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Riejufixing |
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Riejufixing World Chat Champion
Joined: 24 Jun 2018 Karma :
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MCN |
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MCN Super Spammer
Joined: 22 Jul 2015 Karma :
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mentalboy |
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mentalboy World Chat Champion
Joined: 05 May 2012 Karma :
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Posted: 00:23 - 30 Aug 2018 Post subject: |
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Riejufixing wrote: | Yes, they're "not very good". Hower, if they lie, they're liable. They do not like that at all. So, if you say "Is it of traditional brick construction", for instance, and it turns out to be say Norfolk clay lump, or even cob, then they could be in trouble. |
What follows is proper off- topic, BCF stylee...
What kind of moron can mistake brick for cob, although in this day and age where everyone is an expert thanks to Google maybe it's not unexpected???
Tricky to get a mortgage on cob unless you have a huge down payment, at least it was back in the early 90's quite possibly nigh on impossible now. Not sure why because it's a good solid build type, the problems start when have a go heroes use modern exterior paints and not lime based ones.
Back to an earlier comment you made about aggregate obtained from mine tailings, Mundic, whilst the Cornish units were from a Cornish firm they are found all over the country and the likelihood of PRC panels all being cast in an affected area of the South West is unlikely. Don't forget the reason Mundic was an issue was because back in the fifties one would source concrete materials locally whereas today you'd get it from a national supplier like RMC ( assuming that they haven't gone broke yet). I presume that the manufacturer would have precast the panels at sites near the new build estates.
A good friend of mine was an architect with Bristol council and we used to have some very interesting chats about the Patchway estate and Cornish units with concrete cancer - a common post war problem because good steel was in short supply and there was a drive to house families quickly in pre fabs that were designed to last 10-15 years, so using crap steel wasn't seen as an issue.
My home town of Totnes addressed the issue of the PRC panels on Cornish units back in the eighties, I used to walk past them on my way to school every morning and it was screamingly obvious that they had concrete cancer, great big chunks had fallen off pushed away by rusting rebar. If they had been Mundic problems the concrete would have crumbled away, rather than coming off in chunks. I had assumed that you were a Wes'country lad talking Mundic but just in case you're not, Totnes be in Deb'm, m' luvver. ____________________ Make mine a Corona. |
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mentalboy |
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mentalboy World Chat Champion
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Riejufixing |
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Riejufixing World Chat Champion
Joined: 24 Jun 2018 Karma :
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Posted: 00:41 - 30 Aug 2018 Post subject: |
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mentalboy wrote: |
What kind of moron can mistake brick for cob, although in this day and age where everyone is an expert thanks to Google maybe it's not unexpected??? |
They do, though. Some bloke who came to but a house in Norfolk, of clay lump, was most distressed when his surveyor (you see?) reported it was lumpwork. A beautiful cottage in Cornwall[1], with cob walls, was assumed by another disappointed buyer, to be "rock" (!). I'm not sure what business you have calling me "my lover", by the way, but then again I'm old-fashioned and not Devonian.
[1] I saw it a couple of years ago. Dear God. The untarmac'd road is now tarmac. The gateway opposite leads to a hippyesque construction in the top meadow, which is now partly car-park. The steps to the barn have a twee imitation-wrought-iron bannister, and the well's a display thing. The barn itself is now a conversion with big windows. Spew. The listed house itself looks the same, but the ground all around has been dug up, flattened, and sprinkled with ghastly garden furniture and white crushed stone (no, not clay waste...). Up the road, there's a stone circle in another field. It's all "no entry", "no soul", or at least only an ersatz one, and "no-one at home". |
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joombo |
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joombo Derestricted Danger
Joined: 24 Jul 2018 Karma :
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Posted: 08:56 - 31 Aug 2018 Post subject: |
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I think it's better to consult with professionals. When I decided to buy my first house last year I found local real estate company with the heard office in London. They helped me to find a perfect Istanbul apartments for sale and saved my time and money. Hope this year I'll buy my first property in Turkey. |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 5 years, 237 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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