Archive for the ‘Building Tips’ Category

Are You A plumber Or Fitter Looking For Work

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Are You A plumber Or Fitter Looking For Work

As we offer a lot of products that get used by local trades everyday we thought it would be nice to add a section within our site promoting the plumbers and bathroom/kitchen fitters that use our site and products.

We plan to put a list together which will be accessable by the public and will hold the contact details for local trades in your area. We will try to cover all areas but it is down to the tradesman to contact us if he wishes to be listed on our site. If you want to be listed on our sites its fairly straight forward, all you need to do is have a quick word with our customer support team either by e-mail or phone providing them with your contact details and we will review it and get it listed.

As a taps specialist based in the uk we only supply our stock to uk residents and trade workers around the united kingdom so that is why our local trades page will only have contact details for workers based here. We do offer discounts to tradesman as they tend to buy in bulk, but for our normal customers you’ll see that our prices are the best around anyway.

Wall Ties For Building

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Builders use wall ties in cavity walls to hold the two walls together and stop them bulging or bowing. In old properties it is common to find steel wall ties – these rust and corrode and have to be replaced. Modern wall ties are made from either stainless steel or galvanised steel, these have a much longer lifespan as they do not rust.

Problems with old wall ties can be picked up on a structural survey – a hole is drilled into the wall and a camera is used to survey the cavity. Fortunately there are companies who specialise in this work, as this issue can affect your mortgage decision.

Some older buildings have pieces of slate to tie the two structures together; again, this is not acceptable under modern building regulations, so they will have to be replaced.

Replacing wall ties is usually done from inside the house – it involves drilling through the inner brick and into the second brick. They then inject a layer of resin, insert the stainless steel wall tie, then inject more resin.

Alternatively, it is possible to use threaded stainless steel rods with special rubber grippers on each end. Once they are inserted you can use a cordless drill to spin the nut on the end and tighten the ends – this forces the rod to grip both the inner and outer wall. With new builds this is much easier – you simply embed the ties into the mortar at specified intervals.

Chrome-tapshower.co.uk Everything you need for every project.