want to know if you have made later alterations since you moved in, have you done something that could compromise the building performance that has cuased the building to move and over stressed the glazing and this has resulted in the problems manifest. If you have not done any of the above then the glazing provider seems to be on a sticky wicket! I agree Craig. It could be that the window frames are absolutely fixed to the main frame of the house and as that moves about it's causing overstress in the windows and doors. By the sound of it the workmanship appeares shoddy, not maintaining air tighntess for example. In the round though there are so many issues it apears to me that the product could just be faulty and the installation is poor.
  16. Hiya all. This post is intended to provide insight into UFH screeds, the build process and build tolerances.. which drives overall cost. The first part sets the narrative. The last sets out and describes what drives screed thickness. At the end of the day if you are building a new house or just extending then it is vital that you understand how each bit of the design works, how you are going to build it and the tolerances you have to apply to each element so you don't cause a later problem. On self builds few folk have the ability / time to ensure that the contractor is delivering what they say they will! To get round this we need to simplify the design so self builders / extenders can see that they are getting what they paying for, compare builders quotes. We need to build in tolerances that the builder can work to when the rain is pissing down their neck. This is real life in the building trade! With my SE hat on I want to make sure that the slab is thick enough, but buildable, so the slab could be 10-15mm high unless the Client wants to pay extra for the tighter tolerance! "But the Architect told us it would work!" It might but they may not have told you how much extra that would cost to work to a tighter tolerance! Oh no, if the slab is high that can't be as my UFH pipes won't fit! As an SE I want to control the level of the sub base, if sub base is too high the slab is too thin. Now in a stricty controlled enviroment with a traditional Clerk of works we may get this down to 10mm high on the top side, not an SE issue in the main. SE washes their hands at this point, but if they are nice guys like me they will alert you to the problem. Any more tighter tolerances than that and the Contractor will add cost. But the whole idea of self building is to cut out these middle men! The only way you do that is to keep it simple stupid! That statement is based on the what I've learnt from being in this business for 40 years! This is the art of design! See where you can save time on site, make it easily buildable, reduced Contractor risk ( so they don't inflate the price) then you can use the savings to deliver what you actually see as the end result. Many self builders just "hope for the best".. but this is the building trade and there are no friends in the desert. Once you get into this mind set then you are in a good position to "sell yourself " to builders. If you make it simple then the risk to them is less and the price will likely go down. If you take the time to understand what you want to build and how it is going to be executed then you are in a strong position. Your reward will be that you open up the field for the more builders to compete for the work not least. At some point you will find a builder that says, I want this job and can see how I'm going to make a profit as I can see that is is not diffucult and carries less risk. Now I've had a few Clients over the years. If you are smart enough to be able to think about extending / self building and have some funds then you are not daft. My role is to give you the information that you need to make an informed descision. If your advisors are not doing this then you need to ask why. Yes, this post is about screed thickness but it's actually about what is below that drives the equation. I design insulated rafts, a passive raft is just a nuance! have done so for decades, but always having in mind what we need to put on top of the structural slab. The tolerance on a structural slab or just the supporting floor is, having done lots of insulated build raft designs, is about 10mm plus or minus on a good day! I shite you not this is a good day! If you have beam and block then these have a pre camber and that inroduces another aspect. If you assume a flat screed at nomimal 40mm thick then you are likely on a hiding to nothing. DO NOT DO THIS SCREED AT 40mm. Its complete bonkers! Now I know that there are many folk on BH that advocate thin screeds, but my own view is that they may have only done one or two projects at most, some may have done more but have never checked or just put their heads in the sand and never admit they cocked it up! In summary my main gripe is: 1/ That there is a total lack of design coordination and this results in extra cost as many contractors and designers as covering their arses. There is this perception that what you are putting the screed on is going to be flat and level.. that is cloud cuchoo land! Any Architect that wants to dish out advice needs to have practical experience and an understanding of what the SE is doing, the complete process and the tolerances every trade is normally expected to work within...otherwise they are a potential liability. 2/ There are far too many folk poncing about on screed thickness without understanding what they are laying it on, structural slabs have a wide tolerance as do beam and block. 3/ You can use the likes of "Loop cad" as much as you like but in the heat of battle some UFH pipes may have to cross over one another. There is an old saying you can plan for war, but as soon as the war starts the plans go out the window, this happens from time to time when building stuff. That is why I'm advocating for the simple stupid,it at least give you a fighting chance. Please folk try and think about cutting yourself some slack, the tighter the tolerances you ask for the higher the cost.. in reality, I see it so many times unless you make it simple you'll end up paying for something that never gets delivered. Best to pay for something that is achievable, even if you need to make compromises? Good design always involves compromising to get the best overall outcome. This is often missed by novice self builders, its not a bad thing to have that enthusiasm.. what is bad is if they then chuck their money down the drain by not beaing able to recognise that design is about balance / the trade off.
  17. Good approach, your efforts will reap rewarded. It's a very tricky detail. You have to balance cleaning with over hang, how you detail out the membrane under the roof cladding, if the gutters are long do you need or not an expansion gutter detail, the fall in the gutter, often over looked! The detail might look good at the gutter high end but what about the low end? Sometimes if I'm discussing gutters in the North of Scotland, Wales where we get iced snow that can rip pretty much any gutter off, but it does not snow that much often enough to warrant snow guards, we just set the gutters a bit lower, so from time to time the rains running down the roof over shoots. Design is about achieving the best compromise at times.
  18. There is a discprecancy here. Go back and check what parmeters the Larsen truss designer was given. Ask; how do the Larsen trusses cope with the wind load. Larsen truss design is a bit of an art, it's a lot of fun mind and massively elegant, the wind loads get applied in a different way compared with a standard timber frame. The detail you show indicates that the outer and inner flange of the Larsen truss are restrained. It seems that your are on the face of it committed, but if there is an error then no point in compounding this. If I was you I would be confirming in writing to your Architect that a 40 mm screed is achievable, buildable at reasonable cost and it is going to remain serviceable ( i.e) not cause problems with the flooring. I've dabbled with this over the years and I feel that you tolerances are too tight and you are in for a nasty shock At least you'll end up paying for something that does not get delivered on site. My suggestion is that you get together with your Architect.. find out just how much they know about what is deliverable in reality. Give them a way to save face and see if you can change the levels. Bite the bullet now as later it will likely get worse. Well it will be a disater if what you are laying on is 5 - 10mm high? so now the pipe cover will be a bit of a joke. As an SE I'm very careful to set buildable tolerance limits. Ask your Architect how they are going to account for the variation in level and flatness of what you are laying on. In summary you take your chances! As an SE I'm not that fussed if your UFH does not work so well. With my desinger hat on I think this is vital to get it right, even if you have to go back and review the potential desing flaws which I think are there. It does not have to to result in a big falling out!
  19. This says lots in two sentences! It's well worth considering as written by a construction professional with decades of experience. This is great advice. To go into a little detail. If you are a builder and building things, like a self build project / extensions etc for Clients and employing or sub contracting then there three types of insurance that I want you to demonstrate and evidence to me (on behalf of my Client) that you hold. If you as a Client have a mortgage then your lender has in interest, thus you as a Client should make contact with your lender. It can be a bind but to tick all the boxes this is what you should do. 1/ The builder needs to hold Public liability insurance. This is actually quite cheep to obtain for a small builder as the policy terms are really restrictive. It basically covers them for saying leaving a barrow on a public foot path and for some drastic event where no other policy kicks into place. I have this type of cover as an SE, its cheep cf my professional indemnity insurance but if I damage someones BMW with my ladder it could be a sore one. 2/ The next one up is employers liability insurance. This is serious as if you don't protect your employees then you can go to jail.. this is a statutory requirement. So you have to check that when the builder presents this and the extent of thier cover it makes some sense. Even if they say, I only employ my wife and, all the rest are sub contractors you need to do enough due dilligence to say.. can you demonstrate that your sub contractors who may employ ten people are also sufficiently insured. It sounds over the score at first glance but if there is an accident on site the HSE may take a different view! The moral stand point makes it own case. Cost wise employers liability is not massivley expensive unless you have black marks against your past performance and have systems in place to stop folk getting hurt on site. 3/ In terms of cost the last bit a contractor needs is contracts works insurance. This covers most of the things that a Contractor might make a complete pigs ear of and they do from time to time they do. One simple one is say on a house extension; the plumber makes a temporary connection, it fails and floods the house. At the other end they may not follow the SE design, SE pitches up and says.. you need to take that back down and rebuild. Now in context. Before I reinvented myself as an SE I was a Contractor, employed people. There was occasion where I and my employess made a mess, got it wrong. I paid to fix it as that comes with the job. But if I had made too much of a mess then I would have had to pass this onto my contracts works insurer. The key bit here is that contracts works insurance is expensive. Many builders have policies that are written "in aggregate". This means that if they cock up on more than one job at a time then their policy may not pay out the amount you expect. So to sum up. It's worth just asking a few questions.
  20. Plus 1 to that. Once you take into account the build sequence then agree second option is more practicable. I know you have just asked about the inside but can you just check the weathering detail on the outside? This is a critical detail for longevity. Ask your Architect if they know whether the Larsen truss has been designed so both the inside and outside flanges require structural support. @Dunc Does your cladding require ventilation behind, always worth checking the fire protection detail around doors , windows and at the wall head if this is the case.
  21. The FMB is a trade association, by subscription. Make of that what you like. This is good you have seen other work, but check that was not for a relative. Check Face book and other social media for suspicious connections. Don't assume all builders are there to rip you off, many are good honest hard working folk. Just browse and if there is a rat you'll likely smell it. A fatal mistake here is to fall under the builders "charm".. you like them but don't want to uncover bad news. Be brave and grasp the nettle. You don't have to tell them you have checked them out! If you struggle on social media then get say your kids , nieces and nephews etc to check this stuff for you, they will do it in a fraction of the time! Do more due dilligence. Check companies house if they are limited. See what other links the directors have. If not limited then this can be an advantage. If something goes horribly wrong then sometimes you can chase the builders own personal assets. Check to see where they live, go to the land registry and see if they own the home (in Scotland this cost me £3.00) and how big their mortgage is. Check to see if they hold it in joint names. You can't chase easily (and nor would you probalby I hope) if the house is in joint names and you end up putting a family out their home. If vat registered then you can check their registration. If not vat registered then you need to ask them why. If their turnover is that low then how do they build houses? Once you have done this kind of due dilligence then you need to sort out a contract that is fair to all parties. To finish on a light note. I have posted this kind of stuff before. Last year a Client engaged me and told me they had followed my advice and done the full due dilligence on myself! I thought... well at least I passed and if you want to dish it out then expect the same in return!
  22. Agree, your statement is however cleverly worded, what you say is generally accepted as correct. But you are making a straw man arguement. Have you explored the potential of the Rosebank oil field? That is because we keep shutting them down. Have a look at what Ineos have been doing for many years in Fife Scotland. One reason it did well in the past was because it used sweet Brent crude oil from the north sea, more plastic and base chemicals, less heavy crud ( the crap) that is expensive to get rid of. No it won't in the grand scheme of things, anyway if we make the tax system attractive it's the oil and gas companies that will fund it. If we give them the same security as we seem to hand out willy nilly to the wind folk this should be welcome. It's accepted that to develop say the Rosebank field will take 10 - 15 years. Again here you are making the straw man argument. Even the development will create well paying jobs in the UK. It has less nasty stuff in it that is bad for the environment. I'm not saying this is not achievable, but it will be very much less achievable over say 30 years if we don't develop and maintain our oil and gas industry and collect taxes to fund it. As an Engineer I think you are economically naive. There is a reason for this. Brent crude is what we call a sweet oil, it has lots more useful and valuable compenents and less rubbish in it. That is why you often see it as the bench mark oil price. We have down the list a bit WTI (West Texas Intermediate) which sells for less. Then you have the stuff the Middle east sell. Again you are making a straw arguement as you are comparing apples with oranges. We have some of the best and most valuable oil off the shores of the UK. Again you just can't see the woods for the trees, mention Reform and some folk just can handle it. Is that the best you can do? But see that gas.. it does not magically come out the sea bed ready for use. It needs processed and use made of the other components. If you really are worried about the environment then we should be spending money developing our own access to sweet crude oils just 80 miles off our shores. We take them and process them responsibly. So please can you dispense with your straw man arguments as while some may fall for that type of deflection I won't.
  23. Hang on here before you chuck in the towel. It's quite usual to find no membrane or bituminous felt under an old slate / clay tiled roof. Can you post some photos so we can have a look at what you have from the inside and the outside. In a new build yes, but when we are considering old buildings and upgrading it can actually be an advantage. The old traditional roofer ( 100 years ago) did not have access to felts and membranes so they gave their slates / tiles more head lap. We can use this to our advantage at times as the roof is really drafty, every cloud has a silver lining!
  24. Agree a bit of air can cause havoc. One way to purge this is to shut off the other loops and open the air vent. You'll need a bucket and a few towels to catch the water. Give it a good go and don't forget to top up the inhibitor once you have finished.
×
×
  • Create New...