Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: vordWalls: 30%, roof: 12%, windows: 34%, floor: 23%
Posted By: vordCompletely off-topic, but are there any practical issues in having an E coating on the secondary glazing? How resilient would the e-coating be to a wipe with some window cleaning stuff once a year?
I have been agonising over secondary glazing. I have a couple of beautiful arts and crafts leaded windows on the ground floor over 100 years old. The windows are fixed but I feel some sort of lift out secondary glazing would be useful for maintenance and for clearing condensation or replacing bags of silica.
I had thought about a custom frame with fixed glass. My current compromise thinking is to fit aluminium lift out and sliding secondary glazing with bits of custom frame and try to hide it all with a timber moulding nailed to the front.
Posted By: gravelldI stick p strip draught excluder between the plastic secondary frame and the timber windows. The screws then provide a compression seal. Works well, but remember there's also moisture ingress from outside you have to consider.
Posted By: mike7sounds good but not sure if I could bring myself to introduce that bypass even if it is the sensible thing to do!
I also use p strip draught excluder, but with no secondary frame at all. The p strip is stuck to the original window frame (so you don't see the sticky stuff turn yellow) and the glass edges are stoned off and secured with modified T&E cable clips. Low cost, low labour and very unobtrusive. An 8mm hole drilled from the airgap downward to outside seems to be all that's needed to prevent condensation if the seal is good.
Posted By: gravelldClean up and seal with glazing silicone?Yes and no. My panes were just slid into slots in my frames from above - free to rattle around in any wind!!! (as was the way 40 years ago here in Italy). I cleaned up and sealed with silicone - quickly got the knack and did an excellent job BUT such work is strictly temporary. The silicone gets dirty, peels back, goes milky: it is simply inevitable when silicone is used in this fashion. There some newer crystal rather than transparent/clear 'silicones' and these cost more and last commensurately longer. BUT still temporary and how long is the piece of string, depends on the location, cleaning regime, skill of putting it on, prep, and of course your tolerance for deteriorating silicone around windows. I am not saying don't do it - esp as the only better alternative is to refit all the glass, just be aware.
Posted By: gravelldWhat do you mean by crystal?Crystal is the colour. ie normally they say transparent or clear but crystal is even more transparent and IME stays that way longer but let's not hijack the thread.
Posted By: gravelldI still don't understand why the rooms upstairs don't need heating! Are the attic roofs that you've insulated sloping so there's little wall space? Are there not many windows?
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