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Discuss Good Old Delroy, he gets all the best Jobs :) in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
The cable would have to be on the inside face for the socket feeds, and I can't think of any reason for any of the cables to be bridged across the cavity.Still the point of introducing a thermal bridge unless the cable can be placed on the inside face of the cavity insulation.
The cable would have to be on the inside face for the socket feeds, and I can't think of any reason for any of the cables to be bridged across the cavity.
How would a 2.5 drop down the inner skin of a cavity cause a bridge several times the wall is only about 3 foot high and the sockets would be above 450 mm off the floor not much of a drop'If cables are dropped into a cavity then they will contact the inner and outer walls several times, causing bridges.
If the insulation is already in place i.e. positioned whilst building the brickwork, it would be too easy to just drop the cable down the void, then penetrating the insulation to access the pattress box, this would cause a thermal bridge between the temperature of the cavity and the inside of the room.The cable would have to be on the inside face for the socket feeds, and I can't think of any reason for any of the cables to be bridged across the cavity.
How would a 2.5 drop down the inner skin of a cavity cause a bridge several times the wall is only about 3 foot high and the sockets would be above 450 mm off the floor not much of a drop'
That's right it would be too easy to drop it in the void but that wall is so short a drop it would hardly be any work to avoid a bridge, he may even have enough room to get behind the dot and dab.If the insulation is already in place i.e. positioned whilst building the brickwork, it would be too easy to just drop the cable down the void, then penetrating the insulation to access the pattress box, this would cause a thermal bridge between the temperature of the cavity and the inside of the room.
The cable would obviously have to travel horizontally.I assumed he would take them horizontally across the cavity as well.
The cable would obviously have to travel horizontally.
Yes if the run was across the top of the wall and dropped to each socket.I know. But you said there would only be a short drop.
Yes if the run was across the top of the wall and dropped to each socket.
You are now introducing a totally different scenario, if the construction is dot and dab on the inside skin why is dropping the cable down the cavity even being considered.That's right it would be too easy to drop it in the void but that wall is so short a drop it would hardly be any work to avoid a bridge, he may even have enough room to get behind the dot and dab.
Like I said in this instance, i think it would be reasonable.
That's right it would be too easy to drop it in the void but that wall is so short a drop it would hardly be any work to avoid a bridge, he may even have enough room to get behind the dot and dab.
Like I said in this instance, i think it would be reasonable.
This is where Mr spark gives a quote of many £100s of pounds more to dig up his floors or hack his walls to bits and Mr bob the DI gets the work.Well, true. The point remains though, it is bad practice to run wiring in the cavity.
I did not know that Detective Inspectors did electrical work.This is where Mr spark gives a quote of many £100s of pounds more to dig up his floors or hack his walls to bits and Mr bob the DI gets the work.
I'm not introducing a scenario at all, we were discussing the Delroy instance, if you watched the video you would know that he said it was dot and dab.You are now introducing a totally different scenario, if the construction is dot and dab on the inside skin why is dropping the cable down the cavity even being considered.
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