Hi - apologies if this has been covered elsewhere but I couldn't find a thread.
Basically I am having my place drylined with insulated plasterboard (ecotherm ecoliner) on dabs to a solid masonry wall as part of a major refurb. The house is upside down with bedrooms below living space.
The new gas combi boiler is to be located on the first floor and therefore the radiators are to be fed from above. The preferred locations for the new rads are generally against external walls and I don't want to see exposed pipework.
I was therefore wondering if anyone knows if you can locate the radiator pipework within the insulated plasterboard zone (by carving grooves within the insulation zone)?
The guide below seems to only be concerned about breaching the vapour control layer and isn't worried about interstitial condensation etc. (in fact electrical wiring seems more of an issue).
http://regulations.completepicture....using - a guide for specifiers and contra.pdf
If anyone has an experience / guidance / thoughts they would be much appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
Basically I am having my place drylined with insulated plasterboard (ecotherm ecoliner) on dabs to a solid masonry wall as part of a major refurb. The house is upside down with bedrooms below living space.
The new gas combi boiler is to be located on the first floor and therefore the radiators are to be fed from above. The preferred locations for the new rads are generally against external walls and I don't want to see exposed pipework.
I was therefore wondering if anyone knows if you can locate the radiator pipework within the insulated plasterboard zone (by carving grooves within the insulation zone)?
The guide below seems to only be concerned about breaching the vapour control layer and isn't worried about interstitial condensation etc. (in fact electrical wiring seems more of an issue).
http://regulations.completepicture....using - a guide for specifiers and contra.pdf
If anyone has an experience / guidance / thoughts they would be much appreciated.
Thanks in advance.