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• #23577
Door 'weather' seals: do I use expanding foam tape? Or is that only for gaps between frames and wall.
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• #23578
We have a drain cover near a window that can smell somewhat... is there a sprung valve/cover/seal thing that could be opened by the weight of rain water and then close up automatically to prevent smells getting out?
I've seen stuff like this
https://www.ecoprod.co.uk/green-drain-waterless-trap-seal-for-floor-drains/But not sure if they're any good, or if there's just a go to search term I should be using to get something from screwfix or similar
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• #23579
Probably better to examine why it smells. It should be protected from smells emerging from the drain by some kind of U bend but drains that are blocked or slow running can smell.
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• #23580
Lots of different products. What's the problem you are trying to solve and what kind of door are you attaching stuff to?
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• #23581
London prices!
My sister had three new sapele sash bay windows put in her flat in Derbyshire for £9k.
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• #23582
The bay is in and the rear french doors pus the bathroom. It all still looks a bit messy I guess until they do the finishing touches.
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• #23583
How much longer have they got? I guess there’s lots of fettling to get a good fit in old buildings
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• #23584
It's an 8 day install. One of the issues is whether to mount the windows straight by a level of straight in the aperture or somewhere in between. The house is well wonky.
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• #23585
What have you gone for? They look so much better than the pvc shite already.
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• #23586
Visually straight is fine but not beyond 1.5 degrees or windows don't run smoothly. I'm trusting them to get it right. They've done thousands of them.
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• #23587
£16k for the windows alone or including installation?
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• #23588
Both
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• #23589
Edited to fix autocorrect, but you get the idea. Thanks for the info.
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• #23590
Is it possible to get an older (30 years or so) fuse box replaced with a modern consumer unit without a major rewire? Just so existing circuits are covered by RCDs instead of fuses.
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• #23591
Do they only do sash windows? I have a large bay I need replacing, but not with a sash.
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• #23592
Mitre saws - has anyone got experience of the evolution ones?
R255SMS-DB+ looks good, but is it too good to be true - double bevel, laser etc or is it offering too much but not done well.
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• #23593
I have an evolution. Very good for the price. I went for one of the larger ones because why not at the price, but it is huge and a pain to store if you don’t have a garage. You’ll need to spend some time setting up the fence as they tend to be way off straight from the factory.
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• #23594
London prices
I’m in Leeds! I half wonder if the price of wooden windows is high here because of the small market.
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• #23595
Update on the shitty plasterboard fuck up coat hook waste of time :
I used those wetnfix and then drilled into the one stud I could find. So far no falling coats and it's been a month.
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• #23596
Always been impressed with the evolution saws for the price. It won’t be a Kapex but it’s less than a quarter of the price.
I really like the Bosch GCM 800 SJ
Slightly smaller cutting capacity (70 vs 80mm), and less powerful motor, but a light and accurate saw.
If you just want a do everything saw the evolution is a good shout tho. Especially with the multi material blade. For a do everything saw in the garage, the evolution is ideal I reckon but if you’re wanting accuracy and clean cuts maybe go for something like the Bosch.
What @Sharkstar said is worth taking into account too. I have a massive Bosch saw and it’s a bane to move around (hence why I like the smaller Bosch so much). I ended up borrowing a small Makita saw when I did my floor as dragging the big one around was such a ballache.
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• #23597
I had that evolution saw. Was fine for rough work but I sold it when I started requiring precision. Mine had a pretty pronounced blade wobble which would was a recipe for chip out.
Good for the price though as long as you recognise its limitations.
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• #23598
I've got the single bevel version of that and it's been great for making a couple of fences, a raised bed, and I'm now halfway through a shed. How often would you need the double bevel function, and could you not just flip the workpiece over/180°...? Maybe that wouldn't always be possible of course.
But overall, really happy for £150ish.
Definitely use a vacuum or as at least a bag of some kind (I've taped a plastic bag around the dust outlet) - it can produce a LOT of sawdust very quickly. And as others have said, it's pretty big to store in a terraced house...pride of place in the shed when that's finished though!
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• #23599
My least favourite DIY work. Bastard windows.
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• #23600
Nah they do all sorts of windows but specialise in wood variant made from Sapele.
How are the windows coming along @Señor_Bear ?