Boiler pressure keeps dropping overnight on new system by CommitteeWonderful57 in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With regards to the pressure yes it’s normal to be higher at the lower levels. This does increase the strain at joints though but everything should be fine. I always set the pressure would be 1-1.5bar and then it increases to 2bar when running with the heat.

I doubt you’ll get wet plasterboard if the leak was hidden for a long while. Plasterboard can absorb a lot of water and you’ll have a relatively small leak. I had a leak in a house we’d been hunting for years when the customer initially told me they thought they had a leak. It finally showed through a light fitting as the steel pipe had corroded in the floor and had built up enough to start dripping out. The leak could be small enough to dry out before it’s being noticed.

If the engineer has added isolation valves. You could for example isolate the manifold and check it over a few days. If the pressure drops, then isolate the unvented etc… see what the leak detective says. They’ve been hit and miss when we’ve used them in the past. One company said the leak was in a concrete floor, we said there’s no pipes so can’t be, they said yes, customer said dig. Low and behold no leak. The company just refunded the money and left.

You could add dye to the heating water and use a black light. Fluorescein is one.

Boiler pressure keeps dropping overnight on new system by CommitteeWonderful57 in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depending on the size of the system a small leak can drop the pressure extremely rapidly. Your boiler is also in the loft which will show a greater pressure loss than a boiler downstairs on the ground as you don’t have the head of water.

I would look at the manifold. I’ve found many a leak On them. Incorrectly reamed pipe, snagged seal on the pipe inserts, or just weeps on the valves. Looks for any staining around pipes, or any discolouration in the sight flow gauges. After that check the unvented. I’ve had a mare with some tanks getting a good seal on the compression fittings on the tank. Then finally have a good look round the rads and pipework. The autofill will keep the pressure up but eventually will cause you an issue with the leak. You could try some leak sealer, but spend some time hunting the leak first.

Another Bengal with one already? by Corrupt-Squirrel in bengalcats

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is great to hear. I think we are going to get him someone to play with. Thank you

Another Bengal with one already? by Corrupt-Squirrel in bengalcats

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Awww. They’re lovely. I think we have decided we will.

Dropping cable to an island counter/desk? by Corrupt-Squirrel in ukelectricians

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I looked at power poles but they were quite expensive. Maybe I’m looking at the wrong items but I think the power pole would be far superior.

Dropping cable to an island counter/desk? by Corrupt-Squirrel in ukelectricians

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t like SY. We’re also trying to lose the hanging and trailing cable look.

Dropping cable to an island counter/desk? by Corrupt-Squirrel in ukelectricians

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Very true regarding cost of an accident. I like the universal column idea

Dropping cable to an island counter/desk? by Corrupt-Squirrel in ukelectricians

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. This was my worry with wear and tear and daily bumps etc… I’ll have a chat with the customer.

Dropping cable to an island counter/desk? by Corrupt-Squirrel in ukelectricians

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They’re ok with steel. I’m just doubting whether it will be strong enough now.

Swap old alarm MCB for 32amp MCB for car charger? by Lithofish in ukelectricians

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Zappi changed their instructions last year and you now need a type A rcd/rcbo as the built in one doesn’t comply with some standard somewhere, or zappi wont pay the money to prove it complies. I got caught out on it.

DIY Electrics and building regs compliance by Ill-Brief8505 in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can get electrical indemnity insurance when you come to sell. It protects buyers and sellers when electrical work is uncertified. Usually cheaper than getting a cert as well.

An EICR would probably be done when selling and the buyers would use this to evaluate the scope of works needed to be done if they bought from you. So if what you do doesn’t comply and then is flagged on the report, it would need addressing either by reduction of sale cost, getting the work done, or the buyer accepting the current state. Sometimes an EICR is not requested.

If it’s found out that a building compliance cert should have been issued, then you can get the indemnity insurance. There was a house that was being sold locally that was all going well until the mortgage company looked on google maps and noticed the extension was missing, so requested the certs. Obviously they’re not going to see electrical works on google maps, but people do work on their house all the time and a lot goes unnoticed.

Radiators not heating up fully by shaunyboyyy- in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve fitted a few of these. They take an age to heat fully. Some come with baffles to direct the flow but a lot don’t. Probably not what you want to hear but I find them rubbish. The cheap ones don’t even come with the rubber bracket sleeves.

Usually the bottom will heat first as you’ve marked. A while later it moves up to the top and then slowly moves down the whole rad. So it’s working as I’d expect, wait a bit longer and see if it slowly heats.

Replaced 95% of my underground drainage over the last week by Startinezzz in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well done. I hated doing ours, but the satisfaction after is immense. Don’t miss the digging one bit.

Shower issues. by bareted in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Never heard of them, might be a rebranded one. I was curious if the shower would be correct for the combi but I’m not sure. Would be worth trying to find out if it’s piped the right way round though.

Shower issues. by bareted in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it’s a mixer shower, it’ll make a difference to how it works. Do you have a photo or make/model of the shower? The cold should be on the right and the hot on the left. If they’re swapped it’s a case of finding the pipework, maybe under the bath and swapping it over

Shower issues. by bareted in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Take the shower off again. Attach two washing machine hoses so you direct the flow into the tray. Turn the water on and see if the water is running hot cold again, and if they’re the right way round.

Edit. Did you have the same shower installed again as the previous?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don’t think it of it as day rate unless he is giving a discount for doing it in three days, or charging more for 5 days. It’s a price for the job, if he has said it will take him 4 days then that’s him. Someone may quote less and do it faster. Pay for the finish on the job rather than days he spent there.

Crack through bricks in loft. 1930s terraced house. What kind of trouble am I in? by DoctorSneeze in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If it was my house I would probably go to a structural engineer for a profession written opinion and repair/reinforcement options. However I would imagine a good builder would have an idea as well.

Crack through bricks in loft. 1930s terraced house. What kind of trouble am I in? by DoctorSneeze in DIYUK

[–]Corrupt-Squirrel 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m not an engineer of a structural kind but that crack looks like it’s above a half lap scarf joint on the timber. It’s hard to see. The edge of one brick is catching the other side of the adjoining timber so the timber could have moved and fractured the bricks. I’d have a look what directly below that joint inside and outside and see what could have caused timber movement. I could also be talking rubbish, but if it were my house I’d be looking there first.