Thread: Cigarette smoke
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[email protected] whitely525@yahoo.co.uk is offline
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Default Cigarette smoke

On 24 Dec, 17:10, Andy Hall wrote:
On 2007-12-24 14:59:27 +0000, geraldthehamster said:





On 24 Dec, 00:44, scotsgal wrote:


The smoke was seeping through the flat door,
the old chimney/fireplace, floorboards and then into the gaps between
the walls (it is a Victorian property, so the boards have shrunk,
allowing the smoke to permeate). I draught-proofed the door with
rubber sealing strip from a DIY store, filled problem gaps between
skirting and wall with nice and cheap polyfilla (from powder) and
laminate/skirting gaps with polycell flexible/decorator's filler (or
decorator's caulk) to allow movement. It took AGES to do it but it was
worth it. Yes, you are correct that when you block one gap, the smoke
finds another, but the amount of smoke entering your property will be
reduced and after that, the best solution if you want to eradicate it
is to keep going until you have sealed everything that you can!


Yes, but should you have to? An older property is bound to leak in
those places. Isn't it incumbent on your neighbours not to cause a
nuisance by filling your property up with smoke? Quiet enjoyment and
all that.


Regards
Richard


Exactly. *I think that it would be reasonable for this to be referred
to the environmental health people


Sounds more like a modern house was not built according the regs OR
modern regs are ****e and have nothing to do with what real people
expect. In the first case you may well sue the developer.

Maybe you could use a radioactive tracer, but I have never heard of
them used in the gas phase.


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