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• #43852
One of these - https://www.acrheatproducts.com/stove/acr-stoves/earlswood
So it's good for the fuel, I think, but is it really any healthier?
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• #43853
So the real humans live in squat and squalor whilst those guys get clean and glam?
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• #43854
Hah we saw quite a few like that, often in the same roads - seems that people see their neighbours sell up and want a piece of the action regardless of the state of their house.
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• #43855
Humans have only been burning wood since the dawn of time. There are a million other things trying to kill you that arenβt as click baitish for a guardian article. But if youβre in a city or built up area then it probably is a dick move .
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• #43856
At least it is Defra approved.
For you & yours to minimise particulate exposure you could avoid opening the doors: set a fire and let it burn out.
For the environment, burning fully seasoned wood reduces emissions. -
• #43857
Doesn't it depend on the local market and need at the time?
My dad's neighbour's place sold a couple of years ago - elderly bachelor whose parents had moved into the place when it was almost new in the mid-1930s, nothing had been maintained/updated for years (no central heating, original windows etc), bought by a young family to live in - they had to spend a bunch to fix it up before they could move in, but they definitely live there now. -
• #43858
I think that can be the problem, getting emotionally invested in houses before you get em.
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• #43859
We had a log burner installed last month, a mi tinderbox which was the smallest but ranked high on efficiency and heat output with a big window
The first few times its used it does stink
On a side note the fitter recommended going to b&m for their seasoned hard wood that is in the plastic bag rather than nets. It's also certified and kiln dried so ready to go. I popped down and it's cheap as chips at Β£4 bag,
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• #43860
What's an acceptable / expected range of humidity for a house? Mine appears to alternate between 40% and 70%.
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• #43861
50-ish percent. 70% is very high for a warm house in winter, as the cold air outside has very little moisture in it.
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• #43862
Have you considered a bent rad rather than trying to join 3 together? Or are you sold on column rads?
I had a bent rad in a large bay in my old flat. As easy to plumb/install as any other rad and looked really neat. Abs then I stuck a sofa in front of it π -
• #43863
If youβre regularly hitting 70% consider getting a humidistat extractor fan. It made a huge difference in my place.
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• #43864
I have. Undoubtedly more functional, but a bit ugly imo. Maybe I need to reassess my priorities.
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• #43865
If you are drying clothes indoors and don't have a whole lot of ventilation - through trickle vents or air bricks - then you are going to see high humidity.
On the flip side ours gets down to about 35% and Tado starts nagging me to have a shower with the bathroom door open and the extractor fan turned off.
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• #43866
set a fire and let it burn out.
One does not simply set a fire and let it burn out
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• #43867
Doesn't it depend on the local market and need at the time?
Always! The area is weird, all the old houses are being knocked down and turned in to middling footballer mansions with astroturf gardens. Unless you had similar 'spectacular' plans for the place then you'd buy somewhere modern and cheaper in the next town. No point living in a cold 1930s converted bungalow where doing any work requires unpicking 70 years of modifications that weren't done particularly brilliantly to start with. Nice garden though.
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• #43868
Tado starts nagging me to have a shower
Somebody had to say it
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• #43869
Chunky rads. I like.
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• #43870
Somebody has to!
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• #43871
No doubt!
(Only way I can think of not getting a lung clogging amount of particulates into the air of the room is t not open the fire box doors whilst dried wood logs are still burning). -
• #43872
People used to routinely die from particulates, (admittedly mainly from poor quality coal).
It's odd that well meaning people are undermining the Clean Air Act. -
• #43873
I spoke to a local estate agent and offered Β£15,000 for the two garages, 10k for the one with the long lease, 5 the one with the short lease.
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• #43874
Had my loft boarded over and a ladder and light fitted. Loads of storage space up there now.
Particularly with the uncertainty at the moment, there's a non-negligible chance of a mortgage falling through for various reasons.