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ProDave

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Everything posted by ProDave

  1. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but as I feared the 0% only applies to supply and fit. Sales of equipment only will still be 20% VAT https://www.bimblesolar.com/budget22 More jobs for the boys. They don't really want us to install green energy products. Don't shoot the messenger.
  2. Socks and slippers The only place we routinely walk bare foot is the en-suite sand then only when you are going for a shower. The bathrooms are the only place upstairs that has UFH, just to take the chill off the tiles in the winter.
  3. That's where I am, having a friendly discussion, finding out what they want and if it indeed even possible with out plot. I am not about to sign anything without a LOT of due dilligence.
  4. No it was a mix up with addresses. the initial letter was addressed to me at the old house but the plan shows they want to put the cable through the garden of the new house. Their surveyor has not impressed me with his skills so far. the old house is let only because the market was dead when we wanted to sell and letting it was a least bad option. It still needs to sell and fairly soon now, we want to retire, so the prospect of a cable under that garden that might deter buyers does not hold much appeal.
  5. My point exactly. So now take 1/3 of an acre currently un tended for 30 years, mostly scrub, some trees. Clear the site, remove all the saplings only leaving some of the mature trees, build a house on it, some land occupied by the house, some taken up for parking etc, the rest laid to lawn. I defy anybody to be able to demonstrate how that could ever increase biodiversity? If this becomes a requirement for all new dwellings then I really do see sites being rendered sterile before they even involve the planners. It's a nonsense.
  6. That I suspect has been "taped and filled" and the defects you see are normal and normal decorating repairs will fix those. If you really wanted a better finish get the walls skimmed with plaster.
  7. Yes I think almost everyone would advise against a treatment plant with moving mechanical parts such as the one you mentioned. There are many on here with different variations on the air blower treatment plants and I think most are happy with them. From memory the plants used by forum members are Vortex, Conder (me) Graff and Bio Pure. The manufacturers all seem to be a little lacking with quietness and tend to put the air blower in a plastic box that can often act like a drum and make the noise worse. In those cases people have had good results taking the blower out of the unit and building a brick or concrete box to house it instead. You don't want to be putting baby wipes, cotton buds certain womens products etc into a treatment plant. The old saying is don't put anything into it that you have not eaten first. And avoid bleach and use more friendly cleaning products. All treatment plants need emptying (desludging) every couple of years.
  8. Didn't we discuss this when it was first mooted. Unless you blitz the site pre development with roundup, and fill all ponds with cow slurry, I cannot possibly see how taking a bare plot of land like ours was (left untended for 30 years, turning to scrub) and building a house on it, could possibly ever increase the boidiversity. A whole new industry for creative surveyors has opened up it would seem.
  9. At the moment, I have agreed to meeting a surveyor on site. This is my opportunity to find out exactly what they want and where they want to put it, and also to point out all the things on the plot that might make it impossible, like the treatment plant. If at that point they decide our route is not viable and they go away to pester another home owner I will be happy. I think if it gets beyond that, and they really want our route, I will be seeking professional help to make sure what i agree to is correct and what they pay me is also reasonable.
  10. Yes been there, done that got the tee shirt. I have even hears rumours of some builders who enlarge the building having seen it is "too small" then it becomes massive when built.
  11. Our previous house I did as 2 building warrants as we could not build the garage straight away. For sign off of the house, without the garage, BC insisted that wall had at least the render scratch coat applied. Then a couple of years later we built the garage under a separate building warrant. The garage was on the original planning application so no need to re apply for planning.
  12. Yep tried that. Gas meter on the outside of the house. The gas pipe ran up the wall and entered into the loft. I bonded right at the eaves inside the loft as close as I could reach to the "point of entry". Gas man said NO. I had to run the earth cable down the gas pipe (cable tied to it) to the meter box before he would accept it and sign off the gas.
  13. Okay the plot thickens on this. Today I have received some communication including a plan of where the proposed cable would go. They have messed up their addresses, as although it is addressed to us at our old address (that we still own and is tenanted) the property they have outlined on their plan is in fact our new house. I have written to them to clarify this address mix up. In one way that is better news because I feared having a cable underground in the old property might make it harder to sell when the time comes. On the other hand I am not entirely sure I want this cable under the garden of our new house. It poses limitations on what you can do with the land, e.g you can't build anything within a certain distance of the cable, and if we ever decide to sell it could still put off prospective buyers.
  14. This is a constant frustration with electricians. You would think the gas people work to different regs re earth bonding as they don't always accept the earth bond where the sparky has put it. OUR regs say it must be bonded a certain distance either side of where the pipe enters the building, but I have lost count of how many times I have had to move it, because the gas man says it must be bonded in the meter box, even if that is many metres away from where the pipe enters the house. But the gas safe man should not sign off the gas install until he is happy with the bonding. So best if sparky can talk to gas man early on the project. then argue amongst themselves where to bond it. In the case of my own LPG install there is no meter so the gas man asked for the bond to be where the gas pipe exits the changeover regulator.
  15. That's putting the cart before the horse. Establish the principle of being allowed to build a house first with PIP then sort out the details with the approval of reserved matters application.
  16. Perhaps you should put your efforts just now into getting Permission in Principle on the site which does not need a final house design, just a rough idea which you can draw yourself. Only once you have that, go for full planning and see exactly what house design the planners will accept.
  17. Ha Ha. The flush plate in our en-suite is low as the unit is low, so I set it to one side of the seat so it CAN be used with the lid up. I want to check "everything has cleared and it does not need a second flush" before I put the lid down. It would irritate me if I had to put the lid down, flush, then lift the lid to check.
  18. Indeed and because we only have one kid, we designed the house with 2 big bedrooms one for the adults and one for the kid, with the third smaller room as a guest bedroom for visitors. What I dislike about many of these off the shelf "Scottish" designs is they put at least one bedroom downstairs. I would prefer not to have the vaulted living room in that design if it meant I could get all the bedrooms upstairs. but that is a personal thing. Re planning. If it is anything like here, there is a general presumption against building in the open countryside. The exceptions are in an existing settlement, infill between existing buildings and if the plot is existing garden ground. I have known applications refused by being just a few metres outside the existing settlement. Ours passed on both the infill between existing buildings and inside the existing settlement. And once they have accepted you can build something, they generally will not allow full 2 story, it must have some element of room in roof.
  19. Your location would help, building regs are different in different parts of the UK
  20. Okay a bit of a development on this. I have spoken to neighbours in the road, nobody else has been approached. I had a phone call today. I tried to ask if they were considering other routes, they were very evasive only saying "your property is the direct route" So it looks like they have their eye on my garden. Next step is they are going to make an appointment for a "non invasive survey" I am going to use that as an opportunity to point out all the difficulties they would face trying to route an underground HV cable this way, like the septic tank various drainage pipes and the holding tank and pumping station in that bit of garden, and then once they pass through the garden to the field, they then meet the drainage soakaway under the field behind us (with a deed of servitude from the land owner to allow it to be there) Hopefully that will put them off enough to go looking for a different route and I will question why they are not taking the route of the previous underground HV cable through a different and very much easier garden. Because this house is tenanted I have informed the tenant they are sniffing about and she will be involved when the surveyors come. I will keep you updated.
  21. I wired a previous house for the same customer (he is a serial builder / renovator, this is the second new build of his I have wired and 2 renovations as well) His previous new build had appalling bad workmanship installing the insulation, and I pointed it out to him but he did not care. I bet this new build of his will be sold within a year and he will be onto his next project. Building to live in then selling shortly afterwards seems to be his modus operandi to avoid being a "developer" and avoid paying tax.
  22. I have not read the article, but I heard the speech live and it mentioned "installed heat pumps" and same for solar panels, so does this only men the 0% is supply and fit, or will you be able to buy one to DIY install at 0% VAT?
  23. I called into a new build I am wiring yesterday. The walls are insulated and they were about to start plasterboarding the walls, but the detail was appalling with clearly visible gaps from the top if the service void into the loft, so creating the classic plasterboard tent. I would have taken photo's if the builder had not been present. I mentioned it to the client and he did not seem bothered.
  24. What heated your previous house? If it was not electricity then you would have paid your electricity bill plus a gas or oil bill? what was the total. ALL fuels has gone up a LOT, it rose sharply last October will rise another average of 54% at the end of this month and again in October probably. We use about 1400kWh of electricity to heat the house with a heat pump each year. BUT our total consumption of electricity is more like 6000kWh per year. Heating cost is probably less than 1/4 of our usage. I am trying to chip away and reduce the non heating usage but unless you never watch tv, never do any washing, don't use a fridge etc there is no solution. And our bill would be bigger if it were not for the solar PV which we self use most of it. I am experimenting with better ways to optimise that at the moment like only running the ASHP for the heating in the middle of the day.
  25. Can you update your drawing? As I see it you essentially have batteries in series each with a DIFFERENT charging regime. So each battery will receive a different level of charge. BUT they are discharged in series. The big flaw in that is nothing to equalise the charge so a real possibility when discharging one battery will be discharged long before the other (because it has not received as much charge)
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