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  1. M

    Buy a scaffold tower, or buy some proper scaffolding?

    Btw I found a pretty thorough discussion on this sort of thing in an older thread, if anyone else is following this: https://www.diynot.com/diy/threads/scaffold-towers-just-how-useful-flexible-are-they.514680/
  2. M

    Buy a scaffold tower, or buy some proper scaffolding?

    Although possibly this is getting close assuming you can tweak it slightly to reposition braces and build it on top/around an outbuilding: https://www.scaffold-tower.co.uk/product/industrial-scaffold-tower/ This is the problem case, though I also have two large bay windows at the front which...
  3. M

    Buy a scaffold tower, or buy some proper scaffolding?

    Other issues with a tower is that it cannot provide access to some areas sure to outbuildings jutting out... A 2m long tower simply won't fit whereas a scaffold run can easily be fit around it. I can't really access these areas by ladder for the same reason, my perfect solution would be a...
  4. M

    Buy a scaffold tower, or buy some proper scaffolding?

    Yeah for sure, the weight is a concern Main limitation I see on a tower is they are tall and narrow and more often, I'd much prefer a longer run. I did find some products like this Kwikstage which seem a bit of a between solution, never seen these before...
  5. M

    Buy a scaffold tower, or buy some proper scaffolding?

    Both my house and some very tall hedges are much easier to work on with a proper platform, at first storey height or above. Having had scaffold on the house I really appreciate how easy it makes things and how it makes more jobs possible to DIY. I could see we would get regular use out of a...
  6. M

    How much water should come from my combi condensate pipe?

    Bit of an update, I contacted Baxi and it turns out they offer fixed-price for £369 with a £90 call-out if they cannot repair. They ALSO offer a monthly "repair out of warranty monthly plan" for £30.75 a month, over 12 months (same total cost if you don't renew). Under the plan they come for an...
  7. M

    OSB3 top-deck for warm EPDM roof

    Chipboard is probably even worse than ply for water unless you get a special type. You often see buildings faced in OSB left for quite some time in the weather, it seems to be the go-to option these days.
  8. M

    OSB3 top-deck for warm EPDM roof

    The comment I'd seen on screws was the heads can dimple it a bit - but maybe this is being a bit anal, I'm not sure. If it's cosmetic only, perhaps doesn't really matter. I wonder if one can simply tape them but then you don't tape the OSB joints as far as I've seen so may be OTT. This is a...
  9. M

    OSB3 top-deck for warm EPDM roof

    Osb3 is reasonably good with moisture, definitely better than plywood which delaminates easily (all the layers unstick)... This is the problem we have and why I'm having to replace it. You can get moisture resistant marine plywood but it costs a fortune. Every video I've seen they use OSB and it...
  10. M

    OSB3 top-deck for warm EPDM roof

    3 quick questions... 1. Am I right in thinking nothing other than 18mm OSB3 should be considered for this? 2. Has everyone switched to the half-size T&G boards these days despite the higher cost? 3. We would be screwing through 150mm to the sub-structure, should I be doing anything to the...
  11. M

    What are your preferred frame-fixings for battening on top of PIR insulation boards?

    What's the reasoning behind this - just not knowing what you might hit?
  12. M

    What are your preferred frame-fixings for battening on top of PIR insulation boards?

    Well there is the 50mm of insulation too. I can see 120mm and 150mm options, guessing 120 is just a bit on the short side. Would you pilot drill through battens, pir into brick with a long drill then just whack the screw in? That's sounds quite a quick way to do things
  13. M

    What are your preferred frame-fixings for battening on top of PIR insulation boards?

    I'm affixing 50mm PIR on a low brick wall and I plan to glue the boards to the wall first then batten on top with 25mm battens and mechanically fix through. There's quite a few options for fixings - hammer/frame fixings, rawl+long screws, and various fixings that don't need a rawl. Prices vary...
  14. M

    Pinkgrip Dryfix rather than Dot'n'Dab?

    yeah I can imagine this is harder than it looks to get all the boards flush (I only have a 800mm high dwarf wall so hoping not quite so bad.)
  15. M

    Waterproofing a small underground wall - tanking slurries, etc?

    On my greenhouse rebuild project, the structure is on a slope. At the top (left in photo) end, the floor is around a foot below ground level and the top end of the concrete floor rests on the ground (no DPM) - the rest of the building the floor is suspended and above ground level by several...
  16. M

    Insulating between rafters with awkward angle at apex/eaves

    So cutting PIR accurately is tricky enough at 90 degrees (I use the SkillBuilder tip) without trying to do at an angle. I wonder if I can use my circular saw on an angle just to start it off - I am aware of the dust problem :)
  17. M

    Pinkgrip Dryfix rather than Dot'n'Dab?

    I have never used dot'n' dab and saw a recommendation for Dryfix. It sounds great especially for a DIY-er without the experience of D&D, would others recommend it from personal use? I've seen cost mentioned as a con but even at £12 a can, that looks to be ~£3 per full board and as I am looking...
  18. M

    Insulating between rafters with awkward angle at apex/eaves

    He loves his gapo (watched a bunch of guys videos)...I love the concept but it costs half as much as the PIR! They need to invent squishy PIR :) Thanks.
  19. M

    Insulating between rafters with awkward angle at apex/eaves

    I am insulating between rafters with PIR in a home project (my greenhouse conversion) and not sure what to do at the peak and in the eaves since the end of the board won't butt perpendicular to the ridge, etc. Do I try and mitre the ends of the PIR boards or accept it won't fit snugly and...
  20. M

    Remedying vertical crack in unused chimney

    Thanks, I hadn't heard of those before, assume this sort of thing is what you mean - they self drill and provide reinforcement? https://www.toolstation.com/brickfix-helical-bar/p58328 It may well be subsidence although there doesn't seem much vertical displacement and the crack starts partway...
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