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  1. tony1851

    Lintel above bifold doors

    Past experience. If its a conventional roof, half the distance up to the first purlin won't be much. The critical factor here would be deflection under live load, though that could be reduced by using a thicker guage.
  2. tony1851

    Lintel above bifold doors

    If it was well-screwed to the timber to avoid twisting, I reckon a 120 x 120 angle could span 3m or so. Its only holding part of a ceiling and half the roof up to the purlin. {assuming its not a truss-roof).
  3. tony1851

    Lintel above bifold doors

    Use a steel angle directly under the wall plate.
  4. tony1851

    Cat flap cut through weakens single skin brick wall?

    Cutting a hole one brick wide x two bricks high at the base would not affect the wall. Just drill the mortar joints out instead of hacking it away
  5. tony1851

    Cat flap cut through weakens single skin brick wall?

    Depends how big your cat flap needs to be.
  6. tony1851

    Trusteel 2m or 3m

    Whichever system it is, it looks a darn-sight more substantial than skimpy modern timber trusses.
  7. tony1851

    Packing (or something else) between two steel lintels/RSJ?

    The only sure way is to show a plan - it needs to show all ground floor walls.
  8. tony1851

    Garden wall falling apart!

    Would that not cause problems with damp rising from the ground (assumng it has no dpc, which it shouldn't) or does the coating let it breathe?
  9. tony1851

    Packing (or something else) between two steel lintels/RSJ?

    can you post a plan of the house? Eg from Rightmove, with address etc removed. When considering wind load, the SE should consider the ground floor as a whole, rather than an isolated part.
  10. tony1851

    Packing (or something else) between two steel lintels/RSJ?

    The lateral load issue is concerned with wind load on the outer wall of the house. Has he done any calcs to justify this 600 mm wall, or has he just pulled the figure out of his back passage - I suspect the latter? If lateral stabilty is an issue - and in 9 cases out of 10 it isn't - there are...
  11. tony1851

    Packing (or something else) between two steel lintels/RSJ?

    Do you really believe he'll be"overloaded" or "stressed"doing a steel beam calc? Or is it a subtle play on words?
  12. tony1851

    Is it acceptable to double-up on padstones?

    Frankly, this is complete nonsense. The load at each end of the beam is only 21.6 kN. If you've got normal brickwork, a 215 x 100 padstone on each skin would be more than adequate. In fact, if you had a 150 bearing length, and the brickwork was ordinary commons, you wouldn't need a padstone at...
  13. tony1851

    Is it acceptable to double-up on padstones?

    Has the se told you what the actual loading is on the beams, and why it is absolutely, unquestionably imperative that the padstone bridges the cavity?? He should at least explain to you why. 2.2m is a very short span and its hard to see how such a span could be loaded - in a domestic setting -...
  14. tony1851

    Is it acceptable to double-up on padstones?

    Why do the majority of SEs bolt the beams together? Its a waste of time and money and pointless.
  15. tony1851

    Is it acceptable to double-up on padstones?

    How wide is the cavity; and would the steel beams sit vertically over the brick skins? If the beams are only spanning 2.2m they wont be carrying much load so presumably you wouldnt need such large padstones. It isn't necessary to bridge the cavity either - why not have 2 separate padstones, one...
  16. tony1851

    How important is brick mesh?

    By brick mesh do you mean the coils of expanded metal lath? If so, it serves no useul purpose as regards strengthening the blockwork. But it will eventually give you rust stains down the walls, even with galvanised.
  17. tony1851

    90s house various cracks

    Aerated concrete block is well-known for shrinkage cracking. Generally not necessarily an indication of anything more serious.
  18. tony1851

    Post spacing.

    8ft apart wouldn't be a problem; a 6x2 would easily support the polycarb and snow load with minimal deflection. What matters with an open carport is not the number of posts, but the wind uplift. Apply a few more fixings between the polycarb and timber than the manufacturer advises, and ensure...
  19. tony1851

    Post spacing.

    I'd do 2.
  20. tony1851

    What is the name of this brickwork feature?

    As above, pier or 'brickwork return'.
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