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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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On 15/06/2020 18:58, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 15/06/20 18:07, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 15/06/2020 17:42, charles wrote: In article , Â*Â*Â*Â* The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 15/06/2020 16:34, Adrian wrote: Unlikely to be a DIY job (for me anyway), so OT. I've have a detached garage, and one of the window frames and cill board is looking like it is in need of replacement.Â* The cill board has been rebuilt with plastic wood several times, but is now getting to the stage where there is very little real wood left to bind the plastic stuff to. I've also noticed that the frame has a split in the wood, so I think that is on its way out too. I'm aware of building regs / FENSA for houses, but do these also apply to detached garages ?Â* It would be helpful to know before I start talking to window manufacturers. Nope. you can pretty much do what you want. Its not a habitable space so insulation and most of the safety aspects go by the board. For example you can glaze a greenghouse with unaccepbly dangerous single glazing of 3mm agricultural glass that is quite dangerous should you fall through it. About a month ago, a bird flew into one of greenhouse panle. 4mm toughened glass - took a week to get a replacement piece - and it wasn't cheap. surprised that it was toughened and actually broke +1 I had a 1500 x 600mm roof panel of toughened glass sucked out of a greenhouse (caused by strange air flow over a 6m high conifer hedge close by) and deposited on the lawn 6m away. That happened twice and the glass didn't break. I doubled the number of clips holding the glass on until I had the hedge removed. Also, we've had birds fly into double glazed french doors many times and the glass hasn't broken. Sounds to me like the Charles had some dodgy glass. Could it be the way the glass is supported? In DG units the glass is supported on all sides and for the full length of each side. Greenhouse glass is usually clipped in a a few point places, and probably on two sides only. It is relatively easy to crack greenhouse glass when fitting. In a house belonging to a relative bird strikes were once common, possibly because the birds could see the front to the back of the house through two windows, or possibly because the reflection of the outside world. There were no net curtains. The window never broke. The cure was to stick something on the middle of the glass (a small stained glass type motif). -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
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