Kelvin Posted February 26 Author Share Posted February 26 I fitted the hob yesterday. The daft duct for the recirculating hob was a faff. The kitchen fitter fitted it as part of the island installation but he made a proper arse of it and also managed to break it. It’s supposed to just ‘click’ together but the least movement and it fell apart. Not sure how other recirculating hobs work, presumably much the same thing way. Anyway quick visit to screwfix to get some self-tappers and it’s now properly fixed in place. I have a spare back for the cabinet to cover up the cutout and I’ve painted the exposed cuts. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vin Housley Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 Just joined Kelvin new bungalow to build this year.Looks like good progress and really good of you to post your "journey" as an incentive us "newbies".I always try and forward to think Months on sure you'll be in and settled..cheers Vin Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
saveasteading Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 On 26/02/2024 at 11:40, Kelvin said: I fitted the hob yesterday. The only BH post that my wife has been interested in. Wants to know confirm that is a NEFF, Where the cleaned air re-emerges into the room? Is that duct compartment a unit, or a void between units? Does the ducting come with the hob and go all the way to whatever outlet there is? Looks like we will be saving up for one of those, and an AEG oven with the slideaway door. You maybe already said, sorry, but who did the scary cutting in the worktop? I say scary as we had joiners cut a hole in our oak worktop. They traced the upside down sink and cut that size, Then balanced it on the brackets and siliconed so we couldn't see it wasn't sitting on the wood......until it moved a bit and I looked underneath....horror. A much better joiner cut a basin into a composite worktop and was clearly very nervous. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted February 27 Author Share Posted February 27 (edited) It is indeed, it’s a Neff N70 80cm venting induction hob. The duct curves down under the cabinet and has a large wide final piece the air exits from and will come out beneath it at your feet. There’s quite a wide void between the two cabinets that are back to back and it fits between them. You can exit the vented air either into the room, as we are, or it could be connected to longer ducting to extract externally. The ducting is an additional purchase and there are three options depending on how you need to extract the air. The hob comes with an adapter that fits into the back of it that then screws to the back of the kitchen unit. You don’t use this if you fit the ducting. The worktop supplier did all the cutting. Very efficient. They sent a guy out who templated it as per picture. The sink and hob holes were cut in the factory. The two tap holes were cut on-site. The same guy then came back to fit the worktop and the sink as the sink is inset under the worktop. It’s from these guys. https://www.stoneworldltd.com/products/cliveden/ Edited February 27 by Kelvin 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted February 27 Author Share Posted February 27 2 hours ago, saveasteading said: I say scary as we had joiners cut a hole in our oak worktop. They traced the upside down sink and cut that size, Then balanced it on the brackets and siliconed so we couldn't see it wasn't sitting on the wood......until it moved a bit and I looked underneath....horror. A much better joiner cut a basin into a composite worktop and was clearly very nervous. That really is a rookie error. Our utility room worktop is also oak and the enamel sink came with a template to mark out so that was easy enough. What I have been putting off is knocking the hole out for the tap. Bit of tape on the thinner pre-marked hole, drill a hole in it, gently tap out with a centre punch and hammer. Been sat there staring at me for several weeks to get on with it. 😂 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
saveasteading Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 50 minutes ago, Kelvin said: knocking the hole out for the tap. Same good joiner wouldn't do it. I did. I think that as long as the sink is sat solidly on carpet or similar, then there's no problem. Startlingly tentatively with a cold chisel or old screwdriver, nothing happened. Then at the right force it popped out leaving a jagged edge which was easily trimmed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted March 18 Author Share Posted March 18 (edited) Kitchen and utility room finished. I need to fit the overflow for the utility room as it wasn’t in the pack and fit some black laminate tape to the top and bottom of the cookers as the light grey carcass stands out like a sore thumb. The sink drawer unit has been a pia but I managed to get the kitchen manufacturer to make me two short drawers and I cut out the back of the top drawer to get it to go past the sink. Feels a bit bodgy but it works and looks fine. I’ve made a bit of an arse of the Quooker plumbing insofar that the flex bit doesn’t really work as the weight is fouling the other hoses. I’m not entirely sure I can fix it to be much better. A job for another day. Main thing is we have hot and cold water in the house now. Edited March 18 by Kelvin 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenki Posted March 18 Share Posted March 18 1 hour ago, Kelvin said: Kitchen and utility room finished. I need to fit the overflow for the utility room as it wasn’t in the pack and fit some black laminate tape to the top and bottom of the cookers as the light grey carcass stands out like a sore thumb. The sink drawer unit has been a pia but I managed to get the kitchen manufacturer to make me two short drawers and I cut out the back of the top drawer to get it to go past the sink. Feels a bit bodgy but it works and looks fine. I’ve made a bit of an arse of the Quooker plumbing insofar that the flex bit doesn’t really work as the weight is fouling the other hoses. I’m not entirely sure I can fix it to be much better. A job for another day. Main thing is we have hot and cold water in the house now. Looking 👍 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amateur bob Posted March 21 Share Posted March 21 looking good Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 7 Author Share Posted April 7 (edited) Very pleased with our wood floor upstairs. It’s not as dark as the picture shows. The second picture is how it matches against the top tread of the staircase which is yet to be oiled. It’s clearly going to be different but I’ll get it close based on some trials I’ve done. Also just about finished the bathroom downstairs. I have the loo, sink and vanity unit to fit this week then the complicated looking shower! The doors, linings, architraves and skirting arrive this week so we are getting close! End of May is the plan for moving in. Stupidly we are also doing the Cateran Yomp (54 miles in 24 hours) which is on the 8/9 June. We did it last year and I can barely walk for two weeks after it! Edited April 7 by Kelvin 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenki Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 14 hours ago, Kelvin said: The second picture is how it matches against the top tread of the staircase which is yet to be oiled. It’s clearly going to be different but I’ll get it close based on some trials I’ve done. I'd be happy with that, matches the newel and give demarcation for the step. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 10 Author Share Posted April 10 Just when I thought all my problems were behind me. The very last thing I’ve ordered is the doors. Due for delivery this week. Called earlier to get an update. Apparently they were delivered on Monday. Well not to me they weren’t. Am I sure they ask me. 😂 They have a POD which is literally a squiggle. They are getting the GPS co-ords of the delivery location. Like I care about that because it’s not here. Been round my three neighbours just in case. Ffs. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 10 Author Share Posted April 10 Panic over. I gave up with waiting on the door supplier and went direct to the manufacturer. They confirmed the doors are due for delivery today and weren’t delivered on Monday. The POD the supplier had was confirming the courier had received the doors not that they had been delivered. Idiots. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenki Posted April 10 Share Posted April 10 1 hour ago, Kelvin said: Panic over. I gave up with waiting on the door supplier and went direct to the manufacturer. They confirmed the doors are due for delivery today and weren’t delivered on Monday. The POD the supplier had was confirming the courier had received the doors not that they had been delivered. Idiots. Had this a few times further North, when the initial delivery company drops the Items in Inverness to another delivery company. The item shows up as delivered, but in reality its at a depot 100 miles South. Hermes / Evri on the other hand just say they tried to deliver it so its not late.. I've had at least 10 missed deliveries where my driver, Martin couldn't deliver my item due to nobody being in, were always in and the time stamps are usually just before midnight - i.e. its not late yet....:) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 17 Author Share Posted April 17 We finally have a flushing loo that isn’t a fly ridden blue plastic box. I claimed the right of jus primae. Shower next so we’ll have one working bathroom. Doors will be finished this week too so we can move in at the end of the month. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
markharro Posted April 17 Share Posted April 17 On 27/02/2024 at 14:50, Kelvin said: It’s from these guys. https://www.stoneworldltd.com/products/cliveden/ Can I ask you @Kelvin how you found this company and if you recommend them? Was the price competitive given they are a fair way from you (and me)? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 17 Author Share Posted April 17 10 minutes ago, markharro said: Can I ask you @Kelvin how you found this company and if you recommend them? Was the price competitive given they are a fair way from you (and me)? Through a neighbour who had used them. They are in Scotland every week. The day they templated ours they did three others in the nearby town. The quality is good. The guys that fitted it were efficient and careful. Ours is just over 3m by 1.3m so quite big. It wasn’t cheap but I didn’t find any of the suppliers that cheap. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
markharro Posted April 18 Share Posted April 18 Ah thanks thats interesting. Out of interest is there much price difference between quartz and granite? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 18 Author Share Posted April 18 There wasn’t much difference in price. I think the quartz was slightly cheaper. It was more the colour as my wife wanted white. I also recall them saying they had a size limit on a single piece of granite which was slightly narrower than our island. Primarily it came down to colour though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 27 Author Share Posted April 27 I installed the MVHR unit this week and got someone to commission it. It’s very quiet. You can hear a gentle hum from the kitchen terminal when standing underneath it but the others are silent. The external terminal isn’t as bad as I thought it was going to look but it’s still by the front door. I regret a bit not changing the whole floor plan of the porch/lean to bit of our house putting the plant room on an end elevation. In hindsight I ought to have combined it with the utility room with a wall separating them. The benefit of where it is that’s it’s right in the middle of the house though. The other small issue is the board on board cladding creates a void behind the terminal where the inside cladding board is which could allow rainwater to sit. I’ll need to add a block to fill it in. The board on board cladding has caused similar issues like this across a few areas of the house. Worth thinking about for anyone else considering board on board. Downstairs bathroom nearly finished. The Aqualisa shower was straightforward to fit but we pulled the speed fit hose out of the connection inside the rail which was a bugger to get back in. Bit concerned it came out so easily. I’m not massively impressed with the Aqualisa Optic Q shower control given the cost of it. It all feels a bit loose and plasticky. We have two and both the same. The rest of it is well made. The mixer and diverter are in the coomb upstairs making it really easy for future access as I made the coombs slightly wider and higher by removing the coomb completely on the opposite side of the roof. We gained a bit of floor space and it allowed me to widen this coomb by 150mm. I did this to make fitting the shower controls up here much easier. It would have been very tight otherwise. Doors and skirting fitted. Doors and hardware are by LPD. Unfortunately they don’t do smaller doors to fit the wardrobe. However Deanta do a very similar door (looks identical in the pictures) which can be custom made. Not cheap unfortunately and the lead time is 20 weeks. Also removed all the dust protection from our lights in the vaulted ceiling so it’s the first time we’ve seen them up properly. 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 27 Author Share Posted April 27 Apparently not as funny as I think Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sparrowhawk Posted April 27 Share Posted April 27 6 hours ago, Kelvin said: Those doors and hardware are very nice, will be looking at LPD. With the MVHR what inline silencers did you fit, and where? The colour of the MVHR external terminal blends in well; this is the one from Paul Heat Recovery? For me it's the alignment that stands out; I'd have liked top or bottom to be aligned with the top of the door frame. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted April 27 Author Share Posted April 27 (edited) We especially like the door handles. Feel nice and solid. I recall a Grand Design where Kevin made a point about design decisions mentioning the importance of door handles as you touch them multiple times a day so should feel good in your hand. Lindab. There’s a picture on this thread somewhere. They are above my head in that picture with the manifold at the other end of the plant room. Yes Paul Heat Recovery. The location of it was the subject of much debate bearing in mind we put the MVHR pipes through the wall almost a year ago. We couldn’t align the bottom of it with the top of the door as it would have taken the pipes through the wall header and not enough space to go above it. Aligning the top of it with the top of the door made it far too low visually. Therefore it was a conscious decision to place it in the centre. Edited April 27 by Kelvin Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kelvin Posted May 4 Author Share Posted May 4 (edited) I had some shelving and a window cill made locally. Ash, elm , and oak. The elm cill is particularly lovely. It might move a bit though so I’ve not stuck it in place for the time-being Edited May 4 by Kelvin 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RossMcO Posted May 7 Share Posted May 7 That's a beautiful cill Kevin, really nicely done. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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