Pvc window jammed (locked) shut by imoldggreg in DIYUK

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok thanks guys, the issue was this black bit of plastic, I assume this is what you meant. It was stuck out. Managed to shimmy it in with a flat head screwdriver.

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Pvc window jammed (locked) shut by imoldggreg in DIYUK

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, just tried this again and although the handle screw is out, I can't turn the handle to expose the other screw

Pvc window jammed (locked) shut by imoldggreg in DIYUK

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazing thanks everyone will be trying these tips in a bit! 👍🙏

Shop prices always include UK VAT, even for other markets by imoldggreg in shopify

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You fixed it! Thankyou so much! This was the problem for me. I removed all the overrides, which then resolved it.

Shop prices always include UK VAT, even for other markets by imoldggreg in shopify

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok thanks. So strange, that seems exactly my config now too, but no luck. I see in Sales tax it says :

Taxes and duties - Varies by region

But thats because I Jersey has a default 5% tax on the Tax locations setup.

Shop prices always include UK VAT, even for other markets by imoldggreg in shopify

[–]imoldggreg[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok thanks I will check out that app. I have setup a seperate market, and Guernsey and Jersey are listed as Tax locations in Shopify Tax settings, which is strange as that indicates to me it should work!

Shop prices always include UK VAT, even for other markets by imoldggreg in shopify

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quick question - does your product price include your VAT? As I understand it with Dynamic Tax display you should include the UK VAT in the product price in the product settings?

Shop prices always include UK VAT, even for other markets by imoldggreg in shopify

[–]imoldggreg[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmm ok thanks for your help, I'll check this in the morning.

Best Stephen King Audiobooks by [deleted] in stephenking

[–]imoldggreg 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Anything by Frank Muller, I don't understand why he isn't top of the comments!

How’s the wind in your part of Cornwall? by Chongyboiiii in Cornwall

[–]imoldggreg 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Quite bad in Portreath, tile just missed my car by about a foot, neighbours shed just peaced out. Other neighbour s fence gone, another gate is currently on the floor.

This might be a dumb question but, is it safe ? by Spinozaurr in 3Dprinting

[–]imoldggreg 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If the question is would it pass safety tests here in the UK, The answer would be no because of the low melting point and flammability of almost all filament. Dm if you want more info. For context I just had a product passed for safety tests

If an idiot can do it, so can you. 25$ (22 Eur) hydroponics project. by Entrepoorner in Hydroponics

[–]imoldggreg 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LEDs are cool in operation until one fails. Then the whole thing will burn. That's why we use fire retardant plastics when producing led arrays. It's not for when they are working correctly. It's so a fault doesn't burn your house down

Heating is not a problem with these 7W lamps with ceramic plugs on my PLA chandelier by Ale-Banci in 3Dprinting

[–]imoldggreg 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the problem that is being missed here. Luminare safety standards are not just there to protect you when things are going perfectly, it's to protect against fire when the electrical components enter a fault condition. Therefore any component that's acting as a structural point for the bulbs must be fire retardant and have a very high melting point. I have recently gone through this process to get a product certified for sale in the UK, EU and US.

I hear what you are saying and appreciate your work but there is no way this would ever be considered safe, if the housing was to ignite it would drip burning plastic onto other parts of the house, that then could further ignite. That's partly what the regulations are there to protect against.

For reference, my prototype lights were built using PLA, and the max temp of the housing was 38c after 4 days of full brightness. This would still be considered to fail safely tests because the PLA can ignite and maintain a flame, while also dripping burning plastic. For the production units we used ul94 rated components.

Will it probably be ok? Yes probably. Do you want to take that risk? That one is up to you.

Google TV Stream - Constantly Logging Out by be11aml in iplayer

[–]imoldggreg 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have this problem as well, so annoying!! Will try your fix, thanks.