im knackered, my knees hurt. im a whinging pom (englishman) photos now appended

my bil is a painter IF he was doing the job............... he'd put a bit of filler on it and paint on it  :o

im working to the engineers drawings (plus belt and braces) building control came round today, he's "happy"

as we say here................... 

End of
 
in answer to the preasure treated timber (and a couple of other things)

in the uk engineers, architects and building control officers almost always require strength graded and preasure treated timber to be used in joists and roofs.

my GUESS is that strength calculations are easier and the stamped grading guarantees that cowboys havent subtituted cheap low grade timber

preasure treatment of joists and roof timbers, makes sense to me

i fairly regularly have to replace floor joists that have suffered with dry or wet rot, i GUESS it is partly to do with our climate

second

for those who may not recognise C16 timber or C24 timber

they are strength grades, not visual grades, or batch grading

each individual piece of timber is put through a machine and stamped with its grade

anyway

the spec was for preasure treated C16 timber joists for this beam (32mm finished size, a non standard thickness)

so there are a couple of things that are slightly peculiar

first the strength grading is no longer valid, because the timber was graded at 47mm thick not at 32

however in practice timbers cut to length or ripped are still considered to be within grade

regardless of the preasure treatment, the engineer did not require the ripped faces to be re treated
 
I spent the day digging out "dry rot", that had gotten wet in some places (joking) and then I coated the soundest wood with epoxy. Tomorrow I put on a second coat of epoxy and then start inserting dutchmen (what locally goes for a second piece of wood fastened in place of the missing piece. Then I get to fill in the gaps with a mixture of epoxy and filler. Too bad this beam was not pressure treated to begin with. At least I did not have to work on my knees, but it was 99 degrees (37.2 C).

I a little knackered myself.

And now Per (in the post about the stability of the new MFT3) has convinced me that I need to spend some more
$$$
John
 
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