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richo106

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Everything posted by richo106

  1. Hi I currently have 15mm copper water pipe coming into the house and need to move it in a different room on the same side of the house (see pic. red is existing and blue is where I need it to be) I was going to excavate the pipe over the weekend to expose it and see exactly where it goes. what is the best way to joint this underground? Would people join it to blue water pipe incase I want to replace it all in the future? I want this to go underneath the new slab (currently excavated out ready for the new slab) what is the best way to bring it through the wall and under the slab? what options have I got? any advice/information greatly appreciated
  2. Many thanks Marc All sorted
  3. Thank you, I have googled it but not sure exactly what to use Could you recommend any tool to use to do this? Thanks again
  4. I have just spoke to my SE and he is happy with a 300mm footing next the ‘cock up’ one. He said I will need to expose the side of the foundation (1m deep) and scabble it to expose the aggregate. do people think 300mm is wide enough for me to get in and get to it to expose it or would be better to do a 450mm bucket for excess?
  5. I was thinking a strip of around 300mm, when you say depth over the footing…how much would be?
  6. Correct, I have taken the roof off the existing bungalow and discovered the discrepancy
  7. No I don’t want it to join offset, that bit I have moved on the drawing is how it is in real life. But as I will be adding another floor on top of it all, the outer walls need to line up. I am either explaining this terribly or I am being very daft
  8. This is how the drawing should be though
  9. Please see full ground floor plans
  10. The builder said he is going to step out the bricks 15mm either way to create the 100mm cavity
  11. 70mm, that has currently got fluffy white insulation that has been blown in
  12. Hi Mark It was a big thing that was overlooked but we are at the position in the build to correct this/decide a solution now I have attached a couple of pictures that show the arch drawing and then how it should be and with the foundations in position currently in red. The critical thing is matching up with the existing side wall as the extension will be double storey Hindsight is a wonderful thing as when measuring the other way we thought the measurements were but i went with the advice of the civils guys...to my annoyance I wish i followed this up earlier Hope this makes sense Top picture is what is like now, showing the foundations installed (600 wide) and also the nib of the garage that i have moved Bottom pic - arch drawing
  13. The upstairs cavity is going to have 90mm PIR (Celotex thermaclass) So was looking at options of topping upstairs ground floor walls if required
  14. It needs to tie in with the existing building as it will be a double storey extension and the side wall needs to line up. below is a photo of where the wall needs to be Can only see where the line of the wall needs to be now we have taken part of the existing garage down
  15. I am adding a storey to my bungalow and the ground floor has blown cavity wall insulation, but after taking the roof off I think there is some patches that hasn’t be fully done. is there anything that I can add in the cavities while the roofs off? Many Thanks
  16. Haha they are around 150mm out from being bang on I think
  17. How would they overcome something like that though? That’s give me a little hope haha but would be very interested to see how they could do it Thanks
  18. Hi I have been to my project this morning and just checking over a few things and after a thought I wanted to check my foundations. The foundations were doing between myself and civils guy but I now think they are about 6/8inch out as the architects drawings are slightly wrong and we used this as a reference point typically. what options do I have? Can I add another strip next to the footing? I know not ideal but this is the time to do it now any ideas/advice appreciated
  19. Oh right I just presumed parge coat was like a thin plaster coat that had to be put on by plasterers. what is the mix people use for it? Or can you buy ready to mix stuff that I can apply with a brush? like this https://www.clayblock.ie/product/porotherm-parge-shop/ Seems a messy job but definitely doable by myself. thanks again
  20. With our building work starting in couple of weeks there is just a couple of things to iron out and one being how to get as air tight as possible. My plan currently: Existing walls - brick, cement parge coat then another insulated backed PB or batten’d PIR, PB (not decide yet but need at least 50mm pir internally on existing walls New Walls - Fibolite blocks, parge coat, dot and dab ( no need to insulate as in cavity) I was thinking parge coat then I can fix cables and boxes direct to parge I know there is other options out there like proper gypsum based parge, airtight paint and then bond and plaster. I am electrician by trade but competent DIY’er and will be very hands on with the build. As everyone I am trying to find a good balance between cost and effectiveness. I would welcome some advice on what method works best/potentially cheapest as I can paint the paint etc Many Thanks
  21. J_s - Thank you very much for your reply and detail it’s exactly what I was after. With my building starting in 2 weeks I will be spending some evening and weekends following him around. Im guessing blower proof paint will be cheaper and easier than getting my plasterers to parge coat Thanks again
  22. I have CAT scanner that i borrowed through work. I couldn't get it to pick the power cable up even though I knew exactly where it was so I am a bit stumped
  23. Morning All I am trying to trace my supply cable into my house, Western Power have no drawings to help me I have traced in by hand (as needed to move it) but i need to find the route to the road At work I use an radio scanner with generator but this was no use as it has no earth (I am guessing) Has any body got any other methods of how to trace my incoming supply cable to the house? Many Thanks
  24. Or has anybody found a guide/book that would be useful for this topic? Thanks again
  25. We are just going through the final things of our renovation/building project and now on to home network I am planning to install a network point to each room and to all TV locations. I am installing some kind of security cameras - looked in a POE full kit (plug and play type) It is a 250m2 house over two floors First question is where is the best location for router/network cab - 1 option is plant room downstairs (one side of the house) or option 2 is in the a central cupboard upstairs? Does it really matter location? The cable runs won't be too long wherever they go Next question is wi fi coverage? I have trying to read up on umbiquiti but found myself even more confused on what to get. I just want decent wifi coverage throughout the house. Whether it be plug in extenders or ceiling mount AP's I am comfortable using cat5/6e cable and terminating ends but never had any experience in home wifi networking Is there a simple wifi extender/mesh extenders that umbiquiti do? Many Thanks
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