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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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Andrew Wrote in message:
On 15/11/2019 07:17, Jimk wrote: Paul Giverin Wrote in message: On 14/11/2019 21:06, Adrian Brentnall wrote: On 14/11/2019 19:21, Paul Giverin wrote: About 25 years ago we had a small utility room built on to our kitchen. Its only about 1.5m x 1.5m internally and two of the four walls are part of the existing house, i.e cavity brick/block. The other two walls are single brick exposed to the elements. All the walls are bare brick internally. Nothing has been plastered. It has always suffered from some condensation on the single brick walls but this year we splashed out and replaced the original single glazed door and window with efficient sealed units. With the onset of colder weather, the condensation seems to have got worse. I was thinking about tanking/insulating the inside of the single brick walls. When you take away the window and the door, there is only 3 or 4 square meters of single brickwork. I was considering simply attaching some insulated plasterboard (link below) to the internal single brickwork using a grab adhesive. Will this plan work? https://www.travisperkins.co.uk/ther...-38mm/p/383834 Thanks That's what that plasterboard is designed for (I used to work for the company that made it, back in the '70s. You'll lose a small amount of space from the room - but it will make the walls warmer. Using the tapered-edge board you can achieve a fairly neat / invisible join between the boards - there's a tape that goes into the taper before you apply the filler, to prevent cracks later. Thanks for that. To be honest, I'm not too worried about how good it looks. Its only a utility room for appliances and currently is painted brick. I'll probably just be painting the plasterboard in the same colour as the rest of the room. I was just worried about the grab adhesive being up to the job. There's always expanding foam made for fixing plasterboards? Alternatively, do as I did to the lounge and bedroom walls facing North. Use 30mm 'celotex' cut to the exact height of the room and fix to the wall using battens cut down from cls timber. This gives three battens 30mm thick. Fix these horizontally using 80mm frame anchors, then infill between the battens with more 30mm 'celotex' (I used Quinntherm). Sounds like a lot of farting about whilst introducing cold bridges & vapour channels into the previously contiguous insulation .... Then affix plasterboard to the battens, scim if needed or use tapered PB with glassfibre reinforcing. There are foaming PU adhesives for fixing plasterboard, but you need to check that it doesn't disolve the extruded polystyrene on the back of the plasterboard. Polystyrene? The ones linked to & the only ones worth bothering with are PIR foam... -- Jimk ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
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