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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. |
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#1
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Hi all,
I am trying to work out how to make up a Bath stone mortar mix to build an extension. Various places sell ready mixed bags, but at 20-30GBP / 20kg bag that works out very expensive. Does anyone know how I could mix my own? I am guessing that it is a mix of Bath stone dust, some local-to-Bath sand, and white cement, but any suggestions of particular combinations to try would be gratefully received! thanks, dan. |
#2
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On 7 Sep, 12:49, dent wrote:
Hi all, I am trying to work out how to make up a Bath stone mortar mix to build an extension. Various places sell ready mixed bags, but at 20-30GBP / 20kg bag that works out very expensive. Does anyone know how I could mix my own? I am guessing that it is a mix of Bath stone dust, some local-to-Bath sand, and white cement, but any suggestions of particular combinations to try would be gratefully received! If nothing is directly forthcoming, you could try contacting the Cathedrals Workshops Fellowship. They'll be able to put you in touch with somewhere that uses Bath stone and a quick word with the masons will get you the info. -- |
#3
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In article ,
dent writes: Hi all, I am trying to work out how to make up a Bath stone mortar mix to build an extension. Various places sell ready mixed bags, but at 20-30GBP / 20kg bag that works out very expensive. Does anyone know how I could mix my own? I am guessing that it is a mix of Bath stone dust, some local-to-Bath sand, and white cement, but any suggestions of particular combinations to try would be gratefully received! You should only need it for the visible surface, not for the bulk of the mortar (although you haven't said what you're doing with it). -- Andrew Gabriel |
#4
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![]() I am trying to work out how to make up a Bath stone mortar mix to build an extension. Various places sell ready mixed bags, but at 20-30GBP / 20kg bag that works out very expensive. Does anyone know how I could mix my own? I am guessing that it is a mix of Bath stone dust, some local-to-Bath sand, and white cement, but any suggestions of particular combinations to try would be gratefully received! You should only need it for the visible surface, not for the bulk of the mortar (although you haven't said what you're doing with it). I'm building an extension. I was going to build the inner leaf of the cavity with standard blocks and mortar, and then the outer leaf with reconstructed stone blocks and Bath-stone mix. Do you mean that I should build the external walls with normal cement as well, and then just point the gaps afterwards with the Bath stone mortar? How much gap would I leave for pointing if I did that? thanks, dan. |
#5
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In article ,
ct writes: I am trying to work out how to make up a Bath stone mortar mix to build an extension. Various places sell ready mixed bags, but at 20-30GBP / 20kg bag that works out very expensive. Does anyone know how I could mix my own? I am guessing that it is a mix of Bath stone dust, some local-to-Bath sand, and white cement, but any suggestions of particular combinations to try would be gratefully received! You should only need it for the visible surface, not for the bulk of the mortar (although you haven't said what you're doing with it). I'm building an extension. I was going to build the inner leaf of the cavity with standard blocks and mortar, and then the outer leaf with reconstructed stone blocks and Bath-stone mix. Do you mean that I should build the external walls with normal cement as well, I don't know what's recommended for such stonework and then just point the gaps afterwards with the Bath stone mortar? That's a possibility. Obviously this adds labour costs (or time overhead if you're doing it yourself), and you need to contrast this with the savings on mortar. If the sones are large, then they won't use as much mortar as, say, bricks would. How much gap would I leave for pointing if I did that? About the same as the width of the mortar. Another technique which is used is to blow brick dust of the right colour (maybe mixed with cement, not sure) onto the wet pointing. I guess this might not last so well. I saw a brickie doing something like this when moving a boiler flue. He drilled the new hole and saved some of the brick dust. The old hole was filled with a dollop of mortar and smoothed off. He then blew the saved brick dust onto it, and finally recut what would have been the mortar pointing through it. I can't see where this was done now -- it's completely invisible on the wall. -- Andrew Gabriel |
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