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Everything posted by saveasteading
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I've only ever lived in draughty houses tho the steading is pretty well airtight but doesn't get stuffy. I'm of the opinion that the essential vents at fans and through opening of doors etc we get enough oxygen. But maybe when we relax and doze of watching Repair Shop it is lack of oxygen.
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It shouldn't dry at all. It hardens chemically , but drying weakens it. A very light spray of water at most, then polythene over it, or hessian and then wet it. After a day it will be hard and can be soaked but the concrete should be kept damp for a week, (and isn't full strength til 30 days.) Then the small amount of free water can be allowed to evaporate.
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Thanks. Warms the house rather than cools it but not a lot. We are simply leaving doors open after 6pm ish and the house cools ready to start again tomorrow.
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Removing motorhome sealant.
saveasteading replied to TheMitchells's topic in Waterproofing & Sealants
Me too. It's remarkable how a very small leak will spread far and wide. If all your dampness was somehow collected, would it fill a bucket? No. A mug? Maybe. And that's been over a year or more. It could be just one pinprick of a hole in the mastic, if you could find it. @ProDave tarpaulin is such a good idea too. Simple and likely to be effective, and protects the mastic. -
Please help me understand? A fan takes the internal (24°C) air out, through a heat exchanger. It partially cools the incoming air currently at 33°C. What temp is the incoming air likely to be? I'm not understanding how that helps. I have to admit to scepticism in general, from a decade ago when mvhr systems were mostly inefficient bodges which the reps couldn't, or wouldn't, explain apart from ticking a sustainability box. We've gone Spanish. A bit of work outdoors early. 12 til 5 indoors. Evening outside. Dinner later than usually. (Football agony at midnight.) Curtains and blinds closed according to sun movement.
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YouTube channels and playlists
saveasteading replied to Square Feet's topic in Property TV Programmes
Could I do it? Is a good test. I might be very slow, but if I could do it then so can they, faster and sometimes better... especially if watched. -
Or reused. I don't usually look that far ahead. Some future creature will analyse it and call it the chip shop gas well, from the "Humans Age."
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So it's you that is chucking all that heat into the atmosphere!
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YouTube channels and playlists
saveasteading replied to Square Feet's topic in Property TV Programmes
That's fundamental to me. Followed by the kiss principle because most (?) trades are not as skilled as they think they are, and can't handle anything out of the ordinary. I also like the principle of one trade at a time and gradually working to more accuracy as the building emerges....I mean look for total accuracy but expect less. Thus I prefer to avoid ufh pipes in a structural slab. Get the heavies to pour the slab, then insulate and screed much later. -
Sitting in our old draughty house, thinking how controllable it is, using Mediterranean techniques and 2 hours of aircon unit in one room. And how mvhr would be making it worse.
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Insulation upstand when not having skirting board?
saveasteading replied to flanagaj's topic in General Flooring
I've never heard of this. Poker for deep pours yes. Tamper for thin. Is this an additive. Can you point me at a reference? -
Fire Stop Locations for Timber frame with external cladding
saveasteading replied to HanleeHouse's topic in Timber Frame
Cut the mesh and fix to the perforated profiles, then fix the profiles? I'd expect that to exist as a product already. Maybe in more insecty countries. -
Fire Stop Locations for Timber frame with external cladding
saveasteading replied to HanleeHouse's topic in Timber Frame
Some insects will get through any of these. -
Flextron bonded to standing seam versus 'normal' solar panels
saveasteading replied to Bancroft's topic in Photovoltaics (PV)
That's entirely personal taste. An ancient lead or zinc roof looks much the same. -
Removing motorhome sealant.
saveasteading replied to TheMitchells's topic in Waterproofing & Sealants
If you can stop the liquid water coming in at metal laps, wndow joints etc then you are winning. The next stage is the dampness inside drying out. With windows open snd the summer temperatures it might be slow but will happen. That's unless any water is between 2 impermeable layers. Only then might some holes or stripping back be worthwhile. But it's mostly plasterboard or hardboard isn't it? -
'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
Don't assume it is about you. It was a general statement. Those are a bit like the the dictatorship extreme though aren't they. Except that they have public consultations for a tick box, then proceed. You can't do anything about it. Complaining or constructive suggestions would have no effect. And your road is less dangerous. (No idea of course if it affects your own view, amenity, property value). So I'm not sure that counts. -
As always... first needs more info Why 3 hatches? How deep is the void? Insulated? What worries you that might need access?
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'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
Delays can be overcome, especially in a dictatorship where, not even compulsory purchase, but a dozer would appear and drive through whatever land or houses were in the way. I've a feeling that nimby blamers are generally comfortable that their property, location, lifestyle is safe but some more bypasses would suit their journeys.... but not spoil their view/ convenience/ neighbourhood. Or simply raise taxes. But that won't be on the very rich who have the money guarded. -
'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
Nimbys are other people I don't agree with. Everyone is a nimby to some degree. -
'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
Indeed. It's what we hear and some want to believe. The average person has never been so well off, long lived, healthy. Not many thousands killed in wars or crippled by disease. Pot holes are caused by bigger, powerful and numerous cars... into the seventies there were few cars. I do wonder why these invented claims of it being the worst of times are so popular. It seems to sell the Mail and Express though..... what miserable reads, for determinedly unhappy people, sponsored by oligarchs to keep us in our places? -
Removing motorhome sealant.
saveasteading replied to TheMitchells's topic in Waterproofing & Sealants
I've got some old sealant that I should have thrown away because it was never much good. I will see if solvents are mentioned. -
'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
And good for who (whom?) . like in trickle down theory / jam tomorrow / Brexit. -
Removing motorhome sealant.
saveasteading replied to TheMitchells's topic in Waterproofing & Sealants
You forgot Snibbo. -
'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
Off topic. You are excused not knowing this history. It was not a shortage, (The Irish Potato famine was) :but greed of the ruling classes. As perhaps is the Chinese case. It was after the Union of Parliaments, and many of the Highland Chieftains/ lords, now resident in London, became readily persuaded that they'd be rich if they abandoned the community / clan system, evicted the people and put sheep on the land. The people were loaded on ships with few belongings. Hence the very large numbers of Highland names in NE US and Canada. Some Lords were brutal, others less so. "Such a parcel of rogues in a nation" by Burns refers to Scots not English Lords. -
'Where We Live' - a survey of the decline in British housing.
saveasteading replied to MAB's topic in Housing Politics
Wiping out or evicting the natives whose land they required. That's a very extreme opposite of nimbyism. It happened here with the Highland Clearances, but we've evolved a bit since then.
