Battens are renewed as is roofing membrane/felt. Tiles may be renewed depending on condition; concrete tiles have a 50 year lifespan, and I probably wouldn't relay any that had less than 15 years left unless they're was a burning desire to save money now and or blend into a part not being changed (eg reuse good originals from the back on the front and have all new on the back)
Slates can live much longer, maybe 300 years even. You can tell then they're shagged because they sound like wood when tapped with a hammer rather than sounding like a dinner plate would
I don't think there is a standard definition and those two terms are used interchangeably. It should be clarified what any builder quoting means. The breakdown on the quote should indicate whether coverings are being reused and if they are it will likely be that the quote contains an estimate of how many are good and hence how many additional is will be required with a caveat that the price will rise if more replacements are needed
Then the ventilation that there is, bringing the air that is brought, is inadequate for dealing with the moisture that is getting into the loft from somewhere. There are multiple options to address this, and it's not necessarily given the increase in the ventilation will be the solution. It may be that reducing the moisture entering the loft is the necessary step-I've seen bathroom extract fans and kitchen fans plumbed so they just dump their air straight into the loft space, and even if there's a constant breeze that can lead to condensation
If you're heating it you'd need a more controlled ventilation strategy than just leaving it open at eaves and letting it blow through. Insulating it to the degree specified in the building regulations will mean it becomes part of the war envelope of the house and is ventilated as the other rooms are, the amount of which is also specified by the building regulations as such work would be classed as renovation of a large thermal element. You would need building regulations approval for any work that you do.
I can't praise mechanical ventilation systems highly enough in this regard; they absolutely do solve a multitude of problems by creating control ventilation and reducing the amount of money that is lost through paid-for heat drifting out of the building
No. Clay and concrete tiles typically weigh broadly similar and insulation weighs nearly nothing.
Does the other party also not use their side? Would they also be glad of the reading of a potential leak point and also a major heat escape path if it's not been blocked off already?
So have had another leak to base of chimney, despite temp patch up. Plus noticed a hole in a tile on the other side of the roof, either the roofer last year failed to notice or its new damage.
Home insurance again sent the a roofer round for temp patchup, so probably additional premums coming up.
Time for a new roof, the current one will probably prove to be a financial drain.
Have had one roofer come round, he just took some pictures from the outside and will send them to his boss for a quote. Surely, the inner supports need to be inspected also? I would have also liked to have discussed the option of removing insulation from the loft floor, and putting into new roof.
Ventilation is something that needs to be looked at, condensation is already something we have to be careful of. Venting plus a dehumidifier has solved it but as with our neighbour condensation is something to watch, especially at bedroom bay window. Brilliant heat retention though, super comfortable in winter.
Instead of planning how to get a trader that doesn't cause me issues, I now plan a job based on what to do when it goes wrong. Have had so many bad experiences...
Had a chat with checkatrade, plus one of the roofing organisations I mentioned above. CORC did help me out with failed flat roof, but the roofer I found on their site was inadequate and continues to be listed.
Perhaps all you can do is check the reviews, check the associations, get a feel for the person and hope God is in your corner.