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Brian Reay[_6_] Brian Reay[_6_] is offline
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Default Charging your car at home.

NY wrote:
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
...
Change the door to a big up and over.

I may have to do that, but that means some mind of structural
strengthening of the lintel

May just knock it down and put in something else


This is the crux of the problem. How does a builder remove two short
lintels/RSJs and the brick pillar between the two narrow doors which is
supporting one end of each lintel, and install a longer lintel which is
supported only at each end and not in the middle, while continuing to
support the courses of bricks above the lintels?

I realise that you use acroprops to provide temporary support while the
short lintel is replaced by the full one, but you need to slide out one end
of the lintel and then get the acroprop in before the courses of bricks
above start to "bend" into the gap. Rinse and repeat all the way along as
the old lintels are gradually removed, and then reverse the process as the
new lintel is inserted in their place.

I meant to watch the builders who did this when they inserted a new doorway
into the brick/breezeblock wall of our house, but I forgot, and by the time
I remembered, they'd already done it.



I saw an RSJ positioned so a whole wall could be taken out years ago, to
make two rooms into one. A small hole was made in a couple of places where
the span would be. The new RSJ was laid on the ground ready - this was key,
why became obvious, wood planks were pushed through the holes and up
against the ceiling, supported by Akros. Two more Akros were used to
support the RSJ up near its final position. It was placed on the floor
previously as the other Akros would be in the way. Bricks where the RSJ was
to go were removed and seating prepared for ends. RSJ moved off Akros and
into position. I didnt see the rest but I assume, finish around RSJ,
remove cross planks, and unwanted wall.

The men doing it made it look easy. At the time, Id never done any serious
DIY ( I was still a student, it was an acquaintances house) and I was
fascinated.