3) some of our back yard need re-pointing. I did brick laying in school (got an A at GCSE ) but haven’t done anything like that for 15 years or so! Exiting stuff looks like this. Some bits are cracked - other sections are completely missing it. Any ideas on the work involved in re-doing it? I guess removing anything which is dodgy. Clean out any mud/weeds. Wait for a dry weekend and get cracking?
For the bath, I’d use foam rod, like this stuff: https://www.sealantsupplies.co.uk/products/foam-sealant-joint-backer-rod-2/ - expanding foam as per Paul’s post would also be fine, but I never fail to make a horrific mess with foam. If you go the exp. foam route, get a gun not an aerosol with a push button on top, it’s way easier to control. Also half fill the bath as Paul says and hope it doesn’t move as much as Chris’s! Use good quality, mould resistant sealant (Dow is good) or you’ll be re-doing it in a few months. I use masking tape, otherwise I make a mess with the silicone, lots of people do a good job without though.For the roof, can you work out where the ingress is? It might be something simple and easier than a re-roof. I’d look at the flashings, verge, the ridge (can see some of the mortar has come out in your pic) and the gutter - it looks like the existing felt doesn’t lap over the back of the gutter in your pic, and it should, otherwise water dripping off the roof can blow behind the gutter. You can get plastic felt support trays that just slide under the existing felt to remedy this, like these: https://www.wickes.co.uk/Premium-Felt-Support-Tray-1-5m/p/169557If you do re-roof, the doing is straightforward and very satisfying, but I’ve only ever done it when someone else had done all of the thinking. It’d be easy to screw up and only realise when it’ll be a lot of work to fix.For the pointing, just go at it. Raking out can be a ball ache if the old mortar hasn’t all turned to weetabix. Rake out an inch deep, mix a lot dryer than for bricklaying, measure your mix amounts carefully so it’s all the same colour and start out somewhere inconspicuous, as it’ll probably be a bit messy at first. Good luck!
Quote from: James Malloch on September 28, 2023, 11:09:35 am3) some of our back yard need re-pointing. I did brick laying in school (got an A at GCSE ) but haven’t done anything like that for 15 years or so! Exiting stuff looks like this. Some bits are cracked - other sections are completely missing it. Any ideas on the work involved in re-doing it? I guess removing anything which is dodgy. Clean out any mud/weeds. Wait for a dry weekend and get cracking?Is this just a garden wall, or part of your out building? If the former I'd be tempted to leave it. It's a ball ache to grind out the old stuff without damaging the brickwork. Just patch up the worst bits where it has fallen out. Try a few different sand:cement mixes to get a similar match. Don't do it on too hot/sunny day as it may dry out too fast and crack, shouldn't be a problem this time of year though!Congrats on the little one!
Get this or one of the cheaper versions when you do the silicone. I hadn't realised these existed till recently. It's self explanatory but there's YouTube videos to show you what to do.https://www.screwfix.com/p/cramer-profiling-tool-kit-10-pieces/656fn
I’ll see if i can get some of the foam rod locally - i would only need about 50cm of it so hopefully one of the local plumbing merchants willSell it in smaller quantities. If not I’ll maybe try the expanding foam route, thanks.With the roof, there’s quite a lot of broken tiles, moss growing which is raising some tiles (and holding water in place). There’s no felting - its just exposed slates when viewed from the inside - so any ingress is going straight onto the back of the plaster board.I think if i went for the re-roof I’d just replace like for like, other than adding felting. I wouldn’t touch the flashing at the side. To be honest it’s definitely something we could live with and sort out next summer when theres a longer dry spell because, as you say, i imagine things will go wrong and take longer than expected so trying to do it on an autumn weekend probably isn’t ideal…
This looks magical. Much easier than using a wet finger which was the approach we used when trying to seal our ever leaking shower on the boat!
Quote from: James Malloch on September 29, 2023, 08:23:54 amThis looks magical. Much easier than using a wet finger which was the approach we used when trying to seal our ever leaking shower on the boat!Dipping your finger in white spirit makes it a lot easier
Can anyone confirm that this is the correct wiring for a hive thermostat?It is on the youtube of “North west gas certificates” so i assume it is legit.We have the same wires going to our current thermostat that needs replacing.Edit - it is for a Combi boiler
Quote from: James Malloch on February 22, 2024, 10:20:02 amCan anyone confirm that this is the correct wiring for a hive thermostat?It is on the youtube of “North west gas certificates” so i assume it is legit.We have the same wires going to our current thermostat that needs replacing.Edit - it is for a Combi boilerI went for this after seeing the same diagram a few times and it all seems to be working fine 👍🏻
This might be too obvious, but have you tried pressing the button below the screen? Neither of our meters show anything on the screens unless you press one of the buttons. The screens then power off after a pre-determined length of time.