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Mr Blobby's Achievements
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All of it, or some of it. Builder thinks most of it is ok. Lot's of salts on the surface and light patches, is this just aesthetic, or will the mortar be weakened? Also, I asked for the base coat to have a break at the dpc to not bridge it. My builder rolled his eyes, and insists this is nonsense. Render scratch coat is always applied as a single coat over the dpc to the ground. Bridging the dpc seems wrong to me, is it?
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HP12 base coat was applied on garage wall in the rain and now looks like this They told me it would be fine when I pointed at the skies during application. Of course they would say that. But it's not fine. In fairness this base coat is just to seal the blockwork before battens are applied and cladding over the top, but even so, it looks like salts all washed out all over. Bill has arrived. What do I do here?
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Internorm KS430 sliding door seals question
Mr Blobby replied to Mr Blobby's topic in Windows & Glazing
Indeed, the condensation at that end (condensation only appears when the humidity is in the 90s because of plasterers, while close to zero outside) of the window could be for any number of other reasons. The gasket is a bit depressed below the glass for a few mm but I don;t think the fitters are going to remove the massive glass pane just to rectify a stretched gasket. Although it would be better if it was not all stretched and bumpy, and it will probably annoy me forever, refitting a big bit of glass for a small bit of aesthetic is probably asking a bit too much. But it would have been nice if they didnt stretch the gasket. -
Instead of the standard pendants over the kitchen Island with easily changeable GU10 bulbs, we are instead installing a single rectangular LED bar. This has to be ordered yesterday but first we need to decide bulb colour because it will probably be difficult to change in future. The plan is to have 3000k lights almost everywhere else, so some warmth to the colour, but is 300k too warm for task lighting over the hob on the island, where 4000k may be better to see if my baked beans are boiling? Never had an island before and we have a combination of bulbs over the broken hob in our current rental pad. What do people on here like to have over the hob? 3000k or whiter?
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Internorm KS430 sliding door seals question
Mr Blobby replied to Mr Blobby's topic in Windows & Glazing
I met with the fitter yesterday and he dismissed my concerns about the gasket on the fixed pane. The slider gaskets are all concave and very neat and uniform, while the fixed pane is convex and horrible looking. Fitter told me its a different gasket on the fixed pane so I think I'll ask internorm directly. -
Spraying krend is fast, one day of spraying covers two walls, then the naxt day scraping and spraying. With this weather, my nerves are left in tatters 😬
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No, no cover. Rain and frost at night. Renderer seems unphased while I would have put it off until wamer drier weather. But that would have been April 🤔 and renderer wants to work. Checked on site this norning and everything looks good, but I wouldn't know bad render from good if it looks the same. Thick frost on the roof, renderers scraping below 🤞
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yes, smooth I asked the renderer about the bald white patches at lunch time and he said it had not yet set and so they hadn't finished scraping it. He told me it wasn't water damaged and will be fine. I was rather skeptical about all this, but, to my amazement I went back to check the same wall a few hours later and all the marks have gone. In fairness it was about 4 pm and light was fading so I will take another look tomorrow, but it seems like all the smooth white patches have, to my amazement, all dissapeared. I will ask the renderer if he patched it up to fix it. Not that he would tell me of course. Now my concern is that after today's spraying the temps have dropped to zero. Hopefully todays render doesnt get frost damage 🤞
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Another thing that's weird, is all our internorm fixed pane windows have a gasket between bead and glass, like this But one window has no gasket, which doesn't seem to cause any problems but seems a bit odd. Like this... I'll ask the window fitter when he arrives if this is by design 🤷 Anyone else have this feature?
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I was surprised when the krend installer sprayed the walls yesterday when rain was forecast. Two hours after spraying it rained fairly hard for a few hours. Which is a shame because no rain is forecast today and its no colder. Render team back on site rubbing down and the back wall is like this in a few places. ... Is this just part of the normal drying process and to be expected or is it more serious rain damage and should I be concerned? Thought I'd ask here before I ask the render guy.
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In a few places on the large windows glazed on site, the external gaskets are below the beads. Like this: These little ponds are usually full of dirt and water. Window fitters here lunchtime to run through my snagging list. Should i add this to the list and insist the gaskets are properly seated? Fitters are going to be reluctant because it will take a team of weightlifters to lift the glass.
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Its hard to see with the white protective stuff, thats kind of why I missed it until recently 🙄 Heres a better picture, from the inside above, with white stuff removed. The gap on the inside is only on the bottom 50 cm. From there up the inside is tight together. I can see daylight through the window at the very bottom, but only a few mm square. Its easy to find from all the condensation around it 😂 There is something white in the middle of the frames in the gap, which may be the coupler, but I would have thought that the coupler would have held the frames tight together and prevented a gap like this. Unless, perhaps, some bending motion is introduced 🤔 On the outside, there is a 3mm gap running down the lower 75% of the join, but not all the way through. About 15 mm deep.
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I did write in another thread some time ago about how the coupling on the internorm windows was rather neat. .. oh dear, I should have looked a bit closer. From the top it could be seen that the coupling unit had been propery installed and the window was tight together. All good then, I thought. Except no, just because the top 75% of the window was ok, I should not have assumed that the window fitters coupled the windows tightly together all the way to the bottom. I have recently discovered a gap between the windows that starts at about 50cm from the bottom. Such a gap seems strange, as I imagine the frame must be bent for this gap to be only at the bottom. Like this: I am fairly cross with myself that I did not see this earlier, before recent construction around the window. This is a full height window with plasterboard installed at the top and it will be a major headache to remove and refit the window. The window has an opening pane on the right which hinges on the right, so that it closes against the secion that may be bent. It opens and closes ok, I think, but I need to get my laser on it to see if and where there is a bend in the frame. There is a lesson here for anyone reading this at the planning stage.... do not have big windows that need to be glazed or coupled on site, it introduces risk of the fitters totally cocking it up. One of the fitters will be visiting in the next week to run through the long list of issues. The question is, what do I do about this? Do I insist the window is fixed, which would mean deconstructing the surroundings and, potentially delay the build, or, as our builder would prefer, throw some CT1 in the gap, or glue a panel over the gap, and press on.
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Internorm KS430 sliding door seals question
Mr Blobby replied to Mr Blobby's topic in Windows & Glazing
Yes, I think the fixed section only hence the isssue. Currently being plasterd so humidity is in the 90s hence the condensation, but there is more on the fixed pane that was glazed on site. For reference, all five of the other windows that were glazed on site have broken or porrly fitted trims with air coming through the holes in the trims on at least three of the windows. So glazing on site was rubbish. The fitters also left behind as box of internorm fix-o-round sealant that internorm supply to be applied round the glazing units. The missing sealant is probably why the air is coming trough the broken trims, around the glaxzing units. I did ask the fitters about the sealant at the time and they poo-poowd me, saying it isnt necessary. That isnt what internorm would say though, so they will be refitting all the glazing with the sealant applied. Although the box I have on site is out of date now. Thank you for this. So, your seals are the same on both fixed and slider section? That is very useful information. I'm compiling my list today. -
I'm in the process of compiling a long list of issues for my internorm installers. Widnows are fine, but the fitters were appalling. I can't decide if the internal seals between glazing and frame on the slider is going to make the list and require some help please. The sliding door seals are fine. Very neat, very tight, very uniform. In sharp contrast the seals on the fixed section look, well, rubbish. The fixed section seals are a much softer rubber, all bumpy and judging by the condensation, not thermally terrific. Here is the seal I mean, sorry about the picture, but it is very hard to capture the problem in a photo: I am concerned that the seal may have been substituted, it is a bit crap compared to the other seals. Can someone with an internorm KS430 please put me out of my misery. Please check your door and tell me, are the internal glazing seals on the sliding section completely different to the seals on the fixed section? Thanks....
