Soldato
- Joined
- 22 Feb 2014
- Posts
- 2,796
taking boards up won't take long at all, I am assuming you are using a drill/driver and not screwing this by hand ?
I am sure I read that this isn't recommended due to ventilation and condensation.Nothing to stop you leaving the boards in place and adding the insulation, legs, and new boards on top.
taking boards up won't take long at all, I am assuming you are using a drill/driver and not screwing this by hand ?
Just get a decent one from someone like Bosch/Makita/Dewalt and never have to worry about it wearing out or randomly breaking.No drill/driver but I will be buying one if I put the legs down. I've got overclockers hands - much too nice to be ruined by screwing![]()
whilst I love my impact driver, you hardly need one for loft legs/boards, and the drill/driver is more versatile for general DIY purposes100% get at least a drill, or even better, an impact diver. Eight screws per leg, sixty odd legs... That's a lot of screwing.
I'm sure someone has already asked that.I`m thinking of re insulating the loft space and boarding out where not already done. Can I remove the old Yellow insulation and re insulate with kingspan between the joists, will the kingspan offer the same thermal insulation protection as the yellow horrible stuff ?.
You can get drill bits that fit into an impact driver if you need to.They have a hex bit end so just clip inJust get a decent one from someone like Bosch/Makita/Dewalt and never have to worry about it wearing out or randomly breaking.
I put my (Makita) impact driver on top of a set of step ladders in my loft, I knocked it off and it fell through the loft hatch and landed on the tiled bathroom floor (cracked a tile) and still works absolutely fine.
whilst I love my impact driver, you hardly need one for loft legs/boards, and the drill/driver is more versatile for general DIY purposes![]()