by Chippe999 »
Sat Dec 29, 2007 7:41 pm
Hi
there are different ways of doing this but the following way will work.
The method revolves around knowing the horizontal distance between the lower and upper newel posts. Since the regulation of 100mm relates to a horizontal (parallel to the floor), not pitch (parallel to the rise of the stairs) distance between balusters.
(This measurement might equate to whats known as the 'total going' of your stairs,the total distance the stair structure travels horizontally, as it also rises to the floor above.)
To find this measurement you can drop a plumb line from the inside edge of the upper newel to the floor below and simply measure the distance from this to the inner edge of the lower newel ( a little crude but it will work).
Alternatively, if the above method won't work for any reason, you can measure the distance between the newel posts going with the pitch along the 'stair string' that connects them, and, if you know the degree pitch of your stairs, calculate the 'total going' distance using trigonometry.
Once you have the horizontal distance between the newel posts, you must then measure the horizontal width of the balusters/spindles you intend on using.
At this point, multiply the width measurement of the spindles by an acceptable multiple (perhaps use two spindles per tread, so if you have 10 treads use 20 spindles). Then subtract the multiple spindle measurement from your total going measurement. This will give you the fresh air measurement!
At this point divide the fresh air measurement by the number of spindles plus 1 (remember to add 1). The figure you now have is the distance between two spindles. If its greater than 100mm add more spindles (remembering to add 1 when dividing the number of spindles in the fresh air measurement). If the distance is too low, work on fewer spindles. However, consider appearance as well as regs. Sometimes too few spindles, even though within the regs, can end up looking too few.