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Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Scarecrow
I thought the planning laws were relaxed recently? You'd possibly have more luck if you could demonstrate that you'd be saving 'x' amount of carbon.

The problem is that a lot of urban sites are useless because there's not enough wind. Ground source heat pumps might be a better option, along with solar for hot water and, if you have the space and Sun, pv solar. In all honesty, the greatest savings to be made are through insulation and making use of passive gains (conservatories and windows).

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Father Ted
We are lucky in that we back onto fields with prevailing northerly winds - most of the time.
The house is well insulated (1970's box) with cavity wall, 100mm jablite unber the new floors, and loft insulation so thick that I wound up getting condensation on the underside of my tiles. Sadly I cant have a wood burner - or I would have installed one. I have though toyed with some sort of dual fuel stove for the kitchen, but the wife doesnt like the idea.

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by mickey taker
weve got a dual fuel stove , its gas and electric [coat]

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Scarecrow
Father Ted wrote:We are lucky in that we back onto fields with prevailing northerly winds - most of the time.
The house is well insulated (1970's box) with cavity wall, 100mm jablite unber the new floors, and loft insulation so thick that I wound up getting condensation on the underside of my tiles. Sadly I cant have a wood burner - or I would have installed one. I have though toyed with some sort of dual fuel stove for the kitchen, but the wife doesnt like the idea.

The Clean Air Act is a little bit misunderstood - you can burn whatever you like but if, and only if, there is a chimney, and you have smoke coming out of it, then the council can fine you (usually after a couple of warnings). If you are in a smokeless zone you can burn smokeless coal (expensive) or you can have an approved burner installed (from a very short list) which can burn wood or wood products in such a way as to not produce smoke (the trick is to burn the fuel with as much air as possible and to have an effective baffle plate).

My own woodburner is NOT on the approved list, but I switched to smokeless coal for a year which, because it still stinks like coal, made the moany neighbours think again and stop complaining about a little bit of pleasant smelling wood smoke during cold snaps!

My own complaint was that during the summer I have to put up with stinking bbq smoke - but this doesn't count because it doesn't vent through a chimney. Grrrr. Same with bonfires, but watch those chimera things.

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by smiffy
So we are ok to burn oil, tyres, and car interiors at the farm 'cos it doesn't go up a chimney?

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Father Ted
Thats interesting - I have a chimenea thingy with a huge chimney that actually goes over the top of the fence. Im in a smokless zone, but a few people still have coal fires. So far no one has complained.

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Bx Bandit
mickey taker wrote:weve got a dual fuel stove , its gas and electric [coat]
:lol: :lol: :lol: Mines coal & wood :mrgreen:

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Scarecrow
smiffy wrote:So we are ok to burn oil, tyres, and car interiors at the farm 'cos it doesn't go up a chimney?

Ahhh no. There's specific legislation controlling what you can burn on a farm/commercially, but I'm sure you know that :? I think there was a new raft of regulations came in about four years ago and more-or-less everything has to be recycled now.

As a private resident in a private property you can still get done under general environmental legislation - but the Clean Air Act, I believe applies to smoke coming out of a chimney/flue.

Someone's bound to put me right now! :wink:

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by smiffy
what we normally do, is wait till it gets dark, then build a big ol' bonfire, pour loads of used engine oil on it, then let it burn.
Last time we did, we nearly burned the fucking barn down! :lol:

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by docchevron132
this is true!
Although there is an enormous amount of oil to burn now, so I think a bonfire will be called for tomorrow.
Fuck the planet, it's getting in my way.

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Philhod
:lol: :lol: You can't see black smoke in the dark

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by mat_the_cat
I've got about 30 litres to get rid of, until I do I can't do any more oil changes!

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by Philhod
:) We have a mahoosive container that looks like a can of oil at the tip. So it's easy to get shut of it here.

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 28 Aug 2010
by mat_the_cat
Yeah, but that's a waste! Plus it's an 80 mile round trip for me, so it's more environmentally friendly to incinerate it...erm...locally. November 5th will be the date, we have shitloads of wood to burn so we'll have a big fire and lots of fireworks. Maybe another BXP meet?

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 29 Aug 2010
by docchevron132
Really? lana hasn't hasn't banned BXP meets in the North Wales area?

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 29 Aug 2010
by mat_the_cat
Er, well, I haven't actually mentioned the idea to her yet...

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 29 Aug 2010
by docchevron132
ahhhh, I'll await to hear the explosion of a very angry woman from the safe distance of France then!

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 29 Aug 2010
by Scarecrow
I reckon you could probably plan to dispose of your oil next time you're passing the tip, rather than making a special journey. There's loads of bad, bad shit created when you burn old engine oil - I wouldn't breath in too much!

A lot of plastic is burnt anyway - but at least the power-from-waste plants have some emission controls and offset power generated from fossil fuels.

I think the planet is the bit of life that I truly love. [coat]

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 29 Aug 2010
by Bx Bandit
Always good to flood box sections and spray on car pipework!

Re: Driveshafts - new apparently

Posted: 29 Aug 2010
by Scarecrow
That's what I was advised to use as underseal by a Citroen specialist.