Jump to content

SimonD

Members
  • Posts

    1461
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    8

SimonD last won the day on March 12

SimonD had the most liked content!

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

SimonD's Achievements

Advanced Member

Advanced Member (5/5)

701

Reputation

  1. The leak is on the return connection of your central heating. This fitting is the isolator and boiler drain down point. To isolate this you turn the valve which sticks out the bottom of the connection. You also need to isolate the flow side. You then need to depressurise the boiler, drain it down and then probably just replace the fibre washer. However, even though this connection is outside the boiler, it is part of it and there's no telling if there's more of a problem inside. Get a gas safe registered person in to have a look and repair it as they may have to order more parts too. It's not unknown for those valves to need replacing entirely every so often.
  2. Is that a drywall specific shadow gap bead or a plastet skim one? Ive come across the Trim-tex stuff when considering finishes earlier in out build. Apparently made specifically for drywall. https://www.profilestore.co.uk/c/drywall-bead/trim-tex/shadow-gap-beads
  3. Yes, indeed. I've only ever managed bits of all those, maybe that's my problem...
  4. Quite difficult to tell not standing infront of the boiler, but has anyone checked the condensate trap and drain? You can get a very similar sound on ignition if it's blocked and there's condensate backed up into the hex. You probably also mean mBar rather than mV. If gas pressure is too high you will see larger flames on a hob - how much larger at 27-28mBar is the question. Water gauges are about as accurate as you can get as long as there isn't a kink of obstruction on the gauge/hoses. A digital gauge is very accurate too as long as it has been calibrated as it should be annually. I use a digital gauge all the time and it's spot on, and the Network provider has never questioned my measurement when I call for a replacement regulator because of either low or high supply pressure. What were the measurements after replacing the regulator? As that should have been tested given the questions.
  5. So yesterday I had a busy day dot and dabbing and thanks to the guy on On the Trowel Youtube channe, I skimmed my first ever walls as I need to get this room finished in the next week or so to give my younger son a bedroom - it was supposed to be in September. The wall was straight, plumb and the plastering was not a halloween horror show - just a few minor imperfections. I'm most pleased about the clean top corner to the primed ceiling:
  6. I'm the east side, but Salisbury is still about 1.5 hours away. Thanks for the offer though, I'll check out my local suggestions and then ping you a message if needed!
  7. Ah yes, thanks. I've investigated only to find that this appears to be the case. Where two cracks they're along the lines of a cut down board that only spans 600mm so it's only on two half studs. No wonder it's cracked around the joints. Now I have to figure out what to do about it. Just fixing the cracks is going to do the job really. Do I take the drastic action to cut this out, make a bigger whole and reboard to span several studs? It's a big wall 3.1m high by 7.4m long so not really practical to do the whole thing. Studding is pretty spot on as I did all that myself and its been in a long time so perfectly acclimatised to the house now. Yes, the third crack is at a joint that has missed the stud - thankfully one side of the wall is open so I can fix this easily!
  8. Further to my earlier post I'm trying to understand why I've experienced cracking in the skim on new plasterboard on stud walls. I've had a look and it appears that skrim tape has been used at these joints. Can someone shed some light on other reasons this might happen? And is it fairly common for cracks to appear in new plasterwork as snagging?
  9. Should have done a smaller project first! This too. That would have been ideal for where we are. I would also have appreciated finding BH a bit earlier, as that could have saved me a whole load of headaches. It didn't find this place until I was ordering my windows!
  10. Thanks both. I might tap you for those details to see if they'll travel to me. I'm just the other side of Bath so some won't travel to me from Bristol as it can be a right PITA. A customer of mine has suggested I contact a friend of theirs who knows a few of the right people in the area so I'll try that first.
  11. I'm not sure, it looks like there is skrim as I can just see a bit of it where it's been finished poorly at the bottom. If it is skrimmed, what else would cause the cracking?
  12. Yeah, you're right. He did a couple of walls when I was there which seemed fine and I've clearly made the mistake of thinking I could then leave him to it. Clearly not, but it's a lesson in staying there to supervise all the time. Thanks, but I'm about double that time if not more! I'll go on another search.
  13. The plasterer did it with one other person helping him, but mainly him. They work together and the other person was also boarding up the stud walls which the plasterer then skimmed. I've now found a number of cracks on the skimmed stud walls too. This is a picture of one wall. I can run my hand across the surface and feel the texture shown by the photo. Below are photos showing the undulation of the walls. I already spray painted one of the boy's rooms where quite a bit of the uneven surface and roughness showed up when painted and the undulation of the dot and dab walls showed up when fitting the coving. Generally finish is pretty poor in corners and around door frame etc. with loads of snots I'll have to remove to fit the skirting plumb: Dot and dab waves: High spot: Timeline 1.mp4 And now cracks in stud walls:
  14. TLDR; what should a good skim finish look and feel like? Story below: So, sadly the plasterer recommended to me has turned out to be a liability. Had him in to do some work in the house and while my wife was there, I stupidly allowed the work to go ahead while I was away as my wife was in a hurry to get it done. I returned home to find the wonkiest poorly finished reveals ever, which they came to remove and then re-finish. However, in another room, as I was priming the plaster for painting I found a vertical crack on one of the dot & dab walls. Plasterer suggested drilling and filling behind the crack with foam and he would come a re-scim the wall to make good. I then inspected the work in more detail only to find loads of flex at the bottom of the board. Alarm bells started ringing so I remove the dot & dab from the wall to find that there were no beads along the long of short edges of the boards and the crack was down to movement along the long edge - in some places the dabs were as far as 400mm apart with the join in the middle of this gap. I've also found that another dot & dab wall is out of plumb and wavy along the length of the wall, so no straight edge used there. I've painted one room to find the plaster finish in there to be below par and plaster mess left everywhere so this guy isn't coming back to do anything else. I'm looking at the other areas he's skimmed and wondering what I should be seeing to determine the quality of finish. Rubbing my hands on the wall there are quite a lot of areas where the plaster feels like rough sandpaper. I can unfortunately also feel quite a lot of undulation of the plaster and there are some obvious full height lines of high spots at a few of the joins. So in short, what is considered a good enough skim finish in the trade please?
×
×
  • Create New...