I have a similar problem with a small area of torn felt. Can anyone advise if this is easy enough to DIY or is safe enough to leave it alone?
*edit* NM - found this which I will try...
//www.diynot.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=55303
I appreciate that and thats the bit that worries me!! I reckon we will be in this house for another 5 years or there abouts so I need to make the decision - sort it now or sort it later!!
Thanks for your comments
This is one problem when you use someone you know well - its make it harder to point out mistakes and problems - well it does for me anyway. If it was a guy out of the yellow pages I'd be demanding he fixes it and I wouldn't care if I got into a fight with him.
That'll learn me...
The builder said he'd spoken to the Building Regs office and said they didn't need to be involved - mistake number 1!!
Then we were told the wrong width of the french doors by the bloody factory - there would have 150mm support at each end but when the doors turned up we realised they were...
We've had our garage converted into another room but the new concrete floor level is slightly lower than the existing floorboards in the house. I have cut and fitted 9mm plywood boards which has balanced the levels.
I'm wondering now should I leave them unfixed or screw them into raw plugs...
We have had a 6ft knock through between the dining room and lounge and french doors have been fitted. It is in the centre of a 15ft internal load bearing wall. A concrete lintel has been fitted and is anchored 100mm at each end on the existing block work. The lintel is 4 inches wide and 2...
What do you mean by the new insulation butting up to the floor area? Are you saying the insulation should not go under the new boards I lay? Is there a problem if it does? No water tank to worry about as we have a combi boiler.
The rest of your advice makes sense - thanks for that.
The insulation comes in rolls that they can just easily unroll between the joists so it's not exactly 'fitting'. A surveyor from the company has already been round and looked at the loft so they know which width rolls to bring.
If I raise the joists to 270mm before they come they can't just...
I am trying to work out the best way to raise the height of the joists (see the posts above) to at least 270mm which is the thickness of the insulation. I'm hoping they will be laying the insulation in between the joists and because it's so cheap (£250 for cavity wall AND loft insulation!!!) I...
From the loft I can easily see the posistion of the wall that splits the front and back bedrooms as there is a timber that is visible that runs the same direction as the ceiling binders. The joists run across this timber which is pretty much down the middle of the area I want to board.
The...
Actually thinking about I can't run any new lengths that are resting on each wallplate because the ceiling binders are in the way! They would just end up sitting on top of the ceiling binders rather than resting on the wallplates.
Would it be sufficient to attach new larger joists to the...