Oz07 Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago With windows and doors is there a ballpark figure per m2 with mid range 2g vs. mid range 3g? @craig Do you run into a similar issue with glazing and payback periods some of these top spec windows costing a lot. Especially as they wouldn't last as long as a wall. If having a house with average wall u value 1.8 there must be a certain u value window you can go for before it becomes uneconomical. Excluding the benefits of reduced noise etc etc. Average 4 bed with 30m2 glazing I bet ai could work it out.
JohnMo Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 4 minutes ago, Oz07 said: house with average wall u value 1.8 there must be a certain u value window you can go for before it becomes uneconomical Would suspect it's down to the wall to window ratio and that will vary by room and by house. Example Our living room has nearly 30m2 of glazing and about 10m2 of external wall in total. So going for high performance 3G wins the day, every day. For clarity our living room has more heat loss than the rest of the house in total. So we upgraded to to 3G. I's all a balancing act something's make sense in one build and no sense in another. Generalising is choice decision. 1
Crofter Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago 2 hours ago, Oz07 said: If having a house with average wall u value 1.8 there must be a certain u value window you can go for before it becomes uneconomical. Excluding the benefits of reduced noise etc etc. Average 4 bed with 30m2 glazing I bet ai could work it out. 1.8 is horrendous for a wall (you don't mean 0.18 do you?) but improving your existing walls is much harder than retrofitting better windows. None of this is rocket science. It comes down to surface area and u value. 1
craig Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) 12 hours ago, Oz07 said: With windows and doors is there a ballpark figure per m2 with mid range 2g vs. mid range Windows are tested at a standard size of 1230x1480. However, for a 1000x1000 window (1 m2), I’d be expecting 1.2Uw to 1.4Uw for double and triple should be 0.7 to 0.85Uw. There really isn’t any excuse for a double being 1.4Uw unless the frame is s**t and the glass is the same. If triple is around 0.85Uw, it’s not the best Uf value (frame) and sitting around 1.0Uf with 0.5Ug glass or higher Ug (0.6/0.7 for example) but a better Uf. Edited 6 hours ago by craig 1
Oz07 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 7 minutes ago, craig said: Windows are tested at a standard size of 1230x1480. However, for a 1000x1000 window (1 m2), I’d be expecting 1.2Uw to 1.4Uw for double and triple should be 0.7 to 0.85Uw. There really isn’t any excuse for a double being 1.4Uw unless the frame is s**t and the glass is the same. If triple is around 0.85Uw, it’s not the best Uf value (frame) and sitting around 1.0Uf with 0.5Ug glass or higher Ug (0.6/0.7 for example) but a better Uf. I meant price like allow roughly £x per m2 for mid range 2g vs. 3g.
Oz07 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 10 hours ago, Crofter said: 1.8 is horrendous for a wall (you don't mean 0.18 do you?) but improving your existing walls is much harder than retrofitting better windows. None of this is rocket science. It comes down to surface area and u value. Sorry yeh .18
craig Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago (edited) Ahh, that depends. It’s very open to a lot of things. Somewhere in the £400/£800 region system / supplier / manufacturer dependent I would suggest. Edited 5 hours ago by craig 1
Oz07 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 12 hours ago, JohnMo said: Would suspect it's down to the wall to window ratio and that will vary by room and by house. Example Our living room has nearly 30m2 of glazing and about 10m2 of external wall in total. So going for high performance 3G wins the day, every day. For clarity our living room has more heat loss than the rest of the house in total. So we upgraded to to 3G. I's all a balancing act something's make sense in one build and no sense in another. Generalising is choice decision. Yeh obviously all a decision based on individual house. I bet the average lounge would have 20m2 of wall vs 5m2 glazing if you think of a 5x3m box and 2 sides being on external wall. You went 3g throughout not just in that one room?
Oz07 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 minute ago, craig said: Ahh, that depends. It’s very open to a lot of things. Somewhere in the £400/£800 region system / supplier / manufacturer dependent I would suggest. So like double per m2 between 2 and 3g? So with 30m2 glazing 12k 2g or 24k 3g if my sums are right?
craig Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Just now, Oz07 said: So like double per m2 between 2 and 3g? So with 30m2 glazing 12k 2g or 24k 3g if my sums are right? As I say, it’s a very open question. What glass specification, float, laminated, toughened, locking/non locking handles, fixed, turn only inward/outward, tilt and turn, reversible etc. Double is likely to be somewhere between £300/£600 and triple £400/£800 but a lot depends on spec, manufacturer discounts (which can vary even with the same manufacturer) supplier markups and so forth.
Oz07 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 minute ago, craig said: I’ll give you an example in an hour. No thats fine its more like 25% not 100% then. Interesting I might play with some numbers and AI later but we know numbers aren't its strong point
craig Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago (edited) 16 minutes ago, Oz07 said: No thats fine its more like 25% not 100% then. Interesting I might play with some numbers and AI later but we know numbers aren't its strong point It's cool, so I just put a Rehau Synego 1000x1000 Upvc (white/white) window together as well as an aluminium window and timber alu window. uPVC exact same spec same spec for all, no change other than glass. Spacer bar is a warm edge spacer, glass for double is exactly the same (1.1Ug toughened 4/20/4). Triple is 0.5Ug 4/18/4/18/4 toughened, none have extras or locking handles. Double Fixed - £250 per m2 Tilt and turn - £350 per m2 (exposed hinging) Tilt and turn - £395 per m2 (concealed hinging) Triple Tilt and turn - £410 per m2 (concealed hinging). Aluprof aluminium, double Fixed - £350 per m2 standard RAL inside and out. Figures are rounded up for simplicity. Timber aluminium (triple) Gutmann Tilt and turn - £775 per m2, finger jointed pine, standard clear lacquer, standard RAL. Edited 5 hours ago by craig 3 1
JohnMo Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 12 minutes ago, Oz07 said: might play with some numbers and AI later Then ask it the same question tomorrow, and you may get the polar opposite answer 1
Nickfromwales Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago On 16/02/2026 at 22:25, Iceverge said: White uPvc fascia and soffit and black guttering and down pipes whilst we're at it. Sounds odd on paper, but that looks very nice in real life
Oz07 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago I also ran the numbers on single glazing even though you wouldn't be allowed it in UK regs. Interesting how big a difference in u value between single glaze and 2g vs not so big a difference between 2 and 3g (if the numbers are accurate) 1/2/3 5/1.2/.7 I might approach my next place differently instead of fabric first ill do economic fabric first.
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