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Jim GM4DHJ ... Jim GM4DHJ ... is offline
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Default Do you English...


"Fredxxx" wrote in message
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On 11/05/2015 08:57, Jim GM4DHJ ... wrote:
"Jim GM4DHJ ..." wrote in message
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"Bod" wrote in message
...

Most fires are internal, where there's combustible material. You
would
have thought a window on an external leaf would be better?

Inner leaf windows have been standard for this
reason for a very long time. Outer leaf windows tend to be found
on
very old houses that predate this.

I haven't seen a house with a window on the inner leaf for a long
time.
They generally have wide inner sills and adorn ornaments and the
like.

Are you sure you're talking of the UK?

He's talking drivel.
Windows are to keep the weather out, as is the outer leaf.
Hence the window has to be linked/continuous with to the outer leaf.

Plastic windows are a fire hazard.
The plastic gives off highly toxic fumes in a fire.


Are all of your window frames wooden or Crittal steel then?

mine a quality NorDan windows fitted behind the vertical dpc of the
cavity
closure rebate .....


So they are plastic then, unless you have the aluminium cladding?

no...timber


and if you have a concrete boot lintel (with a normal lintel in the
outside
leaf) with a dpm over the boot lintel coming out in line with the cavity
closure dpc ...if you fit your window in the outside leaf you may have
water
appearing inside the house above the window.....


Not if done properly:

http://www.manthorpe.co.uk/Building/...ay-System.html

I think have only come across cheapskate builders flouting regulations.

yes but in older houses as I described you can land youself in trouble
.......