All that does is demonstrate perfectly the poor quality of new builds and the muppets largely employed to work on them. going on on what can't be seen or was left to the ponderings of a pipe monkey on site?
Not too shabby eh? And not a single anaconda to be found.
The window is quite a distance away also.
Seriously, why would anyone put that in their house,
I happen to know more about your trade than you do
I have them in my home. Best thing since sliced bread.
I doubt that very much.
It looks like a Gurney stove. Seriously, why would anyone put that in their house, it's neither radiator nor convector, takes up a whole wall and looks like a half-baked imitation of a sectional cast-iron radiator.
I have them in my home. Best thing since sliced bread.
You didn't answer the question.
Where will the coldest air be? In which direction will it move?
I doubt that very much.
.. said the man who doesn't believe in convection.
You didn't know Pilkington had krypton filled glazed units with U values as low as 0.5 until I pointed it out to you.
Here in the province.
An argon filled low E triple glazed window has a lower U value than many cavities.
Height restriction put there by designers who want to make modern houses look more period.
Because I've installed them that way on new builds.
I see .
Not too shabby eh? And not a single anaconda to be found.
The window is quite a distance away also.
Have you ever installed anything like that in the hovels you be in?
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