by jackthebuilder »
Thu Jan 07, 2010 10:47 am
Hi Mike
A great pleasure - and be delighted to help again if I can.
At the risk of upsetting any professionals here (I'm from the school of hard knocks!), building remedial work (at a domestic low-rise level) is a matter of observation as to the existing construction, and an understanding of some basic principles of physics - mainly leverage, gravity, water and air flow.
Common sense and Google are the most important tools in your box. And a chum to help with the awkward and heavy stuff.
One other useful pointer - don't stint on the materials you use. Let's say a builder quotes £1000 to do a certain piece of work. Every £1 he is tempted to save on materials is extra profit for him. And most of the materials won't be seen when the job is finished!
Perhaps 75% of that £1000 will be labour, which you will save if you do it yourself, so spending an extra £100 (say) on thicker, longer, wider, stronger materials, whatever, is a good investment.
You can rarely go wrong in 'over-specifying' materials. It's when you 'under-specify' that the problems start...next week, next month, next year...
Finally, and the pros certainly won't like this, these is an all-too-common expression used in the building trade: "Up high, and it won't be seen, down low, and it won't be noticed."
Good luck!
Jack.