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Everything posted by ProDave
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Solic 200 like Blackpool Lights - Help Needed
ProDave replied to canalsiderenovation's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
I must have replaces hundreds of failed capacitors. Some makes of equipment are well known for it, and there is a steady market in capacitor kits for some common bits of equipment. -
Solic 200 like Blackpool Lights - Help Needed
ProDave replied to canalsiderenovation's topic in Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP)
So many of today's electronics failures boil down to poor quality capacitors that have failed. Well done for finding the problem and posting here. -
GF joists over ‘internal’ cavity wall
ProDave replied to OwenF's topic in General Construction Issues
I don't see the issue. the first strip of boards you lay might partly miss the joists, but it is not imperative that the joints land on a joist. You can see the board joints in the photo are not landing on a joist. -
With new work like this, you are supposed to pressure test the pipework before boxing it in, to ensure all the joints have mated properly, none of the seals have been damaged and it is all air tight. Did the builders do that? Depending where you are, your building control might want to witness that drain pressure test (they do here). Without that test done, there are so many places it could be leaking.
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What work exactly have you done? Is this a completely new shower room, or have you just changed the WC in an existing shower room? At what point did the smell start? Pictures please.
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Yes get a structural engineer. A compromise might be not remove the whole wall but make an opening double door size and have say two glass doors? But an SE should advise what is possible and what needs to be done to make it possible.
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My question is, is the house detached or joined to another. Like others the double tacked and plywood braced construction does sound like it is for racking strength. Is the house masonry or timber framed?
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0.14 is quite respectable, it's what our house is. Another decision is what insulation material are they using to achieve that. Something like PIR or PUR (solid foam) has a short decrement delay. Things like glass wool and celulose and even wood fibre have a much longer decrement delay. So you can have 2 different walls with the same U value, but one will cool down quicker than the other. So a more important decision is select the TF manufacturer on what type of insulation they are proposing.
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Some VERY rough sums. Assuming you use all of that 1800 litres in winter, or 182 days, that will be 9.8 litres per day Kerosene has about 10kWh of heat per litre, so your roughly 10 litres per day will be producing about 100kWh of heat per day. As a very rough estimate, the coldest day in winter is likely to consume twice the average for the whole winter, so a peak perhaps of 20 litres of Kerosene or 200kWh of heat on the coldest day. So if your heat pump in this cold spell had produced 200kWh to replicate the previous oil heating, it would be likely to have consumed perhaps 66kWh of electricity per day. You say it is costing £29 per day, and with electricity at about 28.5p per kWh that would mean it has consumed about 100kWh in a day. That does suggest it is using the resistance heating for some or all of the heat.
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Building a small cabin on a highland croft
ProDave replied to Finlay1992's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Have a look at this blog, he build a small house as a holiday let to comply with the "caravan" definition. If you have not already seen it, this is how the Highland Council interpret the definition of a "caravan" build it within that definition and it won't need building regs https://www.highland.gov.uk/downloads/file/1346/bst_018_caravans_and_mobile_homes You will need building regs for the installation of a treatment plant, unless you do something like a composting toilet. -
How much OIL did you burn in a year with the old boiler?
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Look into your drainage. Any running water e.g. rainwater, will wash away any non hard surface.
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Building a small cabin on a highland croft
ProDave replied to Finlay1992's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
If you desperately want to design it yourself without being troubled by buildling regs, it is possible to build a building that falls within the legal definition of a caravan while being very well insulated and very well built. The downside of doing that is you won't be able to reclaim the VAT and resale value / mortgagability might be a lot worse. -
Building a small cabin on a highland croft
ProDave replied to Finlay1992's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
If you buy a bare croft, I think it is pretty much a given that you will be allowed to build a house, and usually a portion of the land is decrofted for that. There are usually several for sale. -
ASHP, heat pump unvented hot water tank, heated to 48 degrees. What challenges are you thinking of?
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That is a small outside space in my book.
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How thick is the timber frame? That wall insulation is pretty poor, I am surprised it even met building regs? Where abouts are you so we know which regs it should have complied with? Make yourself a DIY blower door, using an old office fan or car radiator fan. It will let you find where all the air is leaking in and out. Most of the leaks will be lack of detail, there is no mention of an air tight layer so assume there is not one. If you really want to improve it it would be very intrusive, get back to the bare frame, overlay more insulation inside the frame, proper air tight layer, service void, then plasterboard. Something that is oh so simple and not very expensive when building, which is why it annoys me so much that the mass market builders don't do it. I bet your service void is already a plasterboard tent not least with cable penetrations up into the loft. When you next get a windy day, unscrew one of the switches or sockets and I bet you are greeted with a blast of icy cold air coming out of the socket hole.
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The immediate thing that stands out for me, was the tile size was chosen to be exactly 2 tiles fit the height of the stove, and then the stove was set into the wall at exactly the right height to make the top of the stove 4 tiles above the floor. A lot of forward planning before you start anything.
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Can anyone identify what this vent is for?
ProDave replied to SimonC's topic in Lofts, Dormers & Loft Conversions
I am not sure it is really an electricians job, but at least someone is looking at it. -
Anybody used ultra wide monitors
ProDave replied to Adsibob's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
That is the issue. I have an old desktop with an old monitor and it has a really sharp image. I was given a larger Samsung monitor so thought I would try it. The larger monitor has higher resolution, but I found everything was blurred and no way as sharp as my old monitor. I concluded it was because the native resolution of the monitor would not match any of the native resolutions available on my video card, so the monitor was rescaling to fit making the blurred image. I am still using my trusty old sharp as a pin monitor.
