"Your talent determines what you can do. Your motivation determines how much you are willing to do. Your attitude determines how well you do it."
-Lou Holtz
Not just your opinion. If you have to rely on silicon, or a similar substance for waterproofing, you've lost the plot!If you have to use silicon as your main seal, then maybe you need to re-think that option.
Not totally against silicon but I believe it is only good as a gasket, not a bead type seal.
Just my opinion.
It's amazing how many experienced builders, only had a rudimentary grasp of flashing details and how persistent water entry can be.....
Architects...aaaaargh! Run ins with Architects would be one of our major hassles, in my inspectors life. The "I'm the Architect, I'm right and you're just a useless fucking Inspector" routine, was common amongst a small group of fairly prominent people. Didn't wash with some of us and near fisticuff "discussions" about detailing were often played out ....I have come up with this situation exactly with architects. Isn't that your job they say when being asked about details.
By their (rotting) works shall ye know them.....
- He felt that his whole life was some kind of dream and he sometimes wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it.
I suspect architects are a bit like ad agencies. They design their products to win industry awards rather than to meet the clients specific needs....
The both times we used their services we both thought they were total nut jobs and obviously speaking a strange foreign language that seemed like english except all the words had different meanings...
Usually - once you got speaking to the draughstman you were OK.
Still - my uncle the builder gave us the best advice when we were being pressured into a monolithic clad lego box. "FFS - its a house, a house where it rains a lot is a fucking square box with a pitched roof and big eaves and anything else is a reciepe for disaster....'
TOP QUOTE: The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other peoples money.
Perhaps when budding architects were building sand castles on a beach their parents were to busy with the "he will be an architect one day" and forgot to explain to the kid why the castle went away....
But then you have to ask if the founders of Christchurch were explained that little detail as well![]()
"Your talent determines what you can do. Your motivation determines how much you are willing to do. Your attitude determines how well you do it."
-Lou Holtz
It was mostly later generations that built in the red zone.
CBD was a different story. ChCh has hung onto old buildings for yonks and a lot of the stuff that fell down was marginal use / small business stuff and getting very scruffy. The bigger / newer buildings - well - I dunno....
Pretty well could happen anyplace in NZ....
cheers DD
(Definately Dodgy)
Yes you are quite right. It is often used as part of suspended floor systems with point loads and heavier ULD's performed by steel of insitu reinforced concrete. It is also used as wall panels, both with and without cavities but (ASFAI) again requires a support frame of some description. I actually quite like the Hebal products when proper thought is put into the application and detailing for weathertightness.
Political correctness: a doctrine which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd from the clean end.
its not just architects...as a prenailer i often have "discussions" with architects and draughtsmen about the real world application of trigonometry.Why oh why they draw such complex roof shapes with a hip and a valley within 200 mm of each other.
Heh! Or show doors into Attic bedrooms under valleys at junctions to exterior walls that are only a metre high. Lol.
I had my own truss and prenail plant for a couple of years. Started off hand ramming my trusses and had to do all my first multi plane truss detailing job manually as proof to Gangnail that I was worthy of a Mitek license. The web cut detailing and truncated trusses made my head hurt. Though have since done some more challenging detailing the hard way.
Political correctness: a doctrine which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd from the clean end.
I admire you guys for doing the hard practical work.:
Must say I was startled years ago when I learned architects genuinely believed their job was purely to envisage a unique structure. The rest of it was for the builder to figure out.![]()
thats a bout it in a nut shell... umm spent a bit of time in the office today so off loaded a few pics of damage caused by, buildings I have repaired... if ya's are interested I can resize and post up, you will be amazed the extent of internal damage before it shows through inside or out side.
cheers DD
(Definately Dodgy)
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks