 If it sets in, we might just go and get a baking potty. I like the sound of that. And these are London bricks. Absolute shite. Get a state of them. Good morning. I don't even know what day today is. Lost track, but back on the extension after the concrete in, and we're ready to work. So, give you a quick rundown. Yesterday it was very, very rainy. All day raining, but we decided to come in while it was raining and just do this. Get a bit loaded out, so we've got all the trench blocking ready. And just made sure everything else was covered up. Materials are covered, bricks are re-covered, and concrete is looking nice. We've remembered our big tape as well, so we can get these diagonals in. So, gold today. Let's get the diagonal set up, obviously, and get this in. It's only one course of trench, one course of four inch, and three-quarters of brick if I remember right. So, that's not much at all. That's something we could get done in a day. Hello, it's me now, on this miserable, miserable Friday. It's the third time it's raided with the space of half an hour. James Steel's been with the big steel for the front, which goes across the doors, so that steel should be 5.4, and there's a couple of steels to go in, but they're in the back of the house, so we'll take the bogger hose out. We've already got that opening, so there's going to be a bit of a pillar in the middle, and we're going to take that side out. Those two steels are for the, with all the bolts and everything. All done to build the legs. We're upgrading the floor insulation to meet legs, which is all new to us. This is the first job we've done since the new regs came in, so that's all being sorted out. We need to get that loaded, actually. No more, no more job light, and to sell a tex or exotherm, or king span now, 100 mil. So, currently the steels have set up side up there on the road, and then Robbie and Robbie's little trolleys, and we're going to bring them in, bit me, out the way. When the rain stops, if the rain stops, we'll forecast this all the way, so we're going to struggle. If it sets in, we might just go into the baking party. I like the sound of that. Anyway, when it's gone off a bit, we'll sit right over there and get these steels. He's laughing now. After a couple of battery issues, we have 96% for now. So, mix is in. Start to spit again because it's just stopped. It's blown over fast today. So, we're going to have a go. We've set out. Here's the corner of our building. 3.4 out. Diagonal. I'll show you which I've worked out. Here's our dimensions. 8470 wide, 3.4 projection. 5 metre door in the centre. 1735 pelary the side. So, 3.4 squared is 11.56. 8470 squared is 71.7409. Add them together. It gives you that. Then you press the square root key on your calculator, and that gives you the diagonal of 9 metres 126. So, there's all the information you need. You can't lose that. Don't have to get me phone out of your pocket. The paper can't disintegrate, so, sorted. So, we've done the two projections. That diagonal's done. That diagonal is now 9 metres 126. That corner is square. So, we just need to transfer the parallel off that corner to that corner. And then, we can always check it, but that's all squared off. That'll be 9, 2, 1, 6, and 1. So, I hope not. It needs to be 9, 1, 2, 6. Yeah. So, get this one up, get some lines up, and get that bad boy out. Just see over there, the laser level. So, while I've marked this one up, I'll just get the laser level set up. I'll have to do this quick, because I don't want to get it wet. Yeah. And it's spitting. Everybody in, spitting. Has anyone got a P2K ticket? I have to draw all that fluffle, by the way. Oh, yeah. Put it in the comments below, did you get P2K tickets? And if you did, when for? Yeah. And how much did you pay? We're going May 23. 24. Is it? Yeah. What, we're not going next year? No. It's for Christmas next year now. Right. Oh, I'm confused. Thank you for something. 17. Okay. Get the diagonal in. Nice and tight. That's it. Oh. All right. Take it up. Once again. So, that's all our marking's done. Diagnose is set out. So now we just start laying on there. Mix is ready. Got the laser level out. And then, obviously, not in that order. Laser level first. And then we'll get this laid out. And by the way, this concrete, it took a 4.2 cube because we've brought it up higher. So, and that 4.2 cube cost us £763, which is a bit of a shock. But it is what it is. That's price and stuff now. It's got to go in. Yeah. So, the concrete level we've brought it up to is one trench, three face concrete block on the back. So, it'd be three brick, one block, round to 1735. Then it'd be just face work across the front where the door is. And the block work stops and returns there. So, the slab runs into the doorway. And then you've got your cold bridge, and you stick around the perimeter. And we've got to rate the insulation now. I don't know if you've mentioned this before, but I'll edit one of the other out to the PIR boards because if we do jab light now, it's got to be £160. And the price of a 160mm of jab light is £4 different. I think it's actually cheaper for the PIR boards now. What'd be nice is if we're getting to a situation... It's a gumcofty polycarbonate. You don't want to use the staff because the staff's got to prop a flat bottom to measure to. Oh. So, you might remember from... As I was having to work... You might remember from the foundation when we put the levels in, we started at the far end and came back and ended up in half-courses because the house is 30... It's in half-courses, isn't it? Yeah. 35mm at a level. So, I had to swap back and start the levels from this end because you always start the end which is seen. We're not tying in because it's block work so we can start at this side. So, basically, we take our level off this DPC and then transfer it around from there. There's always good news when your level's bang on from one side at least. Right, you're in the way, I think. There's no mic again so I'm up close so hopefully this works. It's a full mix. Mine is that little bit but that's not enough theater blocking but what the hell? A whole mix has gone in. 14 block. Once the trains blocks are in, one, we can start setting up the rest and then two, we're out of the water then. All the work is out of water because all the trench block have done that for us so that's always the best part about the trench block going in. So, yeah, I'll get this mix on. I'll catch you back over here. That quarter past two, we had a late dinner. We wanted to get the trench blocking before dinner so Alex has done all the trench block. Well, I set that one in the corner. Alex did the rest, adding load on the mixing. That took two and a half mixes. That long course of trench block. So then, see the lintels are in and we've cut the blocks over the lintels with the trusty evolution saw, captain saw that. So we've all levelled up squared up and we've got three coats of brick to come over here now. So this just shows you how high this ground is. So when you come up on the 225 there, it's not a bad end but anyway. So yeah, 1735. So, three coats of brick. One course of block. Return around here, 1735. Block worker return and return back. So then, face workers are through. No block on the inside again. Floor across onto there, onto that. We've got thin insulation in and we're raising the floor level to the existing. It's handy having it actually on show so we can work off that. We can actually tamp off that when we're doing the floor. So, that's our level. So we work down from that. So it'd be 200. Yeah, 200. So we've got to bring that hard core up a lot higher than we thought at first. And while we're doing that, that needs changing all that broken bits of clay and concrete. I'm going to go right back to the Y junction which is down there. You'll see it there. I've already dug that out and found it there a week ago. Cut out. So I'm going to go back to the Y, put it back to the original pipe and put new plastic into there. Got a mix in. Got a few bricks loaded out here and these are London bricks. That absolute shite. Get a state of them. That's, say, a third one. We're going to get a bend. Luckily, we've allowed for four cores but we only got three. So we're going to have enough good bricks out of all the shite that's gone. So I'm going to get a corner pane now and we can get this side running and get that side finished. I'm not going to get it up to damp now. It's quarter past two. It's like a flat start and it goes dark before four o'clock. So we don't want to be jump-snipping the dark. That's enough waffle. I'm going to set you up. I'm going to build this little corner and get started running. See you in a minute. It should be enough, shouldn't it? A little more to need roughly. One decent thing about London is the light. That's it for today. The rain was a bit of an issue today but I'm going to get through it and get this done, at the very least. I've got it falling over the dirty. So all it's left to do now is just cover up and we're off for today but just a little look. All the trench blocker in. Brick works up on both sides. Block works up on that side. So come back tomorrow. Try and get them reds running. Get them block running. And then we're going to see about these ones because there's talks about it being a 50mm or a 100mm. I'm not sure yet. So we're going to wait for that. But we can get all this in at least and maybe start doing some backfilling around this part. So yeah. The jury's asked about the 50mm wall. The reason is it's 150mm so that everything lights up in the kitchen when that hole comes out. So if you do a 50mm wall you've got to make up for the installation somewhere else either in the floor, in the other wall, or in the roof. So it's a matter of juggling the installation around. So we're going to wait until we're back about that. Rubbing and rubbing on with that bit but we'll see what happens. At least this side's in. This side's all set up. This isn't changing. This is a 100mm. It's staying 100mm. It didn't do that side, which we wanted to do just in case it just gets changed. So we'll wait to see and find out. So at least now that's ready for damp course and tailwires and backfilling. Anyway, see you tomorrow.