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SIPs floor and ground screws


idris

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Doubtless a silly question for my first on the forum ...

 

I'm researching fitting a SIPs floor onto ground screws but I can't seem to find any indication on fixings.
Access to put screws up through the ground screw plate will likely be limited, and screwing down through the SIPs floor into the plate just strikes me as wrong for so many reasons.

Or you could sit the building on the ground screws and just hope it doesn't move.

 

Does anyone know what the usual way to do this is?

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Good morning and welcome, no such thing as a silly question.  Depending on size, a sips structure will generally need a subframe that would be attached to the ground screws, the panels would then go on top of the sub frame.

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Are you just making life hard for yourself? If you are using ground screws for a good reason. Would you not bolt bearer beams to the ground screw and the the floor panel to the beams.

 

You may be easier 

Ground screw

Bearer beam

22mm floor panels

Insulation (floating) either EPS or PIR 

Floor panels (floating)

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What I've seen has made no mention of a subframe, so that's useful to know.
Now you say there's no such thing as a silly question but ... how does a frame make fixing the floor panels any different? There's still limited access from below and screwing down has the same issues. I can see at the edge of the structure you could use brackets a little more easily, but I can't picture how that's a big gain.

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Have you a picture of the intended screws?

 

In my mind, and I think those answering before me, you simply build a deck using timber or perhaps galvanised steel. Onto that you can build what you like.

Fixings would be from above, screwing down through the top plates of the screws. Big screws or maybe bolts.

 

I'm not a fan of ground screws although I can see they have their place. Temporary structures with difficult access comes to mind.

What is it that appeals to you?

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These are the type of support brackets I've seen.

https://www.groundscrewcentre.co.uk/products.asp?cat=Ground+Screw+Brackets

It looks as though the SIPs variants are designed to have floor panels sitting directly on them, as opposed to those designed to take a frame.

 

@saveasteading Your anti-marketing-hype cynicism is admirable, but I can assure you I've never set foot in a self-build exhibition and this is all the product of my own ignorance and misguided online research. But yes, access is a significant consideration. An alternative would be concrete piles, but I'm not convinced that would be much better. Why don't you like ground screws?

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@idris you have to look at what a SIP is, a block (or several blocks) of polystyrene with a thin ply or OSB glued on either side. The ply or OSB gives very little to screw into. When used as walls they have foot and head timbers for rigidity and you fix through the SIP sheet and into the solid timber.

the Sips panel support doesn’t have any fixings, it is just a support to take deflection out of a panel.

Edited by markc
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34 minutes ago, idris said:

Your anti-marketing-hype cynicism is admirable, but I can assure you I've never set foot in a self-build exhibition

Apologies. Neither have I , I was  only guessing that they will be there. I used to go to Ecobuild though, now named something else, and one year there were several ground screw exhibitors. I took it seriously, but further research showed they were all exaggerating the strength and value many-fold.

I think they are used a lot for radio masts etc, as a jcb can drag them up the hill and screw them into the ground.

 

Why don't I like screws?   

The reps told me untruths and wasted my time. So I'm suspicious of all the information.

It has to be just the right ground. Weak enough that normal foundations aren't suitable. Strong enough that the screws will hold.

Is it right and proper that I could buy these online without proper knowledge?

I expect that traditional footings will normally be better value and durability. I did once build a building on stilts. Concrete pads, then concrete legs up to level, then beam and block floor.

 

Why don't I like Sips? Overpriced. Specified as the 'latest thing' by consultants who don't understand costs. 

It is just ply and foam at a high cost.

 

They all work and are ok in the right place. Just check the alternatives.

 

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@markc Don't worry - I know what SIPs, how they're constructed and how they fit together. I've just never considered their use in floors, as they are in the kits I've been looking at in the last couple of days.
A SIPs wall is anchored to the floor pretty much the same as a timber framed wall - you simply bolt the wall's bottom plate to the whatever is beneath it and screw/nail the rest of the structure to the plate.

But that doesn't deal with how a SIPs floor panel is usually anchored to whatever's beneath it. Even if the're faced with 22mm OSB (which I doubt), that's not a lot to screw into. So as far as I can see, especially with those plates, the intention is that the entire structure just sits untethered.

@saveasteading I'm pretty sure you can dig a trench and get concrete pumped into it without any proper knowledge too. 🤣
Are SIPs over priced? In some cases, possibly, but for what I'm looking at, having built an insulated framed structure before, the increased cost is far out-weighed by the savings in time and (my or someone else's) labour cost.

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21 minutes ago, idris said:

how a SIPs floor panel is usually anchored to whatever's beneath it.

A good  point. you wouldn't want to be fixing through the foam, which will simply crush.

Why not though, fix a solid platform, then infill with foam and additional battens as necessary, then another board on top. It is a diy SIP.

 

Uplift would be interesting with these brackets. A couple of tek screws, as shown,  may well suffice, but I would want to check

27 minutes ago, idris said:

you can dig a trench and get concrete pumped into it without any proper knowledge too

Quite so. But I think even  the dimmest builder knows a bit about footings*, but zero about screw piles.  

Do the building regulations advise on screw piles? 

 

*I am reconsidering that, thinking of some previous situations..  A bit isn't necessarily enough.

 

So: your situation: what is the ground condition?

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I like screw piles but they're rarely the cheapest or most durable option. 

 

You have to do very little ground disturbance and can easily deal with undulating surfaces. 

 

They are dear however. 

 

As far as I know you'd need to mount a say 200*75 timber subframe to join the piles together and then drop your sip on top. Run the screws from the top down threading into the 200*75 timbers. If you used pan head screws and didn't do mad with the impact driver the sips should be ok. 

 

Here's a video of the subframe. From 3:30. 

 

 

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Interesting build video, not least as I couldn't see any mention of fixings between the frame and the ground screws. Their frame just sits on the ground screw top plates and the flooring panels slot into the frame. The implication is that a strong enough wind could lift the finished building off the ground screws.  

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4 hours ago, idris said:

Interesting build video, not least as I couldn't see any mention of fixings between the frame and the ground screws. Their frame just sits on the ground screw top plates and the flooring panels slot into the frame. The implication is that a strong enough wind could lift the finished building off the ground screws.  

Yes I noticed that, I would have fixed brackets from the timbers to the part of the top of the screw pile that was showing.

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My worry would be it sliding off the ground screws rather than lifting, I am a bit OCD and tend to over engineer things but for the sake of a few brackets it’s piece of mind. @idris is your building going to be that heavy/big ? I looked into ground screws for a garden room on a 2ft slope so the screws would be longer and make up the height difference and I could screw up into the floor timbers.

Edited by joe90
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5 hours ago, saveasteading said:

Extreme gusts can lift and slide a small building.

Very true! Storm Eunice slid our neighbours shed about 500mm off the concrete slab it was sitting on. I've got 22 expanding bolts holding my shed onto the slab.

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In case anyone needs an answer to this in future, having spoken to the lot supplier I'm looking at, this is how it works:

 

The SIPs floor panels are joined by solid timber (rather than the insulated joining pieces I've seen elsewhere) and bearer beams are supplied to sit between the floor panels and the ground screws.

The recommendation is to use ground screws with the flat SIPs type top plates and these are sited under the joins on the floor panels.

Self tapping tek screws are then driven down adjacent to the panel joints, through the jointing timbers and the bearer beams and into the ground screw top plates.

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