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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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#41
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On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 17:16:10 UTC+1, Andrew wrote:
On 25/09/2019 00:01, Fredxx wrote: It is something they can ask for in advance of a payout. Why would they do that, if the reason for the payout was a chip pan fire, or hubby dropped a hammer through the wash basin ? because they can often refuse a payout. It's business. NT |
#42
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On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 17:21:10 UTC+1, Andrew wrote:
On 25/09/2019 11:57, Reentrant wrote: Our recent Homebuyer Valuation didn't even mention electrics, even though it had an ancient fuse-wire consumer unit. That is not a survey. It merely informs the mortgage company and would be buyer that the property actually exists. Even if the 'surveyor' can see serious issues he won't mention them specifically, but just add an ambiguous phrase that the buyer might want to consider. If you want to be told the full facts, you need a full structural survey. now there's optimism. NT |
#43
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On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 20:50:22 UTC+1, charles wrote:
In article , ARW wrote: On 25/09/2019 20:29, charles wrote: In article , ARW wrote: On 25/09/2019 19:33, charles wrote: When I rewired our house in 9164, the electricity board tester even checked that the screws on the sockets weer earthed! Would that have been all 6 of them? Seriously how many sockets did you fit? yes, serious typo (1964) around two dozen sockets - all doubles as I recall. But we left that house in 1977, so I can't be accurate Much better than the house I referred to. A new build (1972) which was a 3 bed detached had 2 x 1 g sockets in each bedroom, the lounge, the dining room and a 1g socket on the landing and in the hallway. No idea what the kitchen had as that was the only room with some alterations. when we moved in, there were 4 x 15A sockets - one in each bedroom and 1 in the kitchen (a 1946 install) 2 pole fused presumably. Such setups were sometimes joined up to make 2 ring circuits, each run on 4x 15A fuses. NT |
#44
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In article , David
writes On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 20:49:14 +0000, David wrote: I'm just reading a survey report which includes the wording "As this is a change of ownership, it is essential that the electrical wiring is checked by an electrician, preferably NICEIC registered, in order to outline any remedial works necessary to achieve compliance with the up to date regulations." Is there any regulation which says that on change of ownership the wiring should be brought up to current regulations? This seems to be what the wording implies. As far as I know the surveyor can recommend updating, but there is no absolute requirement. Also. the boiler is an old floor standing one. The wording states: "The boiler is not a room sealed appliance and consequently is potentially dangerous. This is not a condition report I would not advise that the boiler is used until it has been inspected (condition rating 3 and see section J3 Risks)." Thank you for you non advice. If it hasn't been inspected how can you rate it? This seems a bit extreme. Standard butt covering or a real risk? The former. Cheers Dave R -- bert |
#45
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In article , David
writes On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 22:29:00 +0100, Fredxx wrote: On 24/09/2019 22:23, David wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 21:12:05 +0000, David wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 20:49:14 +0000, David wrote: I'm just reading a survey report which includes the wording "As this is a change of ownership, it is essential that the electrical wiring is checked by an electrician, preferably NICEIC registered, in order to outline any remedial works necessary to achieve compliance with the up to date regulations." Is there any regulation which says that on change of ownership the wiring should be brought up to current regulations? This seems to be what the wording implies. As far as I know the surveyor can recommend updating, but there is no absolute requirement. Also. the boiler is an old floor standing one. The wording states: "The boiler is not a room sealed appliance and consequently is potentially dangerous. I would not advise that the boiler is used until it has been inspected (condition rating 3 and see section J3 Risks)." This seems a bit extreme. Standard butt covering or a real risk? Oh, and: "The current arrangement of the conservatory is not compliant with the Building Regulations and will need to be altered accordingly if the accommodation is to be classed as being compliant." As far as I know the older bits should be "grandfathered" in, and have no legal requirement to be brought up to current building regulations. Insulation requirements are below current - glazed with a plastic roof and has a radiator in so is part of the main property - which wouldn't be allowed by current regs. These look very much like weasel words to bump up the cost of repairs. It doesn't actually say that you are legally required to do the work; just implies it by "if the accommodation is to be classed as compliant". Which as far as I can see there is no legal requirement unless you undertake major structural work and have to bring the rest of the property up to current regs. I may be reading too much into this, of course. The survey is commissioned by the buyers, the surveyor is using words for them, so provide some bargaining power. If they have agreed a a price then personally I would likely not budge on price and put it back on the market if they're not going to commit. Remember they have paid for the survey and probably don't want to shell out for another survey on another house with potentially the same result. It's your call, of course. This is an equitable rather than contentious negotiation. We are trying to work out which items are genuinely a problem, and which are just the surveyor trying to bet the price down for their client. Which is why I am asking to confirm which phrases are flannel and which reflect real legislation. Most houses on resale will not comply with current building regulations. Houses built before 1900 probably don't comply with any! Cheers Dave r Building regs electrical regs gas regs to the best of my knowledge are never retrospective. But it is a while since I bought/sold a house. -- bert |
#46
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In article , Chris Green
writes Andrew wrote: There are some free-standing fan flued boilers that pressurise the casing. Great care must be taken with these (if any still exist). A couple of BG engineers weere jailed for manslaughter when they serviced one of these and didn't refit the casing correctly, killing the occupants. I'm not surprised if they were living in a boiler. ROTFL -- bert |
#47
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In article ,
wrote: On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 20:50:22 UTC+1, charles wrote: In article , ARW wrote: On 25/09/2019 20:29, charles wrote: In article , ARW wrote: On 25/09/2019 19:33, charles wrote: When I rewired our house in 1964, the electricity board tester even checked that the screws on the sockets weer earthed! Would that have been all 6 of them? Seriously how many sockets did you fit? yes, serious typo (1964) around two dozen sockets - all doubles as I recall. But we left that house in 1977, so I can't be accurate Much better than the house I referred to. A new build (1972) which was a 3 bed detached had 2 x 1 g sockets in each bedroom, the lounge, the dining room and a 1g socket on the landing and in the hallway. No idea what the kitchen had as that was the only room with some alterations. when we moved in, there were 4 x 15A sockets - one in each bedroom and 1 in the kitchen (a 1946 install) 2 pole fused presumably. Such setups were sometimes joined up to make 2 ring circuits, each run on 4x 15A fuses. I suspect there were fuses on the neutal, too. Certainly no ring. Oh and theer were a couple of 5A sockets off the lighting fuses for downstairs. NT -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
#48
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On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 22:10:13 UTC+1, bert wrote:
Building regs electrical regs gas regs to the best of my knowledge are never retrospective. But it is a while since I bought/sold a house. It's not that cut & dry. If you keep your 1st edition wiring regs compliant installation & it kills someone, as it may well, you'll be looking at jail time. NT |
#49
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On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 22:30:59 UTC+1, charles wrote:
In article , tabbypurr wrote: On Wednesday, 25 September 2019 20:50:22 UTC+1, charles wrote: when we moved in, there were 4 x 15A sockets - one in each bedroom and 1 in the kitchen (a 1946 install) 2 pole fused presumably. Such setups were sometimes joined up to make 2 ring circuits, each run on 4x 15A fuses. I suspect there were fuses on the neutal, too. ie 2 pole fused Certainly no ring. Part of the thinking behind the design of he ring circuits we use now was that 2 old 15A radials could be joined by a new bit of cable, now operating as a 30A ring, and unlimited 13A sockets be added. The resulting ring of course then ran off no less than 4 fuses! But it worked. Oh and theer were a couple of 5A sockets off the lighting fuses for downstairs. those are still permitted & increasingly popular. Now they're used for lighting. NT |
#50
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On 25/09/2019 17:15, Andrew wrote:
On 25/09/2019 00:01, Fredxx wrote: It is something they can ask for in advance of a payout. Why would they do that, if the reason for the payout was a chip pan fire, or hubby dropped a hammer through the wash basin ? In the event of needing a payout, how could the insurance company even show that there ever was a surveyor's report? SteveW |
#51
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#52
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On 25/09/2019 17:08, Andrew wrote:
On 24/09/2019 22:23, David wrote: Insulation requirements are below current - glazed with a plastic roof and has a radiator in so is part of the main property - which wouldn't be allowed by current regs. If the previous owner has removed the original outer door and/or wall so that theconservatory is part of the house then this would not be allowed under existing Part L(2006). If it was done after October 2006 then in theory you could get the remedial work done and then go back and sue the people who owned the building at that time. There is a limited liability time on building regs violations. So the LABC can't chase historic cases, unless they represent an immediate danger. I don't much fancy your chances recouping the cost of historic substandard work years after the fact. Attempting to heat a conservatory is futile. You could spend more money heating that one room than the rest of the house. Not necessarily. You may only need it heated for short periods of time. Things like IR radiant heating (i.e. heat the people, not the building) can make such spaces comfortable when required. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#53
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On 25/09/2019 17:20, Andrew wrote:
On 25/09/2019 11:57, Reentrant wrote: Our recent Homebuyer Valuation didn't even mention electrics, even though it had an ancient fuse-wire consumer unit. That is not a survey. It merely informs the mortgage company and would be buyer that the property actually exists. Even if the 'surveyor' can see serious issues he won't mention them specifically, but just add an ambiguous phrase that the buyer might want to consider. If you want to be told the full facts, you need a full structural survey. Having had a long discussion with our surveyor last time, I did not find that to be the case... The full structural surveys are frequently way over the top unless there is a particular concern about some element of structure - and then you normally need to decide what you are having tested and why. The "home buyer's report" style give (a bit) more detail than your normal valuation survey - but the are usually very limited in scope and only suitable for fairly "standard" property types, and normally allow for only short comments on problems. The surveyors doing valuation surveys often have quite a bit more scope to tailor the survey to your actual needs than say going for the HBR. So when getting ours done last time we moved I actually found the basic valuation survey with some extra instructions was the most flexible. (which was basically were "concentrate on anything that looks like it could be a serious issue, and ignore anything plumbing or wiring related as I can assess that myself!") -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#54
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On 25/09/2019 23:16, Steve Walker wrote:
On 25/09/2019 17:15, Andrew wrote: On 25/09/2019 00:01, Fredxx wrote: It is something they can ask for in advance of a payout. Why would they do that, if the reason for the payout was a chip pan fire, or hubby dropped a hammer through the wash basin ? In the event of needing a payout, how could the insurance company even show that there ever was a surveyor's report? By asking the question, "did you have a survey"? If the house is mortgage it's a near certainty. Or do you still get drive by valuations? |
#55
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On 25/09/19 23:35, John Rumm wrote:
On 25/09/2019 17:08, Andrew wrote: Attempting to heat a conservatory is futile. You could spend more money heating that one room than the rest of the house. Not necessarily. You may only need it heated for short periods of time. Things like IR radiant heating (i.e. heat the people, not the building) can make such spaces comfortable when required. Well, we had underfloor heating (electric film - 1.8kW) installed in our conservatory. Big, expensive mistake. If any form of heating is unsuitable for a conservatory, it is underfloor heating. As it happens, we use our conservatory mainly for growing plants (we do sit in it in spring and autumn, and cooler days in summer. At other times it confirms the definition that "a conservatory is a room which is too cold in winter and too hot in summer"!). The underfloor heating is set to come on at 10°C in winter. Other "heating" is supplied by a 400W dehumidifier, as we find that condensation from the plants is a real issue. The dehumidifier has a major effect on discouraging black mould. If really cold weather is expected (below -5°C), then a 1kW thermostatically controlled fan heater is used to keep the temperature above 8°C, as the underfloor heating cannot cope, especially if it is windy. -- Jeff |
#56
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BS surveys are usually only concerned with the valuation and on new builds can often be no more than a "drive by". On older properties the extent of the survey depends on age, size of mortgage and general state. Our last house a 1957 semi a mortgage condition was the standard have the wiring checked and it was pretty obvious why they wanted that. However, it was not a case of having a portion of the mortgage witheld as can sometimes be the case. I in fact was able to get an addition to the mortgage as the heating and plumbing was dire and we wanted to have all the disruption in one go.
It might seem perverse that BSs do not seem too concerned about the state of some property but they do cover their arses by making building insurance mandatory as part of the mortgage offer which kind of knocks the ball into the insurers court. The bottom line can the BS get its money back should they need to reposes? Richard |
#57
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In article ,
ARW wrote: Some years ago a friend of mine needed a satisfactory EICR to obtain a mortgage. I went and did the test. Not one socket in the house was earthed plus a few other problems. This was a 1972 build. Do you mean the earths weren't connected at all - or a fault between CU and true ground? -- *24 hours in a day ... 24 beers in a case ... coincidence? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#58
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On 26/09/2019 15:12, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , ARW wrote: Some years ago a friend of mine needed a satisfactory EICR to obtain a mortgage. I went and did the test. Not one socket in the house was earthed plus a few other problems. This was a 1972 build. Do you mean the earths weren't connected at all - or a fault between CU and true ground? A fault. This was a 4mm 30A radial. It was quite obvious (we gutted the place) that when the kitchen was fitted a screw had gone straight through the T&E. The burn marks on the cable suggest that the fuse probably blew. This destroyed the cpc before the first socket in the house. I would guess that the fuse was replaced and that as the sockets then worked nothing else was said about it. -- Adam |
#59
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On 26/09/2019 18:24, ARW wrote:
On 26/09/2019 15:12, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â* ARW wrote: Some years ago a friend of mine needed a satisfactory EICR to obtain a mortgage. I went and did the test. Not one socket in the house was earthed plus a few other problems. This was a 1972 build. Do you mean the earths weren't connected at all - or a fault between CU and true ground? A fault. This was a 4mm 30A radial. It was quite obvious (we gutted the place) that when the kitchen was fitted a screw had gone straight through the T&E. The burn marks on the cable suggest that the fuse probably blew. This destroyed the cpc before the first socket in the house. I would guess that the fuse was replaced and that as the sockets then worked nothing else was said about it. Sounds like my house. Previous occupants drilled through the 30 amp cooker cable while fitting a new kitchen. The blanking plate above the wired fuses had two large crescent-shaped melted out burn marks above the two 30 amp fuses for cooker and ring main (one for whole house). I also found many sockets with no earth because the same people removed the fancy brass sockets before moving out but snapped the 1mm cpc behind two non-adjacent sockets when putting the original 1976 contract jobbies back. Many years later I discovered that the first owners had hammered a kitchen wall fixing through the ring main, explaining the other melted burn mark in the wylex fuse box. |
#60
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On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 21:12:05 +0000, David wrote:
On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 20:49:14 +0000, David wrote: I'm just reading a survey report which includes the wording "As this is a change of ownership, it is essential that the electrical wiring is checked by an electrician, preferably NICEIC registered, in order to outline any remedial works necessary to achieve compliance with the up to date regulations." Is there any regulation which says that on change of ownership the wiring should be brought up to current regulations? This seems to be what the wording implies. As far as I know the surveyor can recommend updating, but there is no absolute requirement. Also. the boiler is an old floor standing one. The wording states: "The boiler is not a room sealed appliance and consequently is potentially dangerous. I would not advise that the boiler is used until it has been inspected (condition rating 3 and see section J3 Risks)." This seems a bit extreme. Standard butt covering or a real risk? Further information. The boiler is old (similar to the one in the property we moved into in 1984) so no fancy pressurised bits, nor room sealing. I am assuming those large "lift off" burners like an industrial oven which are cleaned by lifting out and wire brushing then vacuuming or blasting with air. However I didn't look. The boiler is inside a large airing cupboard with a closing door and there is ventilation through the suspended floor. So potentially less risk than if it was free standing in e.g. the kitchen. Safety check is sensible, but the boiler needs to be running for frost protection. Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#61
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On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 21:23:45 +0000, David wrote:
On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 21:12:05 +0000, David wrote: On Tue, 24 Sep 2019 20:49:14 +0000, David wrote: I'm just reading a survey report which includes the wording "As this is a change of ownership, it is essential that the electrical wiring is checked by an electrician, preferably NICEIC registered, in order to outline any remedial works necessary to achieve compliance with the up to date regulations." Is there any regulation which says that on change of ownership the wiring should be brought up to current regulations? This seems to be what the wording implies. As far as I know the surveyor can recommend updating, but there is no absolute requirement. Also. the boiler is an old floor standing one. The wording states: "The boiler is not a room sealed appliance and consequently is potentially dangerous. I would not advise that the boiler is used until it has been inspected (condition rating 3 and see section J3 Risks)." This seems a bit extreme. Standard butt covering or a real risk? Oh, and: "The current arrangement of the conservatory is not compliant with the Building Regulations and will need to be altered accordingly if the accommodation is to be classed as being compliant." As far as I know the older bits should be "grandfathered" in, and have no legal requirement to be brought up to current building regulations. Insulation requirements are below current - glazed with a plastic roof and has a radiator in so is part of the main property - which wouldn't be allowed by current regs. These look very much like weasel words to bump up the cost of repairs. It doesn't actually say that you are legally required to do the work; just implies it by "if the accommodation is to be classed as compliant". Which as far as I can see there is no legal requirement unless you undertake major structural work and have to bring the rest of the property up to current regs. I may be reading too much into this, of course. Further information. The "conservatory" isn't a large separate area where you would grow plants in the summer and not heat in the winter. It is a small extension to the dining room with walls to knee height, double glazing to ceiling height, and a sloping roof with double or triple layer plastic glazing. Integral with the dining room and with a radiator. It wouldn't come up to current standards for insulation primarily because of the roof but the additional heat loss doesn't seem that large. I wouldn't even describe it as a "conservatory" because it is just a dining room extension with a glazed roof and windows all round. Oh, and an external door. Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#62
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On Sunday, 29 September 2019 16:22:34 UTC+1, David WE Roberts (Google) wrote:
Further information. The boiler is old (similar to the one in the property we moved into in 1984) so no fancy pressurised bits, nor room sealing. I am assuming those large "lift off" burners like an industrial oven which are cleaned by lifting out and wire brushing then vacuuming or blasting with air. However I didn't look. The boiler is inside a large airing cupboard with a closing door and there is ventilation through the suspended floor. So potentially less risk than if it was free standing in e.g. the kitchen. Safety check is sensible, but the boiler needs to be running for frost protection. Cheers Dave R it doesn't change anything, either you test it or cross your fingers. |
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