Jump to content

Ferdinand

Members
  • Posts

    12183
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    41

Everything posted by Ferdinand

  1. Since you said you were going to Dungeness, we expect a photo...
  2. Sorry to hear this @ProDave.
  3. OT possibly. In England a chest of gold coins would be referred to the Coroner then the Treasure Valuation Committee under the Treasure Act 1996. I think in practice it is split usually. Perhaps a private agreement may affect the monies afterwards. There is a 75k word Code of Practice all about it :-). In Scotland it is Common Law I think. Not sure what that would mean.
  4. Can something be added to the S and C to make it more flexible etc. Wondering about something as simple as PVA or Rubber Solution glue. I have used it mixed in as part of eg a hearth slab where a doc was difficult. I have no idea how effective it was but the suggestion was by a hoary old architect. F
  5. Who would be asked? Would that be a direct import or a bulk buy such as container load? I am not sure what the margins are.
  6. If you are using sand/cement this chappie says sweeping brush. That looks like the texture for pancake mixture.
  7. The sale may be home delivery only, but there should be the product to look at. Uniclic are the ones with the blue square logo ... or that is how the BnQ chap said to find them :-). F
  8. Can we have a photo of you doing the test?
  9. @Nickfromwales Can the uniclic take stiletto heels?
  10. Just a note that B&Q have their Quick-Step Livyn Luxury Vinyl Uniclic tiles at £22 per sqm for the next week. I will be switching to these from the Laminate version I was planning to use. I have samples and it is an excellent product imo.
  11. The room is not especially large for self-build, but you could split the vaulted ceiling into two reflecting the areas to bring it down a little if you need. Ferdinand
  12. Yep .. ideal for what you needed.
  13. I still *want* one Anyone out there wanting to play with DGPS and some Raspberry PIs? Or I need an X-ray Total Station.
  14. 18 dollars only seems to cover one month would be the downside. Good for a hit and run. I want one that can draw plans from GPS by touching walls and corners with the puter
  15. I am depressed that the Pobble House is named after the Kentish for Pebble rather than "the Pobble who has no toes" by Edward Lear. Have these people no standards? http://www.nonsenselit.org/Lear/ll/pobble.html
  16. What is the minimum height you need, and can there be a gap - say 200mm - below, on the basis that overspray will be high not low usually? I am wondering about tall bath screens, which have the hinge only construction. The one I just put in was 1500mm high by 850mm.
  17. Add. I think the longest ever Grand Designs self-build project (10+ years?) used huge planks of wood as giant overlapping shingles. But he had his own forest, so you may need to schmooze someone with lots of wood. PS Be interested in the detail for the bottom of those posts. Usually they would be on mini-pillars or hunks of stone.
  18. @Visti I don't see how say a waterproof membrane under the wood would be that expensive. I am not sure what effect you want but there are plenty of options for a "vertical bar" or "continuous" effect over the roof. eg and you will need to find out how it was done, 1 - The Grand Designs High Wycombe Core-Ten house had continuous Core-Ten over the pitched roof. There is no reason why similar could not be done with anodised aluminium or sheet metal. 2 - If you want a vertical texture you could use tiles or slates to give a pattern / texture. eg Small black pantiles or Romans, or mixed coloured slates / tiles arranged in bands. 3 - You could do in coloured box-profile or similar metal roof. 4 - There are a whole series of pitched roof houses with similar roofs on the Dungeness peninsula, including one covered in black rubber, one done in vertical black wood etc. Piccies below for 5 of these. These are all publicity-seeking-architect designed (identified at the links), so you should be able to get some technical details off the net. Spend a weekend down there, and have a wander knocking on some doors with a folder of your plans in hand. Some will be delighted to talk. While you are at it visit the wonderfully idiosyncratic collecton of village churches on Romney Marsh ... a great experience, and the WW1 "Sound Mirror" 'radars'. EDPM sheet. Presumably airtight https://www.dezeen.com/2013/08/25/black-rubber-beach-house-by-simon-conder-associates/ Stained wood https://www.dezeen.com/2016/01/06/north-vat-house-rodic-davidson-architects-dungeness-beach-kent-england/ Think this was on George Clark's Small Spaces. Wood and Fibreboard - Pobble House. https://www.dezeen.com/2014/07/28/pobble-house-dungeness-guy-hollaway/ Nearly flat wooden roof https://www.dezeen.com/2013/08/25/el-ray-at-dungeness-beach-by-simon-conder-associates/ Shingle House. Roof clad in tarred shingles. https://www.dezeen.com/2010/12/06/shingle-house-by-nord-architecture/ 5 - Take a look at the wooden Nave Roofs and Tower Roofs of Stave Churches or wooden windmills (eg Chinner near you). That is not vertical but is certainly vernacular. Ferdinand (Picture links removed, as Dezeen seem not to like it) (*)
  19. For info my Wagner Project Pro 119, which is a £600 machine, runs at up to 200 bar and has a maximum specified nozzle size of 0.019". For the job you are contemplating I wouldn't bother unless you are looking for an excuse to play. It will take most of a day to get used to it before you touch the job. Given the area I would either use a roller or a wallpaper paste or dibbing brush.
  20. Tape strong building plastic sheet across the first couple of joists before you put your planks or sheets down.
  21. Reporting back, today I took a few pics of the A-Frames we ended up with. The verticals are about 2.1m high (ie lower than roof of shed for storage), and the horizontals are 2.4m. Once both sides have screws on it will hold about two dozen lengths of skirting. The extra vertical is for shorter lengths. It folds flat (2.1m x 2.4m x ~100mm !) to take to the shed, and *could* be dismantled. The important points were the brace for which we just screwed an angled timber, and that the horizontals are on the inside leg of the A so it folds OK. Ferdinand
  22. Surely the Bruce highway should properly be in Scotland, not Oz ?
  23. Catching up, this is the Makita Stealth Holdall. About £20 for the holdall and £4 for the vinyl spray. Turquoise no longer.
  24. @worldwidewebs @TerryE This looks like the document equivalent to the one you need. This is from Kent CC. You could then see if they have met the requirements, which you would expect from an accredited contractor, and have reason for calling them back. Aspects not covered by that will be down to whether they met your contract imo. This FOI seems to have the doc for Cheshire West and Chester attached but you will need the most recent version. https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/dropped_kerbs_2 The doc https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/179596/response/444144/attach/3/Application pack MASTER COPY.doc?cookie_passthrough=1 CHeshire East have a page on their website on the Planning Aspects http://www.cheshireeast.gov.uk/highways_and_roads/highways-licences-and-permits/dropped-kerb.aspx I do not think you will prejudice your position by asking for a copy of the spec. If necessary just use a pseudonym from a throwaway address. Or whatdotheyknow.com. Ferdinand
  25. I think it can sometimes be different to this, but with same impact. It is common for a householder to own land up even to the midline of the road, but if it is designated as Highway Land that means that there is a right which overrides aspects of your control of that land - similarly in principle to the situation where you own the land over which eg your neighbour has a Right of Way, and that Right owned by your neighbour prevents you eg building a shed on the RoW if it is a 'substantial interference' to the RoW. You would then be constrained by the overriding rights of the Highway Authority .. usually the County Council or similar. We had a whole slew of objections to our big Planning App by people who thought that land outside their fences was part of their gardens. It wasn't, and the objection was baseless ... though I can understand why they might have thought that. They were quite angry / upset on the basis of entirely untrue opinions, unfortunately. Ferdinand
×
×
  • Create New...