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Everything posted by ProDave
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Forget the idea of the resistance heating electric boiler. If you are going to heat the house by electricity then a heat pump is what you need. In very approximate figures that will give you 3kW of heat for every 1kW of electricity it consumes, bringing the cost of electric heating close to the cost of gas heating (at current rates, who know about the future) The solar PV and batteries make sense and you will have plenty of electrical devices to use all that the solar PV can produce.
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Where is the kWh price heading in 2022?
ProDave replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Perhaps if you had watched the news, you might have found out you were almost certainly Eligible for the Self Employed Income Support Scheme grant to help you out when you could not work? -
Why wireless stats and why one per manifold loop? Most UFH pipe is 16mm, could this be why you are struggling to find what you want?
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Where is the kWh price heading in 2022?
ProDave replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
I am a bit in that boat at the moment, having fixed for a year in February. So I will miss the fun of the 80% increase in October and whatever January brings. I hope the ensuing chaos and quite possibly civil unrest will mean by the time my fixed period ends at the end of February, "something" will have happened and I won't face trippling of fuel bills. -
I would start at square one, and ask the installer just why he thinks it will need a 24kW boiler to feed one UFH loop and one radiator.
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It should certainly be touch dry by tomorrow, but still "green" in that it won't be anywhere near full strength. If it were a driveway we would be saying don't drive your car on it for a week. Just take care not to knock the posts while it is curing. Have a few days off to so another job.
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Different names. Some call it concrete mix, some call it ballast. I have never seen that sold with the cement already added, that seems unique to postcrete.
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There is no such thing as a standard heat loss per square metre. It will be individual to each building depending on insulation levels and air tightness. Once you get to a certain level of insulation, then ventilation heat loss starts to dominate, and that is really where MVHR works best. At this stage in a new build you should be striving for maximum insulation, detailed well, and very good air tightness, and then mvhr will get you a low energy house.
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You can buy "concrete mix" already bagged up and ready to use. Just add cement and water. Don't make it harder than it has to be.
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Forget postcrete. It's horrible very quick set stuff for fixing fence posts in a hole. Pour it in, add some water and hope. For what you are doing, mix up proper concrete with concrete mix (sand and agregate) and ordinary portland cement. You can mix it and play with it on a board, when happy it is mixed, shovel it into your bucket, lefel it off with a trowel, take time to work it and make it neat, and if you have mixed too much, leave the excess in smalll lumps to set and be disposed of. It will take several hours to go off so just mix it, use it, and come back next day to see how it set.
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Places I use metal boxes rather than plastic: Where an accessory has to go right next to a stud. When sinking e.g a light switch into a solid bit of wood. When I want the face of the sockets recessed behind the wall behind a television.
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Planning permission refused due to replacement of historical gate
ProDave replied to wils77's topic in Planning Permission
What fills the hole now in place of the gate? On the basis the gate pre existed, I would put the gate back now, and re submit with the plans marked "existing gate" and appeal if they continue to be stupid. -
Mostly plastic, there are a few metal boxes when some unique reason made that a better choice.
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Which is precicely why I keep recommending Appleby dry lining boxes. Some makes of dry lining box are absolutely dire, and when they fail, people assume all dry lining boxes are equally rubbish.
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Where is the kWh price heading in 2022?
ProDave replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Then I will say "told you so" if the internet still works. -
LAP metal flush boxes are okay. It is the Appleby plastic dry lining boxes that I rave about.
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Where is the kWh price heading in 2022?
ProDave replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
In a way I wish they would shut the bloody thing now and we would refuse to buy anything from Russia. God what a shambles the whole EU energy policy has been, to place ourselves so dependant on potentially unfriendly states. -
Where is the kWh price heading in 2022?
ProDave replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Has any single commodity ever gone up that much in a year? 150% inflation on the gas price. -
When does building control sign off?
ProDave replied to Andeh's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Ours never showed a staircase on any drawings, probably because the architect knew no staircase would comply, so we just built to the approved drawings. -
When does building control sign off?
ProDave replied to Andeh's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
BC will sign off when they are satisfied the building is complete and meets building regs. We had a similar situation with a mezanine, the headroom was about 1.6 metres, you could just stand up at the highest point, so there is no way any staircase could ever meet building regs. BC were happy to sign it off as a storage platform, where you put up a ladder to get to it to put anything up there for storage. Of course it now has a staircase and handrails..... I had to cut the plasterboard, but no big deal, make a careful sketch with measurements of where all the joists are and take photographs, so you remember what awaits you when you get the saw out. -
Hi and welcome to the forum. You have hit upon what all self builders "down south" find. Building plots and getting planning permission is so hard, the few plots that come onto the market are way over priced. If your motivation for self building is to get a house for less money, forget it. If your motivation for self building is to get a house that is better built than an off the peg developer house, it might be worth paying more to proceed. Re the limited time on the planning permission, some people make a "start" on the development, that may mean installing the foundations or sometimes something more minor counts as "starting" and once you have started the planning is locked in without a time limit. Have you considered doing more work yourself? What skills do you have? And roughly where in Oxfordshire? That's where I came from originally.
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Direct air kit (multi-fuel stove 5kw)
ProDave replied to Smcmullan88's topic in Stoves, Fires & Fireplaces
That raises an important point. Check with the stove manufacturer before you buy, that both primary and secondary air are drawn from the duct. Not all of them are, so some with a ducting kit are not true room sealed stoves. If there is an air leak from the ducting kit, it is wrongly fitted. That should not be a concern. and once the stove is in, work on fixing some of the other leaks to make the house less draughty.
