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saveasteading

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saveasteading last won the day on November 2

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About saveasteading

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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. I won't criticise but it is not high on my list of good signs. I assume that the exhibition advice was from FMB or a builder who is in it. The best sign is a long existence and dozens of reference projects. Any such would walk into FMB membership but probably don't want to.
  2. The important issue is that it has a proper bed ans surround of gravel or concrete. That arches the load from above and protects the pipe. Got an photos during construction of did the bco see it at that stage?
  3. It is quite clearly laid out in the building regs, so if you have done it according to that then you should not need another party to confirm it.
  4. The pullout force on each screw is huge and osb is weak. If any dampness was to find a way in the osb would fail anyway. I assume the cladding fixings come where they come and dont hit rafters, so you need a batten running along each line of them... and so more height... or use noggins/ dwangs. What qualifications does this person have? And PI cover? Remember that standing seam does not work well with any penetrations. It is for looks more than performance. No vents, chimneys , dormers etc.
  5. The slab has a dpm ( I took bores to confirm construction quality and spec.). The puddles demonstrate that the concrete is not porous. The sole plates have dpc stapled underneath, just in case, which will sit on the grout packing. I'm using tanalised throughout as an extra level of risk reduction. It's OTT at 1st floor but at about 20p /m more than CLS, it is insurance against damp and worm, and even wasps which would chew CLS. The slab is agricultural. It was built as a grainstore so they included dpm and strong construction for 3m of grain. But the levels are awful, with 30mm variation in random hummocks. So the highest point is datum. In theory the puddles will coincide with plate level, but we have now kept most of the weather out, and will try to remove the bulk of the water. Keep the queries coming though.
  6. Agreed that is to many people's taste. The colour can distract from joins of wall to window too. It happens. We've decided a colour but the order confirmation says something else which we had discussed. We didn't notice and signed. That's our fault and we've decided we prefer the colour we've got.
  7. You see rooms. Sole plates. The structure is hybrid. The portal frame stays in place and already has a new roof.. The existing slab is 175 thick. Rooms internally will be timber stud and the external walls are being studded too, as the photo shows. 6x2 joists and a few steel beams over big spaces. One great first floor deck will then receive walls and ceilings. The sole plates are packed up to level and will then be grouted, but they are not fixed yet as can be seen. Due to kicking and wind that will have to be done again. The timber house industry works to +/- 10mm, which appals me. We are working to +/-2. ie try for 1mm but accept that a few will vary from that. We hope the early precision makes everything that follows fit better and not squeak.
  8. There were 3 more off picture. The gang was 5, but in the afternoon others turned up after completing other jobs, because it needed all hands to beat the wind. It had been foul weather.
  9. It is low grade, just Big6 asbestos cement. apparently they expected us to double line the skip with plastic and seal it. I had expected either a closed skip or one with lots of cleats and a specific tarpaulin. It's something I was well used to in the past and it had to be in a sealed container. and that is what the replacement skip company say they supply as standard. Plus, the panels are coming off in 8ft lengths so won't sit flat on the bottom of that, and we will end up with a lot of air and needing another skip. Plus I believe panels should be walked into the skip and laid in gently, not chucked in from outside. I am aware that the risk is very small especially with old, wet panels. But the HSE guidance / rules seem to still require closed skips. My bet is that standards are slipping because HSE are under-resourced.
  10. We had this delivered for stripped asbestos cement cladding. At huge expense. To me it is a normal skip and not suitable so we have rejected it. Plus it is on its last legs with rust and holes. Plus it came complete with junk in it. Somebody's resin drive surplus stuck on the side. I thought the skip industry had moved forward but this is awful. Or am I being overfussy?
  11. We are wrapping the scaffolding to try to keep the rain out while framing and cladding.
  12. OK that's good. No need to send a new photo of nothing happening. And you're going to save money on detergent while improving the efficiency of the kit... cleaner water coming out the other end, and less sludge.
  13. Rounded gravel does not compact, and that is the point of it... it settles and is stable. so not option 2. You can just fill with the earth or as 3 or 4 but must compact it. If it is clay then this will be difficult to do well. 1. will be the quickest but cost you a bag of gravel. 3 the cheapest. You can buy a tamp for £15. 4. Does that mean it was soil but now has stone mixed in it? same as 3.
  14. Did it start empty or did you fill it with water? If the latter then the drainage to date is a tiny proportion and the clean water will foam up, as in the difference of the frothy water before you start the washing up, and the lack of foam after. I don't know the science of detergents, but it is along the lines of it clinging to fats etc, and the rest forming bubbles. It will be going back up the inlet pipe too. Less detergent* (which will help digestion anyway) and a bit of patience is all, I think. And maybe turn off the bubbles for a few days while the festering gets going. But do keep us informed as I have never seen this... * we all know there is only one way to wash dishes and everyone else is wrong. I use little, as and when. I've seen other people use maybe 10 times as much... a great big scoosh and there is still loads of foam when finished.
  15. It's not for us to say. It is a project specific thing, so your SE should advise on the structure, not the BCO. The BC can advise on insulation and damp, not that they should be designing for you. But as an overview, and as @Russell griffiths .. that is a big beam with a big load and the footing is absolutely NOT designed to support it.
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