Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
Hi,
Just been quoted £85+vat / m2 for low-e glass and 133+vat for toughened by a local glazier in Kent. This is for 12mm air gap, 20mm overall sealed units. Normal air fill, argon is £5.25+vat extra / m2. Just wanted to ask, is this wide of the mark or fairly reasonable, before I go getting half a dozen more quotes? Is there such a thing as an online supplier, because I'm b***ered if I can find one with google. Whole windows yes, sealed unit no... Ta muchly, Tim |
#2
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
Tim S wrote:
Hi, Just been quoted £85+vat / m2 for low-e glass and 133+vat for toughened by a local glazier in Kent. This is for 12mm air gap, 20mm overall sealed units. Normal air fill, argon is £5.25+vat extra / m2. Just wanted to ask, is this wide of the mark or fairly reasonable, before I go getting half a dozen more quotes? Might help if you told us the window size... ;-) -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#3
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
John Rumm coughed up some electrons that declared:
Might help if you told us the window size... ;-) Ooops - sorry. Got used to m^2 pricing. Actually the first 2 units will be 900x875 mm (re query a couple of weeks back about removing glazing beading) Having worked out that the thermal efficiency of 12mm gap DG is barely any worse than any other larger gap types (I checked low-e glass U-values, with and without argon), I've concluded it's worth saving these frames. If I can get a *sensible price on sealed units, I'm tempted to re-glaze the lot as it's all done in plain float glass and the surface areas add up to quite a bit over the house. The wooden frames need checking and re-coating (it looks like a preservative/sealer rather than varnish - haven't decided what to use, frames are hardwood of some sort), so I might as well pop the ali frames out, tidy them up, stick better locking handles on, check and fix the wood and re-fit + reglaze. Then that'll be a job done for the next 10 years or so with minimal senseless wasteage (probably reuse some of the old good DG units in a shed + summerhouse). Cheers Tim |
#4
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
"Tim S" wrote in message .. . Hi, Just been quoted £85+vat / m2 for low-e glass and 133+vat for toughened by a local glazier in Kent. This is for 12mm air gap, 20mm overall sealed units. Normal air fill, argon is £5.25+vat extra / m2. Just wanted to ask, is this wide of the mark or fairly reasonable, before I go getting half a dozen more quotes? It looks expensive to me, compared with our experience. Recently we've had a couple of leaded lights of about this size encapsulated (i.e. glazed on each side and sealed), they were under £40 each. It was float glss and I don't think they contain argon though. We're very pleased. Is there such a thing as an online supplier, because I'm b***ered if I can find one with google. Whole windows yes, sealed unit no... We use a local glass supplier, have done for years. Mary |
#5
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
John Rumm wrote:
Tim S wrote: Hi, Just been quoted £85+vat / m2 for low-e glass and 133+vat for toughened by a local glazier in Kent. This is for 12mm air gap, 20mm overall sealed units. Normal air fill, argon is £5.25+vat extra / m2. Just wanted to ask, is this wide of the mark or fairly reasonable, before I go getting half a dozen more quotes? Might help if you told us the window size... ;-) All the prices are per square metre - /m2. |
#6
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
In article ,
Tim S writes: Hi, Just been quoted £85+vat / m2 for low-e glass and 133+vat for toughened by a local glazier in Kent. This is for 12mm air gap, 20mm overall sealed units. If the Windows predate Part L (April 2002), you don't need low-e glass. If the window has multiple panes, you don't want to mix low-e and normal glass as the low-e will look obviously tinted. (Of course, you might have low-e in windows predating Part L, but that wasn't very common). -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#7
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
Andrew Gabriel coughed up some electrons that declared:
In article , Tim S writes: Hi, Just been quoted £85+vat / m2 for low-e glass and 133+vat for toughened by a local glazier in Kent. This is for 12mm air gap, 20mm overall sealed units. If the Windows predate Part L (April 2002), you don't need low-e glass. If the window has multiple panes, you don't want to mix low-e and normal glass as the low-e will look obviously tinted. (Of course, you might have low-e in windows predating Part L, but that wasn't very common). Hi Andrew, Thanks for that - had crossed my mind. Then it occured to me that if I were replacing about 40% of the glazing area per damaged window and that the rest of the units are probably going to fail in the near future, I might as well uprate the thermal characteristics, at least in the rooms with the larger areas of glass. Cheers Tim |
#8
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
DG sealed unit pricing
In article ,
Tim S writes: Andrew Gabriel coughed up some electrons that declared: If the Windows predate Part L (April 2002), you don't need low-e glass. If the window has multiple panes, you don't want to mix low-e and normal glass as the low-e will look obviously tinted. (Of course, you might have low-e in windows predating Part L, but that wasn't very common). Hi Andrew, Thanks for that - had crossed my mind. Then it occured to me that if I were replacing about 40% of the glazing area per damaged window and that the rest of the units are probably going to fail in the near future, I might as well uprate the thermal characteristics, at least in the rooms with the larger areas of glass. OK, but I would suggest doing some sums. When I did them (admittedly before current fuel price hikes), low-e was never going to come even remotely close to paying for itself in any reasonable lifetime of the window. Just about any other energy saving measure you spend the extra money on instead is going to be much more effective. And that's without even allowing for needing the lights on more with low-e glass! -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Target stores unit pricing on paper goods. | Home Ownership | |||
Triple-glazed sealed unit suppliers | UK diy | |||
DG Sealed unit replacement | UK diy | |||
removing double glazing sealed unit | UK diy | |||
Repairing sealed unit double glazing | UK diy |