Results 16 to 18 of 18
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8th November 2004, 11:00 AM #16
been thinking a bit about safety and the wall. At the risk of stating the obvious.
getting a structural expert to look at it might cost money but would be cheaper than rebuilding your house ( or paying your hospital bills ) if it all went pear shaped.
you would probably need to fence off the external area while you're doing the work, you don't want to smack next door's kid on the head with a brick as you knock it out of the wall and they are retrieving their football from the garden next to the hole.
you would also probably not want to do this when no-one else was around to call for help.no-one said on their death bed I wish I spent more time in the office!
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8th November 2004, 02:23 PM #17Crazy Fisho & Brewer
- Join Date
- Oct 2004
- Location
- Shell harbour
- Posts
- 27
gee, isn't it great to have so many good points of view in one place... thankyou
to all that have provided input to this thread...
From what I can establish, whilst it MAY be ok / possible to work unsupported,
it would definately be best practice in regards to structural / safety to
install temporary supports etc...
I will get the window sized based on the brickwork, and will cut away the mortar
at the top of the opening to allow me to slide a new lintel inplace, and repack
with mortar before I start removing the bricks out...
although, I do have a comment that may give you somthing to think about... I was
once told that the main reason that lintels are installed (in small ish openings
that is), is to actually hold teh bricks up above the opening during the laying
/ curing process, with the bricks / mortar courses above and around the hole
doing the work of structure, rather than the lintel itself!... hence one of the
main reasons why the bricks are laid in the pattern they are, to interlock, with
each brick supporting the other...otherwise the lintels on downstairs windows /
doors would be quite significant with another floor of brickwork above it!...
food for thought??
D
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8th November 2004, 03:02 PM #18SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Sep 2003
- Location
- Mid North Coast
- Age
- 71
- Posts
- 100
Originally Posted by dallas
The only way you could get away with it would be to use an arch which, if built correctly, is self supporting.
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