Thanks Iain, it looks a lot worse that it is. Left it to dry while we were in Turkey, just pulled it down yesterday a simple fix which was easily rectified with good access. It's very tight now!

Thanks Iain, it looks a lot worse that it is. Left it to dry while we were in Turkey, just pulled it down yesterday a simple fix which was easily rectified with good access. It's very tight now!
don't you want the downstairs heat to leak upwards and help the room upstairs? When we designed our heating I am sure one of the factors used was heat conducted up from the room below.
Interestingly, building regs mandate sound insulation under floors between storeys, which also means putting thermal insulation in there in reality. I had to fit 200mm of acoustic insulation in the ground floor ceilings, packed tight between the joists, with a decoupling layer isolating the floor above from the joists. The acoustic insulation had pretty much the same U value as thermal insulation, so very little heat travels through to the bedrooms from the rooms below. I'm glad I had to do this, though, as my wife tends to go to bed an hour or so before me, and it means that she can't here the TV from the room below our bedroom.AE-NMidlands wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 5:13 pm don't you want the downstairs heat to leak upwards and help the room upstairs? When we designed our heating I am sure one of the factors used was heat conducted up from the room below.
I wondered whether the insulated ceiling might pre-date the upstairs room/ en suite...
With Joeboy being away until recently, did the house get colder than usual, cause a plastic pipe to shrink and pull the joint apart? I am always very conscious of the high thermal expansion (and contraction) of plastics.
A
p.s. just seen Jb's reply, so not caused by a cold house...
If you do (and it took me two years of hard slog to find our plot) then be prepared for an absolutely ball aching job in doing a self-build. I'd researched self-build and passive house principles for over a decade before we found a plot and committed to building this house. The build damned near killed me, not from the physical work involved at all, but from the stress of having committed every penny we had to building the house, and knowing that it just had to get built.
Power came back on at 14:30 so only 5.5hrs it was off and not a problem with having the Lister to run the house, that 4 days without power after storm Arwen was more than enough and not to be repeated.
Despite the stress of the build, it does sound if it was worth it to have the house just as you wanted it.Oldgreybeard wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 5:46 pmIf you do (and it took me two years of hard slog to find our plot) then be prepared for an absolutely ball aching job in doing a self-build. I'd researched self-build and passive house principles for over a decade before we found a plot and committed to building this house. The build damned near killed me, not from the physical work involved at all, but from the stress of having committed every penny we had to building the house, and knowing that it just had to get built.
I think it was, on balance, worth it, but I'm not the same person I was when we started this ten years ago. I'm now far less of a risk taker than I always used to be, and I believe that's entirely due to the stresses involved in the build. The big problem was that I was doing something that was alien to the vast majority of building tradespeople. The main consequence of this was that I had to learn to do things myself, as I just couldn't trust anyone else to do work without compromising the airtightness and overall integrity of the house. Taking responsibility for all the systems in the house, when I just didn't have anywhere near the experience required (I was at best a reasonably OK DIY'er when this started) took its toll, as I constantly worried about whether work I'd done was OK and safe.
Whoa! that was serious, don't envy you that either, so credit for taking it all in your stride.Joeboy wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 3:32 pmWe also had a leak! Insurance job, upstairs ensuite shower waste coupling had backed off works start Monday.Adokforme wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 2:17 pmDon't envy you those conditions Joe, I hate the cold. Just spent the morning outside assisting with linking up fourth battery then getting wheelbarrow and gear together for gleaning Savoys tomorrow pm. I was feeling pretty chilli by the time I got back in, and it's a balmy 8 degrees C here!When I worked on deck in North Sea, my Winter wear was boxers, two pairs insulated socks, top and bottom helly hansen thermal underwear, t-shirt, sweatshirt, thermal lumberjack shirt, thermal coveralls, jeans and waterproof jacket & trousers. Hard hat had a wool kepi too and a thermal skullcap . Needed about 5,000 calories per day. January on deck in the North sea is quite a serious environment!
Put the ashp on to get the lounge toasty for the afternoon and evening.
Discovered a leaking joint into the cistern in the garage so mustn't get too comfortable. Turned the water off for now, so must get back out again and sort afore settling in for the evening.
I know, us softy southerners don't know we're born do we!![]()
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