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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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Disposal of roofing felt
This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes.
A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include 」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But 」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry |
#2
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 10:42, Harold Davis wrote:
This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry Check with your local council? https://www.oxfordshire.gov.uk/resid...-waste-charges |
#3
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Disposal of roofing felt
I recently helped my neighbour to dismantle a carport with a felt roof. Some of it went in a skip we had that was partially filled and the rest we disposed of at our local recycling centre taking it down in his fathers trailer. Neither the skip company or the attendants at the recycle centre batted an eyelid and we were observed and they were aware of what was being disposed off. Sounds like a nice little earner for the roofing company.
Richard |
#4
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Disposal of roofing felt
"Jim K.." wrote in
: Harold Davis Wrote in message: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include 」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But 」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Ring a skip company & ask? Tactically, ring a skip company outside your area, just in case it's a cosy setup ;-) Thanks everyone. I rang the council's landfill centre and they quoted me about 」170 per tonne if I bring it in myself. I also looked at websites of a few places that sell roofing felt, and it seems that the weight is about 2kg per square metre, so with about 50 square metres I'll have about 0.1 tonne to get rid of. I forgot to ask whether there was a minimum charge, so it may cost 」17 or perhaps as much as 」70 plus all the hassle of cutting it up and making several journeys in the car, but 」1400 seems totally ridiculous. So now I'm sceptical about everything else in the quote too. Harry |
#5
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Disposal of roofing felt
Harold Davis wrote in
: "Jim K.." wrote in : Harold Davis Wrote in message: so it may cost 」17 or perhaps as much as 」70 plus all the hassle of cutting it up and making several journeys in the car, but 」1400 seems totally ridiculous. I mean 」170 if there's a 1 tonne minimum but the guy didn't say there was. In any case 」1400 makes it sound as though the roofer added an extra zero. This is on top of a quote of about 」10000 for replacing a 50 square metre felt roof with fibre glass. Please don't envy me for living on the scammer-rich Isle of Lewis. Harry |
#6
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Disposal of roofing felt
Harold Davis Wrote in
message: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include 」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But 」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Ring a skip company & ask? Tactically, ring a skip company outside your area, just in case it's a cosy setup ;-) -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#7
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 10:42, Harold Davis wrote:
This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. He's ripping you off... -- Email does not work |
#8
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Mon, 11 Feb 2019 11:37:43 -0000 (UTC), Harold Davis wrote:
This is on top of a quote of about 」10000 for replacing a 50 square metre felt roof with fibre glass. 4 or 5 years ago it cost us 」6k ish for a 13 x 4 m (52 sq m) flat roof in fibre glass. Including removal of old felt and failed decking, installation of 100 mm celotext between ceiling rafters, new deck in 22mm OSB3 and the glass fibre covering. Please don't envy me for living on the scammer-rich Isle of Lewis. Where have the guys got to come from? Are they having to stay over night whilst they do the job? Mind you 」1080 buys you 4 blokes for 3 overnights @ 」70/night (B&B, L, EM) in 2 vans coming from 150 miles away... -- Cheers Dave. |
#9
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote:
Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. Will it all go in one skip? Just curious. |
#10
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote:
On 11/02/2019 10:42, Harold Davis wrote: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. He's ripping you off... THis is Scotland and a remote island, so materials come a long way and that costs a lot. Maybe the Scottish gov has 'rules'. I replaced my 5.5 * 2.8 mtre flat garage roof with new 22 ml OSB3 and EPDM for about ツ」700 for the materials and all the manky chipboard and bitumen is gradually making its way to the local recycling centre. |
#11
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Monday, 11 February 2019 11:33:46 UTC, Harold Davis wrote:
"Jim K.." wrote in : Harold Davis Wrote in message: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Ring a skip company & ask? Tactically, ring a skip company outside your area, just in case it's a cosy setup ;-) Thanks everyone. I rang the council's landfill centre and they quoted me about ツ」170 per tonne if I bring it in myself. I also looked at websites of a few places that sell roofing felt, and it seems that the weight is about 2kg per square metre, so with about 50 square metres I'll have about 0.1 tonne to get rid of. I forgot to ask whether there was a minimum charge, so it may cost ツ」17 or perhaps as much as ツ」70 plus all the hassle of cutting it up and making several journeys in the car, but ツ」1400 seems totally ridiculous. So now I'm sceptical about everything else in the quote too. Harry There will be 2 or 3 layers of felt on the roof. You shouldn't pay anything at the dump if you have a car. It's waste from your house and can go in the general waste bin. But yes you may get hassle if they spot it, as they think you might be a roofer. The slow free way is to put some in the household bins each week. NT |
#12
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote:
On 11/02/2019 10:42, Harold Davis wrote: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. He's ripping you off... I wonder if they've priced it for ripping off asbestos roofing felt that's in poor condition. -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
#13
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Monday, 11 February 2019 14:30:42 UTC, Andrew wrote:
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: On 11/02/2019 10:42, Harold Davis wrote: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. He's ripping you off... THis is Scotland and a remote island, so materials come a long way and that costs a lot. Maybe the Scottish gov has 'rules'. I replaced my 5.5 * 2.8 mtre flat garage roof with new 22 ml OSB3 and EPDM for about ツ」700 for the materials and all the manky chipboard and bitumen is gradually making its way to the local recycling centre. FWLIW if you wanted a path or shed floor you could always heat the old felt up to over 200C & tamp it down. Chop it first for a neat result. NT |
#14
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Disposal of roofing felt
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#15
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Monday, 11 February 2019 10:42:04 UTC, Harold Davis wrote:
This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry The easy solution is to DIY with butyl rubber. (Fish pond liner) Put on top of the existing felt. Nail periphery with battens. If windy, lay some heavy timber baulks on top. ツ」200 fo entire job? Or use box profile steel sheet. Easy DIY job. |
#16
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Disposal of roofing felt
Often companies get shafted by local authorities as they consider they will
have a lot of whatever it is. It is probably cheaper to get it off and take it to the tip yourself a bit at a time. Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "Tricky Dicky" wrote in message ... I recently helped my neighbour to dismantle a carport with a felt roof. Some of it went in a skip we had that was partially filled and the rest we disposed of at our local recycling centre taking it down in his fathers trailer. Neither the skip company or the attendants at the recycle centre batted an eyelid and we were observed and they were aware of what was being disposed off. Sounds like a nice little earner for the roofing company. Richard |
#17
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote:
On 11/02/2019 10:42, Harold Davis wrote: This isn't strictly about DIY but here goes. A contractor has quoted me a large figure for the job of replacing the currently felt-covered flat roof over my garage and part of the house, to include ツ」1400 for disposal of the felt that will be removed before fibre glass is put on. I queried this figure and he said the felt is considered to be a hazardous material. It seems he's right, even if the attendance of teams of guys wearing chemical warfare suits won't be required. But ツ」1400? The area is about 7 metres x 7 metres. How can I make some sort of check on what the disposal costs will be? Thanks, Harry Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. He's ripping you off... I burnt mine -- "And if the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the ditch". Gospel of St. Mathew 15:14 |
#18
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 13:51, GB wrote:
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. Will it all go in one skip? Just curious. I would have thought so. -- Email does not work |
#19
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 14:30, Andrew wrote:
On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. He's ripping you off... THis is Scotland and a remote island, so materials come a long way and that costs a lot. Maybe the Scottish gov has 'rules'. Oh... I replaced my 5.5 * 2.8 mtre flat garage roof with new 22 ml OSB3 and EPDM for about ツ」700 for the materials and all the manky chipboard and bitumen is gradually making its way to the local recycling centre. -- Email does not work |
#20
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Monday, 11 February 2019 11:37:45 UTC, Harold Davis wrote:
Please don't envy me for living on the scammer-rich Isle of Lewis. They are charging you for the ferry. And the whisky consumed on the ferry. And for the waiting time at the tip. And for the whisky consumed while waiting at the tip. And for the whisky for the boys at the tip to unload specially slowly so they have more time to drink whisky. At those prices they may also be charging you for the diesel used by the ferry! Owain |
#21
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 15:56, Tim Watts wrote:
On 11/02/2019 13:51, GB wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. Will it all go in one skip? Just curious. I would have thought so. Having been through a fair bit of clearout recently trhis is what it cost me. (ex of council tax) 8 yard skip ツ」250 Hire a van for a half day and take it to the local tip ツ」45.00 Fill the freelander up and take it to the local tip ツ」7.00 of diesel Burn it in the back garden ツ」0.00 Cut it up with angle grinder and put a little in the bin each week. ツ」0.00. -- 廬t is hard to imagine a more stupid decision or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong. Thomas Sowell |
#22
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Disposal of roofing felt
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#23
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was ツ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to ツ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. |
#24
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Disposal of roofing felt
Tricky Dicky wrote
I recently helped my neighbour to dismantle a carport with a felt roof. Some of it went in a skip we had that was partially filled and the rest we disposed of at our local recycling centre taking it down in his fathers trailer. Neither the skip company or the attendants at the recycle centre batted an eyelid and we were observed and they were aware of what was being disposed off. Sounds like a nice little earner for the roofing company. Or the roofing company gets treated differently at the dump they have to use. |
#25
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Mon, 11 Feb 2019 06:33:47 -0800 (PST), wrote:
The slow free way is to put some in the household bins each week. Yep, amazing what will fit in a blue bag. Two single divan beds, one matress and two sofas have left here via that method. Admitedl not all the sofas went that way the bigger bit's of wood became firewood. B-) -- Cheers Dave. |
#26
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Disposal of roofing felt
"Dave Liquorice" wrote in
idual.net: On Mon, 11 Feb 2019 11:37:43 -0000 (UTC), Harold Davis wrote: This is on top of a quote of about 」10000 for replacing a 50 square metre felt roof with fibre glass. 4 or 5 years ago it cost us 」6k ish for a 13 x 4 m (52 sq m) flat roof in fibre glass. Including removal of old felt and failed decking, installation of 100 mm celotext between ceiling rafters, new deck in 22mm OSB3 and the glass fibre covering. Please don't envy me for living on the scammer-rich Isle of Lewis. Where have the guys got to come from? Are they having to stay over night whilst they do the job? Mind you 」1080 buys you 4 blokes for 3 overnights @ 」70/night (B&B, L, EM) in 2 vans coming from 150 miles away... There is no 150 miles away from here that wouldn't involve a ferry. They would be coming from about 25 miles away. Harry |
#27
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Disposal of roofing felt
GB wrote in :
On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was ツ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to ツ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. The man at the council has now quoted me at around 」140 per tonne. So with 50 sq m and 2 kg per sq m that's 0.1 tonnes for 」14. He did say that the contractor would need a licence whereas I don't so long as I'm throwing away my own stuff. I could spend a few hours slashing the felt into 33 pieces of say 1m x 1.5m and do 2 or 3 journeys in a SEAT Alhambra with the back seats removed and 2nd row folded. That's a lot of slashing, but worth the effort for 」1386 minus car fuel. Harry |
#28
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 23:24, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Mon, 11 Feb 2019 06:33:47 -0800 (PST), wrote: The slow free way is to put some in the household bins each week. Yep, amazing what will fit in a blue bag. Two single divan beds, one matress and two sofas have left here via that method. Admitedl not all the sofas went that way the bigger bit's of wood became firewood. B-) I had a lot of trouble with some mattresses I had to get rid of. I was able to concertina them into the boot of the car, and take each one separately to the dump. How did you get yours into a blue bag? |
#29
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 00:30, Harold Davis wrote:
GB wrote in : On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was テつ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to テつ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. The man at the council has now quoted me at around ツ」140 per tonne. So with 50 sq m and 2 kg per sq m that's 0.1 tonnes for ツ」14. He did say that the contractor would need a licence whereas I don't so long as I'm throwing away my own stuff. I could spend a few hours slashing the felt into 33 pieces of say 1m x 1.5m and do 2 or 3 journeys in a SEAT Alhambra with the back seats removed and 2nd row folded. That's a lot of slashing, but worth the effort for ツ」1386 minus car fuel. Harry Hertz do hourly rentals of vans. Pick up at the local B&Q. That might save some wear on the SEAT. |
#30
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 00:30, Harold Davis wrote:
GB wrote in : On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was テつ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to テつ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. The man at the council has now quoted me at around ツ」140 per tonne. So with 50 sq m and 2 kg per sq m that's 0.1 tonnes for ツ」14. He did say that the contractor would need a licence whereas I don't so long as I'm throwing away my own stuff. I could spend a few hours slashing the felt into 33 pieces of say 1m x 1.5m and do 2 or 3 journeys in a SEAT Alhambra with the back seats removed and 2nd row folded. That's a lot of slashing, but worth the effort for ツ」1386 minus car fuel. Those are the sort of sums that made me determoine that renovating my house was going to be done by me, to my standards, not at ツ」200 a day to some cints slapdash standards. Harry -- 弋he ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. Herbert Spencer |
#31
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 00:36, GB wrote:
On 12/02/2019 00:30, Harold Davis wrote: GB wrote in : On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was テつ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to テつ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. The man at the council has now quoted me at around ツ」140 per tonne. So with 50 sq m and 2 kg per sq m that's 0.1 tonnes for ツ」14. He did say that the contractor would need a licence whereas I don't so long as I'm throwing away my own stuff. I could spend a few hours slashing the felt into 33 pieces of say 1m x 1.5m and do 2 or 3 journeys in a SEAT Alhambra with the back seats removed and 2nd row folded. That's a lot of slashing, but worth the effort for ツ」1386 minus car fuel. Harry Hertz do hourly rentals of vans. Pick up at the local B&Q. That might save some wear on the SEAT. Indeed. And you can get a lot more in without dismantling -- 弋he ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. Herbert Spencer |
#32
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Disposal of roofing felt
On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 00:30:15 +0000, GB wrote:
I had a lot of trouble with some mattresses I had to get rid of. I was able to concertina them into the boot of the car, and take each one separately to the dump. How did you get yours into a blue bag? Stripped the covers off and dismantled the spring unit. 2nd one was rolled up tied rolled with some string and taken to the HWRC. B-) -- Cheers Dave. |
#33
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 11/02/2019 16:44, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 11/02/2019 15:56, Tim Watts wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:51, GB wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. Will it all go in one skip? Just curious. I would have thought so. Having been through a fair bit of clearout recently trhis is what it cost me. (ex of council tax) 8 yard skip ツ」250 Hire a van for a half day and take it to the local tip ツ」45.00 Fill the freelander up and take it to the local tip ツ」7.00 of diesel Burn it in the back garden ツ」0.00 Perhaps you could also heat your house with it. Instead of a wood burning stove you could install an "Any old crap" burning stove. Instead of ツ」0.00 it could be -ve disposal cost. |
#34
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 14:28, Paul Welsh wrote:
On 11/02/2019 16:44, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 11/02/2019 15:56, Tim Watts wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:51, GB wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. Will it all go in one skip? Just curious. I would have thought so. Having been through a fair bit of clearout recently trhis is what it cost me. (ex of council tax) 8 yard skip ツ」250 Hire a van for a half day and take it to the local tip ツ」45.00 Fill the freelander up and take it to the local tip ツ」7.00 of diesel Burn it in the back garden ツ」0.00 Perhaps you could also heat your house with it. Instead of a wood burning stove you could install an "Any old crap" burning stove. Instead of ツ」0.00 it could be -ve disposal cost. Prolly COULD burn it in the woodburner -- Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas? Josef Stalin |
#35
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 00:36, GB wrote:
On 12/02/2019 00:30, Harold Davis wrote: GB wrote in : On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was テつ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to テつ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. The man at the council has now quoted me at around ツ」140 per tonne. So with 50 sq m and 2 kg per sq m that's 0.1 tonnes for ツ」14. He did say that the contractor would need a licence whereas I don't so long as I'm throwing away my own stuff. I could spend a few hours slashing the felt into 33 pieces of say 1m x 1.5m and do 2 or 3 journeys in a SEAT Alhambra with the back seats removed and 2nd row folded. That's a lot of slashing, but worth the effort for ツ」1386 minus car fuel. Harry Hertz do hourly rentals of vans. Pick up at the local B&Q. That might save some wear on the SEAT. Many council tips won't let Vans in though... -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#36
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 16:58, John Rumm wrote:
On 12/02/2019 00:36, GB wrote: On 12/02/2019 00:30, Harold Davis wrote: GB wrote in : On 11/02/2019 16:45, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Data point: a small transit sized van has more room in than a 8 yard skip, and costs less to hire. I had some stuff to dispose of in MIL's garage. I thought 'not much there', but it completely filled a hired transit. Cost all in of the transit was テつ」38 for half a day. Plus, some money for my son for helping. Compared to テつ」150 +VAT which was the cheapest quote from the rubbish clearance firms. The man at the council has now quoted me at around ツ」140 per tonne. So with 50 sq m and 2 kg per sq m that's 0.1 tonnes for ツ」14. He did say that the contractor would need a licence whereas I don't so long as I'm throwing away my own stuff. I could spend a few hours slashing the felt into 33 pieces of say 1m x 1.5m and do 2 or 3 journeys in a SEAT Alhambra with the back seats removed and 2nd row folded. That's a lot of slashing, but worth the effort for ツ」1386 minus car fuel. Harry Hertz do hourly rentals of vans. Pick up at the local B&Q. That might save some wear on the SEAT. Many council tips won't let Vans in though... drive to one that will... -- "I guess a rattlesnake ain't risponsible fer bein' a rattlesnake, but ah puts mah heel on um jess the same if'n I catches him around mah chillun". |
#37
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 16:58, John Rumm wrote:
Many council tips won't let Vans in though... Ours does allow vans, but you have to book the day before, and bring ID showing you are a householder in the borough. It was a real problem the time before, when we turned up with a drop side truck. I hadn't read the web page closely enough, but they let us in, anyway. |
#38
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Disposal of roofing felt
Our council requires us to have a residents permit which is free on providing resident proof to use the waste sites but they do take asbestos for free and vans are permitted on application for a van permit.
Richard |
#39
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 12/02/2019 15:30, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 12/02/2019 14:28, Paul Welsh wrote: On 11/02/2019 16:44, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 11/02/2019 15:56, Tim Watts wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:51, GB wrote: On 11/02/2019 13:22, Tim Watts wrote: Cobblers - it goes in the skip. Mine did. Will it all go in one skip? Just curious. I would have thought so. Having been through a fair bit of clearout recently trhis is what it cost me. (ex of council tax) 8 yard skip ツ」250 Hire a van for a half day and take it to the local tip ツ」45.00 Fill the freelander up and take it to the local tip ツ」7.00 of diesel Burn it in the back garden ツ」0.00 Perhaps you could also heat your house with it. Instead of a wood burning stove you could install an "Any old crap" burning stove. Instead of ツ」0.00 it could be -ve disposal cost. Prolly COULD burn it in the woodburner Burning old chipboard and bitumen is seriously bad for the environment and your neighbours. Stupid idea. Do you burn your old car tyres as well ?. |
#40
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Disposal of roofing felt
On 13/02/2019 12:41, Andrew wrote:
Burning old chipboard and bitumen is seriously bad for the environment and your neighbours. Stupid idea. Do you burn your old car tyres as well ?. I had a mate, who burned chipboard in his woodburner in his workshop. He had a lot of medical issues, and he got diagnosed with possible Motor Neurone Disease. Then, the penny dropped, he stopped burning chipboard, and he made a miraculous recovery. We can never be sure the chipboard was the problem, but it seems quite possible. |
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