rowland gatward
New Member
Any advice welcome please. I was told once that if you board over and close a chimney breast where à fire once was you need to put in a vent? Not sure if this is the case or not.
The flues should be separate surely?
Any advice welcome please. I was told once that if you board over and close a chimney breast where à fire once was you need to put in a vent? Not sure if this is the case or not.
If the client instructs you not to leave a vent, do as you are told. Explain the reasons why you want to insert a vent and confirm the situation on your invoice or by way of a note. if you over rule a client, or anyone else for that matter you take on the responsibility for the consequences. This is true for every area of work especially when the instruction comes from a building professional. Not all consequences are obvious.
In respect of vents, safety overrules plaster staining and issue relating to condensation. Inserting a vent carries with it a responsibility for the consequences because it is a design decision made by you.
If all the flues of a chimney are redundant and the neighbour does not have a mirrored arrangement explain the importance of fumes from adjacent flues being dangerous and let the customer decide. If they can't make a decision don't put one in.
Working open fires in terraced housing nowadays are very rare. The chances of your neighbours fire, if they had one, leaking smoke thru the firebacks and then thru 13" brickwork is well nigh negligible. And even if the smoke did get thru to your side, I think it, erm, would go up the chimney :RpS_scared:
Its known as rising smoke :RpS_biggrin:
You defiantly seem to be an expert. A self proclaimed one that is. You are the fool that followed ridiculous advice from some council expert to install a vent at 1st floor level to a working fireplace :RpS_laugh:
Following your ridiculous theories, it would now be dangerous for my neighbour to light a fire in their fireplace, but it would be perfectly safe for me to light a fire in my fireplace :RpS_scared:
I still think you are lovely but stick with Gaelic because you struggle following the central theme of the topic when written in English.
If instructed by a qualified environmental health officer to insert a vent upstairs in an old house, one can query it etc but the installation was part of the contractual relationship between client, Council and myself. It was not self-evident as you claim that vents should not be inserted in bricked up fireplaces ( at first floor for example) since thousands have been bricked in this manner. The first responders on this thread confirm this.
Vents is an important topic that someone has asked for views on. My substantive argument is that of not taking on the responsibility of designing a solution. Which plaster to use falls within the problem solving remit of plasterers, flues and vents does not so why make a rod for your own back.
It's NOT difficult.
Answer my question.
Is it more dangerous for my neighbour to light a fire in their fireplace than it is for me to light a fire in mine ?
Think about it for a couple of hours
Why type ten words when one will do? It only serves to cloud your point....right or wrong.
Why type ten words when one will do? It only serves to cloud your point....right or wrong.
The flues should be separate surely?
My thoughts exactly, If they do join in the loft area then the hot gasses will only rise aided by the bedroom vent.
Vent or no vent, unless the chimney is almost totally blocked, gases will escape properly.
FWIW I usually just block bedroom vents.
I did a grant job in Kirklees, it was in their standard spec to brick-up bedroom fireplaces and insert a vent. We installed a vent and when we lit a fire in the lounge smoke came out thro vent in the bedroom. I mentioned this to env health officer in charge of job pointing gas fires and dangerous fumes to people asleep. Env. Health officer said would have this removed from their standard specification for the obvious reason of killing occupants whilst asleep.
My mistake was that client was a prat if I had said nothing and he had been gassed I would have had a perfect defence ... I was following instructions of the Council.