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saveasteading last won the day on March 23
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About Me
Another daughter, another barn conversion. A steel shed this time, commencing May 24.
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SE England / Highland depending which.
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Grand designs: off site construction
saveasteading replied to Post and beam's topic in Property TV Programmes
It has been happening for decades. I worked with steel buildings which were made to order and slotted together beautifully on site. They were not even modular, but to any dimensions but there were parameters. Most of it was automatic manufacture, with humans just doing the odd tack weld to get it started. It was also possible to make a frame on site and lift it into place By chance I have a photo in front of me from some box sorting. THe odd thing was that the steel erectors didn't want to know about this. partly habit, partly macho, but the time difference was very small. The big difference is that you then took this hitech kit to a muddy site and worked at 8m in the air in all weathers. -
My apologies. factor of 10 out. PHEW we are only paying £160/ household as dividend. That does sound more like it, but it is still a lot. I shouldn't do mental arithmetic with big numbers while sitting in the car (I was not driving). I chose 1M for convenience btw. and of course there is commercial use too, but we are the populace, so that huge amount could perhaps be better controlled.
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Agreed. I found that the cost is pretty much based on £/m3 except for 100mm. As this is the big seller the merchants will stock it by the lorry load and know they will sell it all. Unconventional thicknesses may be special orders and so attract handling and delivery costs.
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New build waste drainage, durgos and the regs.
saveasteading replied to jimseng's topic in Waste & Sewerage
Ignore the glass on H and S grounds. I think he was guessing. It could always be added. -
Grand designs: off site construction
saveasteading replied to Post and beam's topic in Property TV Programmes
Perhaps. I went to a modular factory and was surprised to see it was just an old shed, with people slicing osb and cutting battens, and another nailing it on a bench. The difference though was quite simply in taking away all manual measuring. A computerised machine drew cutting lines and part numbers, straight from a schedule. So there was minimal waste, and much reduced skill level. Also, they took in fresh timber, in wrapped 6m3 or 4.8m3 bundles, straight from the docks and it never got wet so the quality was more certain. -
I'm shocked, so to speak. So let's say there are 1 million properties in the UK then we are all, as families, paying £1,600 to these owners as dividends every year. I can understand the article being vague, as few journalists these days do more than print a press statement and very few will have construction or scientific knowledge. I'm guessing though that if it is plugged in on our side of the meter, that it doesn't apply. Maybe just do it and see what happens?
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New build waste drainage, durgos and the regs.
saveasteading replied to jimseng's topic in Waste & Sewerage
That sounds primitive, dangerous and short term. Can't the outlet have a grille? I bet they are a standard thing. Or simply stuff some mesh in the pipe. Anyway, any creature venturing in there would get washed away and become effluent. -
This works and is some concreters preference, but can also go badly wrong. Maybe you can find a way so they don't get displaced. I started doing columns this way but moved away from it. @B52s what stage are you at now? Is the concrete in place. My preference is always to have the concrete in first, to an absolutely precise level or with 25mm space for metal shims or an extra nut beneath. NB this can affect your subsequent detailing so keep the concrete low to do this. Then to draw the bolt cluster positions as 4 points but with the square projected, as you will lose the marks. Then drill for threaded rod and epoxy. Some people prefer to have a ply or metal template to hang the bolt clusters but they can be displaced. As @Nickfromwales and @Russell griffithssay... check and check, and have a permanent reference line. Checking diagonal distances with a tape is important, even if you've used a right angle laser... they can be faulty or be used incorrectly... I never found out which. This process goes wrong a lot, even with experienced operatives, so you're right to ask and keep asking.
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That's not happening I'm afraid. When I followed your link I saw that Toupret do a big range of external products, I will look into this powder one for the smaller work and maybe a resin one for big gaps. https://www.toupret.co.uk/professional-filler/product/wood-surfaces/wood-repair-filler-white https://www.screwfix.com/p/toupret-wood-repair-filler-natural-wood-1kg/224HE?tc=JS7&gclsrc=aw.ds&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=895557794&gbraid=0AAAAAD8IdPyUeZdKJb4fWJQyzVOYn2BPQ&gclid=Cj0KCQjwkMjOBhC5ARIsADIdb3eeVmP0gJAcT6hADzZZVxvyI8Zn5Qvb7FE9IJQidD9BaJTrhiBXTDsaAhMGEALw_wcB
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360 degree laser level recommendations
saveasteading replied to flanagaj's topic in Tools & Equipment
I've never used a laser level so am not able to recommend. However 2 things to say. The big names such as Leica , when I used them every day by sight to a staff, were much more accurate than the others and were adjustable and repairable. No electronics, just lenses , prisms and a pendulum. The latter is what needed adjustment. Is that still how lasers function, gravity on a pendulum? No matter how good they are, there is a lot of skill in using them properly, especially in challenging conditions.... I know this from picking up the mess from workers who thought having a laser level was the whole answer. And 3rd of the 2!. Learn the principle of equal back-sight and fore-sight for anything more than a room distance. 4th, treat them very carefully. -
No, this is SE England. temperature isn't stable here either. I'd say -5 to +35 this last year. Anyway an update, I've tried the Bedec Barn paint and am extremely impressed by it in every way. Handling it, I've been brushing onto the bare wood, perished paint and the decent paint and it flows nicely and covers amazingly well for a single coat so far. And it goes a long way too. Finding some more at a decent price doesn't look so easy, as the stockists are far apart and seem to favour black.... most actual barn conversions here use timber in natural or black, whereas the local architecture is traditionally in white: and its for an old house, as the pic above. I'm thinking this will best be a Forth Bridge process of dealing with flaky stuff as it arises as various areas have different properties according to age (areas have been re-clad over the years) , sunlight, damp etc. The ease of using this product aids that decision, as it is very easy to just use some, and wash the brush in water. ie the previous regime of cleaning then prime and gloss, all in one hit, is not ideal.
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Thanks. What do you recommend for external wood filler? Weatherboard, mostly ancient, where knots have pinged out, some boards where becoming porous on the surface (or chewed by wasps perhaps,) and some badly holed or split feature blocks. That may be 2 different products required according to the hole sizes. I've used Ronseal and really don't like it for handling or for the ability to smooth or shape it.
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I don't know the Toupret product so used your link. The description says it 'does not flash or grin' . That's good to hear, except I don't know what that means in this context. Do you know?
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This published Thursday and surprisingly the only mention I've seen of it. Not surprising. Maybe old news regurgitated.
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New build waste drainage, durgos and the regs.
saveasteading replied to jimseng's topic in Waste & Sewerage
Barely any smell but you'd not want it next to your patio just in case. I've even got one next to an ancient cess tank and even it doesn't smell. Another one serving a 3 chamber, low-tech one does whiff occasionally. This is a different situation to needing an air intake, such as a durgo, to allow the flush to move without a vacuum holding it back.
