Iceverge Posted Monday at 12:13 Posted Monday at 12:13 On 04/04/2026 at 08:35, allthatpebbledash said: What was the cost difference between using PIR and the wool batts? Are there any alternatives to this specific brand? I want to ideally beat the new wall construction u-value of 0.18w. I did some calculations online using that German website I seen linked on here. Keeping a cavity at 150mm, the PIR on paper appears better. But that’s the topic being discussed here, theoretically it does. If construction doesn’t meet proper standards, how much of the supposed r value is lost? PIR achieves 0.15W Mineral wool batts gives 0.18W I can build a wider wall of course and throw in more mineral wool? Then for the lintels use split lintels and avoid the catnic thingies? That "mineral insulation panel" has a k value of 0.045W/mK. try it again with a "mineral wool 035" or "hk 33" for the EPS beads. 1
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 06:41 Posted yesterday at 06:41 On 02/04/2026 at 19:57, DannyT said: I’m a bricklayer. Just had planning approved for south Scotland. Was told rigid boards (PIR) is the standard with 50mm air gap. I sent a email over to building control about having Dritherm 32 fulfill along with the BAA certification. They replied saying I can go ahead with it as long as installed to manufacturers standards. There was no way I would do PIR. Even on my own build taking all the time in the world it would be a nightmare to install. Looks great on a drawing but it just don’t happen in real life and when the bricklayers not getting paid much to take the time you end up with a right mess as shown in photos above. It repels moisture too so won’t get through the cavity, even in exposed locations like mine. You can still full fill up there then? I thought it went on exposure zones? The stuff is deffo water repellent. An offcut can sit in a puddle for a week and is no heavier for it.
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 06:42 Posted yesterday at 06:42 On 05/04/2026 at 07:57, JohnMo said: Or don't bother with cavity - block wall and external insulation? You can see exactly what is going on. Not as good for finance or future sales purposes I think?
JohnMo Posted yesterday at 08:58 Posted yesterday at 08:58 2 hours ago, Oz07 said: Not as good for finance or future sales purposes I think? People say the same for timber construction, which is standard building method in Scotland. No one has issue with finances or sales. External insulation has been given out free for ages by the government, so not seeing the issue there either. Personally I wouldn't do block or cavity build, it would be ICF or twin stud timber frame, as I could do both myself.
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 09:23 Posted yesterday at 09:23 23 minutes ago, JohnMo said: People say the same for timber construction, which is standard building method in Scotland. No one has issue with finances or sales. External insulation has been given out free for ages by the government, so not seeing the issue there either. Personally I wouldn't do block or cavity build, it would be ICF or twin stud timber frame, as I could do both myself. I think timber frame and block cavity are easy with finance. You'd have to check with CML or uk finance whatever they're called now make sure the majority of lenders are happy
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 09:27 Posted yesterday at 09:27 29 minutes ago, JohnMo said: People say the same for timber construction, which is standard building method in Scotland. No one has issue with finances or sales. External insulation has been given out free for ages by the government, so not seeing the issue there either. Personally I wouldn't do block or cavity build, it would be ICF or twin stud timber frame, as I could do both myself.
-rick- Posted yesterday at 11:10 Posted yesterday at 11:10 2 hours ago, JohnMo said: External insulation has been given out free for ages by the government, so not seeing the issue there either. Pretty much everyone who lives in a city knows someone who has been affected by cladding issues related to Grenfell. A lot of those are EPS EWI related. So even if mortgages don't mind there are a pool of buyers who may be put off by EPS EWI. Mineral wool EWI doesn't have the same problem but is a lot more expensive and frankly I doubt many buyers who are nervous about 'cladding' are going to worry about the distinction. * Yes I know most buyers don't even know enough to think that deeply about what they are buying but even a subset of city dwellers moving out of the city is not a pool of people you want to put off IMO.
Iceverge Posted yesterday at 12:56 Posted yesterday at 12:56 3 hours ago, JohnMo said: People say the same for timber construction, which is standard building method in Scotland. No one has issue with finances or sales. External insulation has been given out free for ages by the government, so not seeing the issue there either. Personally I wouldn't do block or cavity build, it would be ICF or twin stud timber frame, as I could do both myself. I could probably do any build method myself, masonry included. Unfortunately I would be long dead before I had finished. I think stick built has great advantages. 1. Speed 2. Many options to source materials locally 3. "Standard" TF constitution these days for mortgages and insurance etc. 4. No big deposit to find. 5. Easier airtightness + thermal bridging details. 6. No mega machines needed. Masonry is good but to make it work well you really need a simple box design, good masons and plasterers, a longer time scale and time for tricky airtightness and thermal bridging detailing. It's not impossible but for a high performance building (we did it) but it's more touble than it's worth. If you're will to accept something average it's fine. ICF and twin wall factory frames are excellent when done well but carry the risks of higher up front cost, waiting times, deposits, scarcity of extra materials if needed. Big cranes on site. Sometimes awkward insurance and mortgaging. Pick your poison.
allthatpebbledash Posted yesterday at 17:56 Author Posted yesterday at 17:56 On 06/04/2026 at 13:13, Iceverge said: That "mineral insulation panel" has a k value of 0.045W/mK. try it again with a "mineral wool 035" or "hk 33" for the EPS beads. Ah. Yeah so with the “035” wool at 150mm thickness it gives a 0.15w/ wall which is good. But it also shows a heavy set of rain drops suggesting huge condensation risk.
ADLIan Posted yesterday at 18:04 Posted yesterday at 18:04 Condensation is often predicted with cavity walls. That’s the problem with taking the calculation at face value as in this instance any condensation risk is probably irrelevant.
DannyT Posted yesterday at 18:53 Posted yesterday at 18:53 11 hours ago, Oz07 said: You can still full fill up there then? I thought it went on exposure zones? The stuff is deffo water repellent. An offcut can sit in a puddle for a week and is no heavier for it. Yes. The BBA certificate is for all exposure zones. 1
Oz07 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 10 hours ago, DannyT said: Yes. The BBA certificate is for all exposure zones. Presumably full fill too? You can buy those cavity sure trays if not now which give you a guaranteed 25mm or something clear cavity.
Iceverge Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 15 hours ago, allthatpebbledash said: Ah. Yeah so with the “035” wool at 150mm thickness it gives a 0.15w/ wall which is good. But it also shows a heavy set of rain drops suggesting huge condensation risk. I wouldn't worry about it. The calculator takes a snapshot of a temperature and assumes it stays -5 deg forever. Not very realistic unless you live in a valley somewhere that never gets any sun. Masonry is very tolerant of any damp. Masonry wall with mineral wool is somewhat vapour open so drying does occur both back into the house and put through the wall .
ADLIan Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 30 minutes ago, Iceverge said: The calculator takes a snapshot of a temperature and assumes it stays -5 deg forever. Not so. Current version of BS does not use this number. It uses monthly weather data based on the building location
Iceverge Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 1 hour ago, ADLIan said: Not so. Current version of BS does not use this number. It uses monthly weather data based on the building location ubakus?
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