-
Posts
30798 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
427
Everything posted by ProDave
-
Well you have plenty to play with, reduce the ceiling height in the rooms below to a more normal (and easier to build) 2400 and that's an additional 360mm to play with in the loft conversion which will solve all your problems of joist depth, staircase rise etc.
-
I disagree. I have 13 steps to rise our 2440 room height plus the 300mm joist thickness, and the rise of each stair was still less than maximum. Or do English regs give you a smaller maximum rise than Scottish? What is your ceiling height of the room below?
-
Wireless Access Points or Mesh?
ProDave replied to YorkieSelfBuild's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
My take is RJ45's are tedious to terminate, so I didn't terminate them all. I just terminate them and put them into use as needed. Just make sure there are plenty to all rooms where you think you will need them AND where you don't. A good place to hide them until you find a use for them in in a service void next to 13A sockets. If you need one pop out the adjacent socket box and fish for it. So far I have only put 2 into use, but I don't have cameras etc. Almost every thing works on wifi. -
Shorten the stairs. You have 14 steps there it should easily be possible to get that to 13 and possibly even to 12 (depending on your lowered ceiling height below) by using the maximum rise per stair. Then the maximum pitch to give you the steepest , shortest stair allowed.
-
Try dowsing rods and have a walk around
-
Is 1.8M enough over the stairs? I thought it was 2M on the centreline of the stairs (perhaps that is only Scotland?)
-
So you have your neighbours soakaway in you plot? Where is YOUR soakaway going?
-
Perfect energy rating – until he got a heat pump
ProDave replied to Temp's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
It is what has been reported before. When he rebuilt his house he probably got a proper SAP assesment and got a good score. Then when he got the heat pump, someone did a tick box RDSAP completely ignoring any documentation given to him, and making a guess at what he thought was the construction of the building. It angers me that this happens. We have a house now with EPC A94 and the good rating is borne out by the cheap bills. But that is valid for 10 years from when it is issued. I fear, if we need to sell the house and that 10 years has expired, we will be forced to get a new EPC and if the system still uses the ridiculous tick box / guess system and ignores the proper data, then we might no longer be an A. As he says the system is broken, well and truly broken. -
Window trickle vents in Scotland, any alternative?
ProDave replied to kiwibloke's topic in Ventilation
I wired a house next to an airfield and a planning condition was no vents in the windows facing the runway and instead sound attenuated vents were placed in the side walls. But I did not do the work so have no details. -
Does the garage need a building warrant, that will be a deciding factor. If installing a soakaway now I think it has to be 5 metres from a building (check the latest version of building standards) Lift the inspection cover and see which way it flows? Send a drain rod down and see how far it goes before it hits any obstruction (the actual soakaway)
-
How much is a stone built outbuilding worth
ProDave replied to Triassic's topic in Costing & Estimating
More likely the boundary has a dog leg that includes this building although it may look like it ought to be in your garden. Assuming that is the case, it must have an entrance from the neighbours garden. How would you access it if you bought it? A picture or sketch would make the situation clear. Do you want the building? Or just the land it is standing on? Why does the neighbour want to sell it? as above it would be very hard to sell it to anyone else so the open market valuation is meaningless. -
Strange Plasterboard Ceiling Support, Repair
ProDave replied to Maksim's topic in Plastering & Rendering
A lot more than one fixing has failed there. The only way to be sure what is happening is take part of it down or at least cut an access trap to have a look. -
Your main consumer unit is old, wired to a very old version of the wiring regulations before an RCD became a requirement for even some of the circuits, so probably 15th edition. That does not automatically make it dangerous but it is certainly less safe than a modern install. If you want to get it upgraded, get an electrician first to do an EICR. That will recommend a consumer unit change which is about £200 worth of parts (or more) and best part of a days work. But the EICR will tell you if the wiring itself is okay and suitable just for a CU change or if there are other problems as well. The outside cable, without seeing inside that little box feeding it we won't know, but if you have an electrician there anyway, it is a trivial amount of extra work for him to make sure it is disconnected and can't just be turned back on.
-
IF you do somehow think you managed to prove the fence was actually on your land, what do you think the outcome would be? I think the outcome would be the fence would move over 6 inches so it was not on your land and be just the same fence just as tall causing just as much of an issue, except you would be £££ lighter and some lawyers would be £££ richer. and your neighbour would dislike you even more.
-
No, this box, That is the one feeding the SWA. Undo the 2 recessed screws either side of the switches and take the cover off and photograph the inside. The SWA might already be disconnected, but if not it will be simple to disconnect it thus making that cable safe and ensuring it does not get turned on by accident.
-
Take the cover off the RCD box that feeds it and post a picture of what you find inside.
-
First look around for hauliers that will move one for you. Up here it is a bit of a closed shop, and the only 2 caravan dealers near here will only transport what they are buying or selling, claiming that is all they are insured for. On our first build when we sold the 'van privately, the buyer had to get a haulier from about 50 miles away as the nearest one that would quote for the job.
-
I keep hearing you must use those special twisted galvanised nails for joist hangers and not screws. I seem to remember it was something BC looked at on an early visit. And they expect every hole to have a nail in it.
-
Get an electrician to test it and confirm that is indeed the cable you think. Then if the cable is good I would use it by getting an outside 13A socket connected to the end of it. But you would need to change the B40 MCB for a B32 or smaller if just feeding a socket. Was there a shed there before that a previous owner took down? If so and if he was responsible you would find the SWA disconnected inside that housing so it is safe, and a note saying where the other end is would be a real bonus (but unlikely)
-
At 200mm spacing, you might sort cable holes etc by pre drilling, but best of luck swinging a hammer to drive the twisted nails into the joist at the joist hangers. 150mm gap is not a lot of room to swing a hammer.
-
Here is another angle to it. A fence that tall close to the road would have needed planning permission. Did they apply? Did you object? If it's been there without PP for a number of years and nobody objected it is likely beyond the time limit for enforcement. When I was going through planning for my plot visibility was raised. At one point the planners were asking me to "demonstrate control over the visibility splay" which of course I could not do. I then found a recent nearby planning without that condition so I queried it and got planning without having to show control over the visibility splay. During my conversation with someone at highways about this I said "so what if my neighbour erects a tall fence" and his reply was contact us immediately and we will come and enforce your neighbour to maintain the required visibility. So have you actually asked if that fence close to thee highway does have pp? and if not can they enforce it's removal. If it IS on your land, why did you not take it down as soon as they put it there?
-
Most terrace houses seem to span joists front to back, which often makes the span longer but avoids the party wall issued. Your front room is pretty square at just under 6 metres so the span of that is the same whichever way you go. so size jousts for 6 metre span and go front to back with a joist supporting over the door opening from that front room. But I suspect whatever you choose you are looking at 300mm deep joists for that span. Our posi joists for 5 metre span are 300mm deep.
-
Each piece of the roof is a single bit of timber (or engineered joist) assembled on site and cut to final length on site. so the roof is assembled one stick at a time all by hand. The original roof will almost certainly be like that but supported on purlins rather than the ridge beam. In our case the ridge beam is a timber Kerto beam, think an overgrown bit of plywood. Stronger for a given size than a Glue Laminated beam. some pictures of our roof being assembled: The last picture in particular, you can see the big ridge beam, the individually cut rafters and how a dormer was formed (one on the front, 2 on the rear) In our case the 11 metre long ridge beam was lifted using a digger with a boom extender. the rest were all done by hand. At your size it should all be possible by hand.
-
Strong argument for cut roof and ridge beam separate to floor joists. Everything can be lifted one at a time by hand at those sizes.
