Jump to content

saveasteading

Members
  • Posts

    10692
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    91

saveasteading last won the day on July 5

saveasteading had the most liked content!

6 Followers

Personal Information

  • About Me
    Another daughter, another barn conversion. A steel shed this time, commencing May 24.
  • Location
    SE England / Highland depending which.

Recent Profile Visitors

17333 profile views

saveasteading's Achievements

Advanced Member

Advanced Member (5/5)

3.4k

Reputation

  1. The same rules apply. In efficient structural design concrete beams and slabs would be completely integrated, but these appear to have been designed for speed and tying in has been for location and nothing more. The NY building probably has concrete floors too, tied to the steel with studs.
  2. Scotland has differing values and goals to a large extent. Hence a left wing government for a long period , despite the voting system being designed to prevent it. So lots is different And lots was not devolved. In summary? More collectivist and egalitarian. Eg social services. Less of a class system Naturally against privatisation.
  3. Thats perhaps intended as a distraction. No, but they could get a reduced rate for using non- peak times. It's also common sense, as a no Investment solution. People are entitled to not turn on the cooker any time they choose.
  4. I don't think they can except at aonb / heritage sites or where local need is vastly oversupplied. Certainly they cannot on major power lines which is a UK thing, and could go over the Chilterns.... but don't.
  5. Wind seems not to be even considered. Solar expanses are going ahead though, on farms and marshes but not large-scale on roofs where it will be more difficult. Can't do that. Farm sheds are designed for about 40% less loading than peopled buildings as the factors of safety are low to nil. And the quality can be lacking. Adding another 20kg/m2 would be unwise. That's what they say in planning applications. Removing all direct sun from a field will obv affect photosynthesis. So I say it's unlikely in a temperate climate.
  6. The big detour would cost more. ICs are plastic and about £150, plus concrete, gravel and labour. Needed whatever you do. Another matter is the gradient. Assuming that the drain was designed efficiently, by taking it a longer route you are flattening the slope and it might not work. Say £1,000 diy. Double or Treble that for a good contractor. Add fees for the licence but building control will cover that with the building work. I'd still be digging to find that pipe. But first feasibility on budget and permissions.
  7. Agreed, and lots onto industrial roofs: vast areas of metal just sitting there. Just look on Google Earth at a commercial estate near you, and the amount of roof as seen from above can be shocking. Plus they are usually in or near the towns that can take that amount of power into existing cables. They aren't designed for the extra loading but most will have enough if we look at whether snow load allowance is excessive. However if required at planning then the cost of the extra steel and suitable detailing is relatively small. When you and I are asked to sort the world out will you agree that price structuring can also help for both power and water.? Reduced rates for less than the reasonable need per head. Then it increases for anything above that, by enough to subsidise the lower use. And then a curve to make excessive use (car washing, swimming pools, hose use) an expensive matter. This rate can change at times of shortage, so right now we would be charged a lot for uneconomic use of water. The rich will simply pay but that's normal and at least it can be used for infrastructure. The middle ground is where habits can be changed, and I think that is fundamental. The formula will alter according to region and water resources. Sorted.
  8. As often by those from the South, Scotland is up there and is wet and cold. The reality is of a very varied and large place. 3°C colder on average, in the populated areas. Nobody lives on the mountain tops. The west is generally wet. The east is generally quite dry, except last winter when it reversed. The saved Steading area has rainfall much the same as Kent. But if up high then of course it gets colder. Proper winters with snow. We put a woodburner in. It is in a very large open space, including stair well. There is a lot of outside wall, including lots of glass and exposed, uninsulated walls. And yet the one log at a time principle applies. So for there it was the right decision as it is: 1. Expected, esp for rentals.* 2. Very pleasing. 3. A backup in the highly likely occurrence of power cuts due to trees v cables. * paying guests include the wbs in their incredibly positive reviews, so it is also economically justified. This discusson is very helpul and timely for us. We are (were?) currently planning to fit a wbs in our current family project in the scorching SE. I think we may leave it out for now, but the air intake and flue routes are ready if we change our minds. It can be very cold here... I liken it to Dutch winters of a damp cold that eats at your being.... not so much in recent years though. Question. What is a sensible backup if there are long term power cuts? I'm thinking that winter solar might run the basics and a little ufh. Thick socks and jumpers and buy a gas stove or 2?
  9. I think you may be choosing to reject it. I won't go further into that. What do you favour then as our source of energy? Now and in say 20 years or whenever you consider that carbon fuels will be too diminished, esp if the burning regimes succeeded in banning renewables.
  10. That's another issue than the fire protection, but a chunky beam that is inefficient in normal use can then use that extra stiffness. Next time you're in a big warehouse , reasonably modern, if you look up at the rafters, they are likely to have diagonal struts. They're not for fire but show how stiffness can be provided. Likewise if a floor is built in line with a beam, or a wall into a column it won't distort.
  11. Without referring to documents.. It takes a huge temperature rise for steel to soften and fail. If it was all exposed to fire the heat would rise more quickly than if some is protected. A skinny section of steel conducts the heat more quickly. So a typical example of partial protection is being partly enclosed by a wall or having a concrete plank floor sitting on it. The steel is not being protected in the long term. Continued heat will make it fail. But it is being designed to remain structural for a period of time. Thus we could find that an exposed light column needs lots of intumescent paint while a heavy section needs nothing or a thinner coat. I've dealt with 3 fire damaged steel buildings. An agricultural one was a write-off. One we had built a few years earlier only needed cleaning and painting. The third was within an external fire wall (steel cladding and fibreglass insulaion) .. no damage other than to the paint on cladding and column (fire officer amazed).(the fibreglass was converted back to sand). I don't know if that's a complete or logical answer, so keep asking.
  12. This happened in my uni year one. Tiny portal frames tested to destruction, and thus stuck in my mind thereafter that a frame needs 3 'pins' to form. (You can see that in the photo... top, middle bottom have all rotated.) If it had simply been 10 minutes of a lecture it wouldn't have had the same effect. Dead load becomes dynamic load. Also that the loading of the remaining structure becomes out of balance, and in the RP example the floor collapses are accumulating to be ever increasing loads.
  13. Not a pretty sight. And then there is getting out again. How did I know it would be CT1? Or Snibbo as it used to be called.
  14. " it’s a steel frame building, so it would not be a total collapse. It would be more of a localised collapse. " Wishful thinking perhaps, or some words to keep the shareholders and banks happy? Steel buildings can collapse. There is an inherent ability for them to crumple and come to some sort of stability if there is a localised failure. But I don't think this was designed for back in 1960. in Europe we have to design to prevent "disproportionate collapse" ie one failed element, eg from a gas explosion, would cause only local damage. see Ronan Point 1968 That's a fire officer...
  15. It's one of these area over perimeter things. So a chunky steel possibly needs no protection, an certainly less... I've had lots of cases, and knowing the principle can save money and also be easier to build. (To the extent of using a structurally inefficient steel because of the fire and geometry benefit... this seldom happens in a linear design process. ) It's the exposed area, so with a fire on the inner face, only that area counts, divided by the whole cross section. Thus a column in a wall is less exposed than one in an open area. The info is provided by manufacturers of protection products.
×
×
  • Create New...