What material is this?

Joined
3 Nov 2012
Messages
25
Reaction score
0
Location
West Midlands
Country
United Kingdom
Hi All,

I have some concerns other some material in my heating cupboard which I disturbed.

My property was built in 1965. I believe that the current warm arm heating unit was installed in 1988.

What is the material around the flue, is there any chance it could contain any nasty materials such as asbestos? Would asbestos ever have been used in such an application as I know they used to insulate pipes with such a material? I am wary as the grey material panel above probably is asbestos.


Would the flue pictured be the original one from 1965 or would it have been installed when the new system went in? Do these items always get replaced when a new unit goes in? It is made by a firm called Rite-Vent.


View media item 53885
Thanks,

Rob
 
Sponsored Links
Looks like fire cement to me. Nothing to worry about.
 
John,

Would it be normal for the material to be very crumbly, I touched it and a piece fell off. When I picked it up the material disintegrated in my hand?

Thanks
 
Fire cement does break down over time due to the long term exposure to heat. That stuff also looks quite old to me. modern cements are better quality. Assuming the cement is simply sealing the gap between the flue and the plate I woiuld probably remove it and reseal with new. The plate may well be asbestos cement board but that's also nothing to worry about. Just don't go sawing or sanding it.
 
Sponsored Links
Damp it down, ie soak it well before working on it to keep any dust down. Bag it immediately and the double bag and take it to your local council recycling site. They will have a special bin for it. Sounds like overkill but better safe than sorry.

Don't put it in your normal landfill rubbish collection, that's illegal!
 
Damp it down, ie soak it well before working on it to keep any dust down. Bag it immediately and the double bag and take it to your local council recycling site. They will have a special bin for it. Sounds like overkill but better safe than sorry.

Don't put it in your normal landfill rubbish collection, that's illegal!

Yeah and don't forget to wear a chemical suit, respirator, thick rubber gloves.

Seal all rooms. Buy a Geiger counter. Get a carbon monoxide indicator too.

In fact evacuate all properties within 1 mile radius.
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top