okeydokey
Established Member
Long winded bit - sorry.
My son has just bought a 1930s house where the central heating boiler is at floor level in the kitchen with the flue straight out through the wall.
House has been empty for about 6 months and the executors have no records of anything useful. Son being sensible wants a gas safety check and service before he tries to switch it on.
The gas was off at the mains and its possible if he turns the gas on it might/will fire up using the wall thermostat to give the on signal also there is a typical in a fireplace gas fire (gas to be capped off as part of gas safety check) or none of the above will happen -- maybe BOOM.
The boiler is in a long alcove. Access to the boiler is via sliding out a wheeled floor unit and moving a nearby electric cooker THEN removing a kitchen worktop that sits above both. to get access to the boiler cover and controls.
The worktop looks a recent install as the white silicone looks newish. Perhaps the worktop was replaced or installed to make it look better for selling the house.
To the point ---- the worktop has a 7cm square upstand on 3 sides of the worktop, looking underneath - both ends of the worktop appear to rest on a sort of shelf bracket on each end and rests on a batten along the longer 3rd side. Cant see any fixing other than lavish amounts of silicone along the top of the upstand joint of both and some underneath and to the wall. I need to get the worktop off!
Other than trying Stanley knife blades to cut through would an electric multi function tool be the tool to slide in and cut through the silicone so I can work the the worktop out. I don't wish to destroy the worktop.
Ive been considering buying a multi tool and now half an excuse to buy one!
Anyone have experience of a cheaper one and what kind of blade would be best to try and cut through the rubberized silicone that can be a devil to cut through
thanks
My son has just bought a 1930s house where the central heating boiler is at floor level in the kitchen with the flue straight out through the wall.
House has been empty for about 6 months and the executors have no records of anything useful. Son being sensible wants a gas safety check and service before he tries to switch it on.
The gas was off at the mains and its possible if he turns the gas on it might/will fire up using the wall thermostat to give the on signal also there is a typical in a fireplace gas fire (gas to be capped off as part of gas safety check) or none of the above will happen -- maybe BOOM.
The boiler is in a long alcove. Access to the boiler is via sliding out a wheeled floor unit and moving a nearby electric cooker THEN removing a kitchen worktop that sits above both. to get access to the boiler cover and controls.
The worktop looks a recent install as the white silicone looks newish. Perhaps the worktop was replaced or installed to make it look better for selling the house.
To the point ---- the worktop has a 7cm square upstand on 3 sides of the worktop, looking underneath - both ends of the worktop appear to rest on a sort of shelf bracket on each end and rests on a batten along the longer 3rd side. Cant see any fixing other than lavish amounts of silicone along the top of the upstand joint of both and some underneath and to the wall. I need to get the worktop off!
Other than trying Stanley knife blades to cut through would an electric multi function tool be the tool to slide in and cut through the silicone so I can work the the worktop out. I don't wish to destroy the worktop.
Ive been considering buying a multi tool and now half an excuse to buy one!
Anyone have experience of a cheaper one and what kind of blade would be best to try and cut through the rubberized silicone that can be a devil to cut through
thanks
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