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saveasteading

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saveasteading last won the day on October 19

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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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  1. Excuse that I haven't read all the above. But I don't like most of what I see. Get drains outside of the building by a short route. Avoid bends and junctions under the floor. Why can't you take them out of the right side? Is the bco OK with footings 420mm deep? Is there to be stone under the slab? 2 layers of dpm should be unnecessary.
  2. That can go down as a light use sub- base or concrete fill.
  3. That is a different level of pump power I expect so will be louder. It's a newish development and one I've never needed, but will make lots of sites viable.... and reduce trench depths a lot. The air bubbles one though, surely isn't loud?
  4. Don't rip out a historic hedge without permission. These are the way to mark blatantly, and let anyone with an issue see them. Then take pictures. Then replace with chestnut posts for posterity.
  5. That had not occurred to me. On a posh lawn anyway. I think I would hide it under a nymph statue or some such. Our one isn't loud at all. Silent at a few metres. I guess it could be muffled if necessary. My guess is that one was designed with a pump chamber in it, and it wouldn't fit in the other.
  6. By its nature, crushed rock is more random in shape and will have more air gaps. Gravel has been rounded by nature and may consolidate more. I cannot remember if that is allowed for in the grading specification. But, I also know from experience that the same crushed stone will abrade under repeated loading and so become denser and less permeable. So a slight slope is still worth considering.
  7. Do you have any exposed stone? Try to scratch it, then try harder . Granite will remain ummarked. Limestone and sandstone are variable. People near you may know what the local stone is. Yours will not have travelled far.
  8. And we have learnt to watch out for this risk. Thanks for the contribution. Next time would you stress to the BM that you must have a proper mix?
  9. @SteveG40 Interesting and thanks for reporting. Who specified it? Do you still have any leaflets from back the I'm cautious about any of their products. Very skilfully written blurbs with few real life test results. I went to a tech presentation at the local bco, of this honeycomb stuff and was immediately surprised and impressed with the concept. Interestingly though they wouldn't take questions and comments about the other products. In my opinion they did not target the industry with the multifoil stuff, only homeowners. The same later became the case with honeycomb. And it's expensive. I have never seen them at construction exhibitions but have at self builder ones. 20mm gap seems still to be specified. Complain to them by email. Upset not angry, and asking for a solution. Tell them you want their comments before taking advice from the industry. BTW . IMHO multifoils or bubblewrap may have their place to line sheds or attics. The honeycomb idea is good but it shouldn't fall apart. If anyone has positive comments I'd love to hear.
  10. Is there a good reason why the Graf pump isn't within the tank? It's just an air pump like in an aquarium. We used a Marsh and it just needed an electric feed. Seems less hassle at end of pump life too.
  11. Are you sure it isn't type 3? I've seldom used it, but know it isnt 'single size' and does have small aggregate in it. The supplier can adjust the mix within gradings to suit what they have. I've recently been surprised by the look of a ballast delivery... it seemed not to half much middle-sized stone.
  12. Apart from this specific case. It's a good idea to record the boundaries with any clear feature, pegs or posts, and take photos. File the pictures away and after a period of time they become definitive in law.
  13. By coincidence or this discussion is being watched: Next day, I got a Facebook ad from a local plant hire chain, selling machines off at 3 to 7 years. Full maintenance schedule, and hours were lower than I had expected. About half the new price and will be good for diy (ie careful) use. A lot of money still.
  14. The only "dodge" would be if one of your contractors included it. But they'd probably charge you some other way, and liability for any design errors would be complex. Digging a hole is probably doable, but you've got more important matters to concentrate on.
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