William
Member
- Messages
- 6
- Location
- Winkleigh, Devon
Hello everybody,
This looks like an interesting forum for period property, so I’ve registered and this is my first post, so hello.
I’ve undertaken a variety of work on previous period homes but, for the first time, I’ve moved to a cob house so I find myself on a new learning curve and I probably have more questions than answers - ‘hope that’s okay! I’d also be interested to meet people, see work or even problems associated with cob property near where I live, in mid Devon.
So my first question is how does one ‘start’ a perpendicular wall, of conventional construction, up to a cob wall? I’ll soon be demolishing a small porch (which is so badly constructed that it actually takes some believing) and I plan to rebuild a similar sized addition using either conventional brick or maybe oak framed construction. I’m not listed.
With conventional modern construction, where one would start a wall from stainless wall starters, bolted into the existing wall, that doesn’t strike me as being a viable option when coming off a cob wall so can anyone shed any light?
I did wonder whether some kind of plates or mesh, alternating horizontal and vertical orientation, maybe 50cm apart, built into the new construction and lime rendered into a reasonable depth slot in the cob might be appropriate. If it went say 30cm into the cob, surely any forces concerned would at least to some extent, be less of a point load and more of a turning force, which I’m guessing might work?
I’ve looked around and haven’t found an answer and surely there must be a well-tried, good practice method – can anyone advise?
				
			This looks like an interesting forum for period property, so I’ve registered and this is my first post, so hello.
I’ve undertaken a variety of work on previous period homes but, for the first time, I’ve moved to a cob house so I find myself on a new learning curve and I probably have more questions than answers - ‘hope that’s okay! I’d also be interested to meet people, see work or even problems associated with cob property near where I live, in mid Devon.
So my first question is how does one ‘start’ a perpendicular wall, of conventional construction, up to a cob wall? I’ll soon be demolishing a small porch (which is so badly constructed that it actually takes some believing) and I plan to rebuild a similar sized addition using either conventional brick or maybe oak framed construction. I’m not listed.
With conventional modern construction, where one would start a wall from stainless wall starters, bolted into the existing wall, that doesn’t strike me as being a viable option when coming off a cob wall so can anyone shed any light?
I did wonder whether some kind of plates or mesh, alternating horizontal and vertical orientation, maybe 50cm apart, built into the new construction and lime rendered into a reasonable depth slot in the cob might be appropriate. If it went say 30cm into the cob, surely any forces concerned would at least to some extent, be less of a point load and more of a turning force, which I’m guessing might work?
I’ve looked around and haven’t found an answer and surely there must be a well-tried, good practice method – can anyone advise?

 
 
		 No problem, there are a lot of experienced members who post on this forum but contributions are usually intermittent depending on what people have going on in their lives, so if you have a slightly more niche question (there aren't many with cob experience on here for example) then it might take a while before the relevant person checks in and sees your post. Usually as darker evenings draw in and people are limited in what works they can carry out, participation rates tend to rise. Certainly no taboos broken on your part though! Best of luck and do please post back and let us know how you get on, as that will help provide valuable resource for future members who may find themselves in a similar situation.
 No problem, there are a lot of experienced members who post on this forum but contributions are usually intermittent depending on what people have going on in their lives, so if you have a slightly more niche question (there aren't many with cob experience on here for example) then it might take a while before the relevant person checks in and sees your post. Usually as darker evenings draw in and people are limited in what works they can carry out, participation rates tend to rise. Certainly no taboos broken on your part though! Best of luck and do please post back and let us know how you get on, as that will help provide valuable resource for future members who may find themselves in a similar situation.