- Joined
- 28 Feb 2025
- Messages
- 67
- Reaction score
- 4
- Country

Hi all,
The extension project rolls on, and has hit a bump in the road.
Around 50% of the fibolite block wall is in place. The builder has today began the process of attaching the 90mm, foil backed insulation boards into the 100mm cavity, and then building up the facing brick. He is using these red circle things on the wall ties to hold the insulation boards against the block.
The problem is, we are supposed to have a 10mm air gap between the insulation board and the outer brick skin. This is apparent in places, but in others is more like 8mm and even 4 or 5mm in others. The boards are obviously very rigid and unforgiving. He has achieved the 100mm cavity at the bottom where the DPC begins, but it seems that any discrepancy in the block walls, whether because of the blocks themselves, slightly imperfect positioning and mortar chunks, push the boards out and there is no flexibility with the boards. The other thing is that these red circles don't hold the boards in as tightly to the block as we might like in order to squeeze every mm out of the cavity. Some questions:
- how important is the 10mm air gap? I don't really care about the U values being perfect (we've done everything otherwise to achieve the required spec), I mainly want a gap so any water ingress can go down the back of the brick and not onto the insulation boards. I'm assuming this extension still ends up being a very warm room whether the air gap is 2mm or 10mm. Am I missing anything here?
- how do other builders get around this, do they get the block work absolutely perfectly square to the single mm and then clean it all off to perfection on the cavity side, or do they just do their best and accept a smaller air gap if necessary?
- it is a shame because knowing what we do now, it would've been nice if the designer factored in an extra 5mm or so into the cavity to make it all a bit more forgiving for the builder. We could take the 90mm insulation back and see if we can get an 80mm one. Trouble is, I don't want thick plaster board on the inside to compensate and taking up valuable space. That said, the building inspectors are hardly likely to find out if we use slimmer boards (as opposed to the 90mm on the plans) as they hardly pay any attention at all when they visit and the next inspection now will be for the roof, and the cavities will be closed off. Thoughts? Or shave off 10mm from what we've bought but lose the foil on one side... (I'm just thinking out loud).
- is there a way to stick the boards to the block so we don't lose space in the cavity using the red circles?
- other option is the builder takes most of the block down again and rebuilds it much more precisely. Prefer to avoid this total waste of time if it isn't absolutely necessary.
Grateful for the usual expertise!
Thanks
The extension project rolls on, and has hit a bump in the road.
Around 50% of the fibolite block wall is in place. The builder has today began the process of attaching the 90mm, foil backed insulation boards into the 100mm cavity, and then building up the facing brick. He is using these red circle things on the wall ties to hold the insulation boards against the block.
The problem is, we are supposed to have a 10mm air gap between the insulation board and the outer brick skin. This is apparent in places, but in others is more like 8mm and even 4 or 5mm in others. The boards are obviously very rigid and unforgiving. He has achieved the 100mm cavity at the bottom where the DPC begins, but it seems that any discrepancy in the block walls, whether because of the blocks themselves, slightly imperfect positioning and mortar chunks, push the boards out and there is no flexibility with the boards. The other thing is that these red circles don't hold the boards in as tightly to the block as we might like in order to squeeze every mm out of the cavity. Some questions:
- how important is the 10mm air gap? I don't really care about the U values being perfect (we've done everything otherwise to achieve the required spec), I mainly want a gap so any water ingress can go down the back of the brick and not onto the insulation boards. I'm assuming this extension still ends up being a very warm room whether the air gap is 2mm or 10mm. Am I missing anything here?
- how do other builders get around this, do they get the block work absolutely perfectly square to the single mm and then clean it all off to perfection on the cavity side, or do they just do their best and accept a smaller air gap if necessary?
- it is a shame because knowing what we do now, it would've been nice if the designer factored in an extra 5mm or so into the cavity to make it all a bit more forgiving for the builder. We could take the 90mm insulation back and see if we can get an 80mm one. Trouble is, I don't want thick plaster board on the inside to compensate and taking up valuable space. That said, the building inspectors are hardly likely to find out if we use slimmer boards (as opposed to the 90mm on the plans) as they hardly pay any attention at all when they visit and the next inspection now will be for the roof, and the cavities will be closed off. Thoughts? Or shave off 10mm from what we've bought but lose the foil on one side... (I'm just thinking out loud).
- is there a way to stick the boards to the block so we don't lose space in the cavity using the red circles?
- other option is the builder takes most of the block down again and rebuilds it much more precisely. Prefer to avoid this total waste of time if it isn't absolutely necessary.
Grateful for the usual expertise!
Thanks
Last edited:
