Because you need to know where your issue lies, you can compare drawings but that won’t tell you what was actually fitted, I would imagine that expansion and contraction would have been factored into the design. However if your drawings for eg say the covers are 3m x 3m allowing for any movement but the company fitted covers of 2m 975x 2m 975 then you need to know this . The same goes for the frame - it’s just confirming what you have actually got against what your drawings say . Knowing if the frame is at fault or the actual covers is just helping you resolve the problem as what has already happened can and may happen again. Do you have any warranty or guarantee? If yes the more information you have the less likely the company will try to get out of it by bulls..ting you .Thank you all. I will do just that but I’m not quite understanding. We all agree that the frame is bigger than the plastic. So why measure the frame other than to confirm for movement? I have the original drawings of the plastic covers so I could compare against those.
Thanks
Ironically the reason I gave my advice is I have a greenhouse that is in the direct path of a neighbouring property and they have a large industrial floodlight that keeps my plants within the greenhouse in light 24 hrs a day so I made a screen with a plastic tarpaulin but it wasn’t wide enough. I used a large roll of industrial tape - a perfect fit until a recent cooler day and the tape contracted pulling the tarp out of shape - moving forward if you experience further problems you may have to source a different type of cover or look into the expansion/ contraction properties of your current covers . Good luck and keep us informed as we all learn from each others experiences.Thank you @Bingy man. I remember the plastic was made on my exact measurements and did not allow for contraction/expansion. Fortunately because it was made in Bulgaria everything is via email (due to the language barrier) so I may have recourse.
I think I’m being a little slow here - sorry. So I’ll measure the gap between posts and compare against the measurement of the plastic?
Ill post another video of the posts soon as I agree it most probably is the plastic. Post are set in concrete yes and only one has bowed slightly.
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