Alan Ambrose
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Everything posted by Alan Ambrose
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Where is best to by an electric mains kiosk?
Alan Ambrose replied to saveasteading's topic in Barn Conversions
Wow, these are expensive for how well they are made. Anyone know - are you allowed to put a CU and say a router inside too? -
What is Ubakus really doing? And what is that 2/3 - 1/3 rule?
Alan Ambrose replied to Garald's topic in Heat Insulation
From memory doesn’t ubakus allow you to choose from a bunch of different moisture models? I’m guessing that a typical moisture analysis usually isn’t so marginal that the choice of moisture model means much anyway. -
You might be able to slip it into fulfilment of a condition - do you have to confirm materials, planting etc? Or the straight forward way is to file a non-material amendment - no rush as presumably you'll do this near the end?
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This? "You will also need to provide one of the following: + An approved claim for a VAT refund for DIY house builders + A self-build warranty + An approved self-build mortgage" So, the VAT claim will do it?
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Yeah, good quality diamond drills will do it, but even then, they take a while. I found the erbauer drill guide a bit b.....x.
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HELP, failed perc test and on clay soil
Alan Ambrose replied to nowtie's topic in Introduce Yourself
Do you have a soil investigation and/or have you looked up BGS records of any bores nearby. It would be interesting to see how deep the clay is and what’s under it. -
Certificates needed for site clearance
Alan Ambrose replied to MariaD's topic in New House & Self Build Design
To go to a proper waste plant, the dirt would need to be tested if there’s any amount of it. (A single wheelbarrow full probably gets through the system unscathed.) There’s restrictions on knotweed etc. Look up ‘WAC testing’ (not some kind of sanity test). If it’s going to be left in a layby somewhere you won’t need any certs. Check he’s not being an idiot over one wheelbarrow worth, but suggest the answer is ‘yes’. -
Fire protection of steels and this example?
Alan Ambrose replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Building Regulations
Apologies - I was not intending to cause controversy - I was just asking, as a fire regs newbe, 'how does this meet the regs'. Reading this article and looking at the pictures more closely, I think that structurally it is probably a steel frame building entirely (i.e. not a few random steels dropped in for span purposes). It actually appeals to my meccano-kid 5-year old self. So, I suppose nicely coloured intumescent paint is the simple answer. -
French renewables boost causes negative electricity prices…
Alan Ambrose replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Housing Politics
>>> Instability? Surely this is a good thing I imagine the nuclear plants are already bugging the French regulator suggesting that they have to pick up the cost (and risk?) of wind and solar putting random spiky amounts of power onto the grid. That is 'it was all very safe and stable until the new boys came along'. -
Wind and solar glut forces 6 French reactors to shut temporarily: https://fortune.com/2024/06/16/electricity-prices-france-negative-renewable-energy-supply-solar-power-wind-turbines/ I wonder whether there will be some future intervention on the electricity marketplace to reduce this kind of grid instability?
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Fire protection of steels and this example?
Alan Ambrose replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Building Regulations
And this: "The basement is not counted when assessing the numbers of storeys for fire resistance and means of escape. Typically, for a two-storey house over a basement, 30 minutes fire resistance is required for the structure..." https://www.basements.org.uk/TBIC/Basements/Fire-Safety.aspx -
Fire protection of steels and this example?
Alan Ambrose replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Building Regulations
OK school day for me apparently: "A pack with 4,400+ matt and eggshell colours with sufficient intumescent basecoat (Bollom Brosteel Ultra 60) and coloured topcoat (Bollom Flameguard Ultra Vinyl Matt, Bollom Flameguard Ultra Acrylic Eggshell) to protect suitably primed, standard ‘ɪ’ shape structural steel beams and columns in internal environments to 30 minute fire resistance." https://www.rawlinspaints.com/products/5402-zeroflame-aquasteel-wb-30min-system-for-universal-beams-columns.html https://www.rawlinspaints.com/products/5232-bollom-brosteel-ultra-60-30min-system-for-universal-beams-columns.html -
Getting broadband/WiFi to my garage.
Alan Ambrose replied to Russdl's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
As an alternative, I can't think there would be a problem running two or more SWA cables (e.g. one power, one network) in the same duct. Yeah, theoretically heating if there were two power cables, but you're unlikely to be doing that. -
Fire protection of steels and this example?
Alan Ambrose replied to Alan Ambrose's topic in Building Regulations
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>>> the only thing stolen on our site was wheel barrows (X2) that reminds me of an old joke... https://jokesfunnystories.quora.com/What-was-a-loophole-that-you-found-and-exploited-the-hell-out-of-356
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Planning Permission battles
Alan Ambrose replied to Indy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
@Indy B....x - commiserations, I feel for you. -
In this issue of Homebuilding & Renovating p24-31 (the 1st image doesn't have a wavy ceiling, it's just the way the magazine is sitting on my desk). I like the look a lot. My question is: how do they do this without covering the whole thing in plasterboard etc for fire protection? Standard paint over intumescent paint maybe?
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Adjustable wall fixing
Alan Ambrose replied to Pocster's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
I like these things for that sort of job: https://www.fischer.co.uk/en-gb/products/cavity-fixings/board-fixing/metal-cavity-fixing-hm Only the Fischer ones, the competitor ones are rubbish. You really do need to use the pliers thingy ('setting tool') to pull them tight before you screw into them. Ask me how I know. With these you can screw and remove as often as you like. -
Buying a house without a new build warranty
Alan Ambrose replied to oksleator's topic in New House & Structural Warranties
>>> surely the Building Control inspected whilst it was being built. Good point, if it was the local authority BC, I've seen before a property advertised with 'LABC warranty' i.e. these guys: https://www.labcwarranty.co.uk/ -
Help designing our home network
Alan Ambrose replied to MechanicalBuilder's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
Just think of anywhere you might want to put a wifi access point, a camera, doorbell, gate opener, plug in a computer, tv, have a smart device etc etc etc. Note that, if you forget one, that in the future you can split a network cable into two if you need, but it need a couple of tails and the solution is OK where you don't need max bandwidth. Run the cables back to one or more hubs - more than one might reduce the amount of cable considerably. CAT6 should be fine. -
I think that is holding up the edge of the asphalt - so remove it and the edge is likely to crumble over time.
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>>> The new Fischer ones are stunning. They are in TS or SF @saveasteading I’m interested exactly which ones - the duopower, sx, ux, self drilling? https://www.fischer.co.uk/en-gb/products/standard-fixings