rich1911
Established Member
thomashenry":wyw5hjat said:Trevanion":wyw5hjat said:thomashenry":wyw5hjat said:My windows are 150 years old - as far as I’m concerned, that’s a pretty good advert for pine.
Except that the pine they had 150 years ago is 150 times the quality of any pine you could get your hands on today.
thomashenry":wyw5hjat said:I refitted everything, using folding wedges, oakum and lime mortar instead of foam and portland cement. Painted with linseed paint.
This is the correct way to do this but is also the most time consuming and laborious method. You could never do it this way and expect to make any money as people who tend to buy the windows have no clue about it and just want it as cheap as possible. If you're twice the price of everyone else, you'll never get any work.
As much as I would love to spend a week waiting for paint to dry, another hour per window ramming oakum into the window voids and then spend half a day mixing lime cement, it really isn't economical on a professional scale.
I agree that people aren’t generally willing to pay for it, hence all the problems so many windows now have. But if the OP is willing to do the work himself, it’s well worth doing IMO.
As for the the pine - I’ve normally been able to keep myself in old reclaimed pine. On my street alone, 5 houses must have had loft conversions in the last 5 years, with each one resulting in lots of rafters and some purlins ending up in skips, lovely 150 year old pine. My local reclaimed wood yard (Oxford wood recycling) normally has plenty of this sort of thing too.
This is all extra work of course, it needs denailing, planing and re sawing but if the OP find he only needs to make the boxes and doesn’t need to make any sashes, it’s eminently doable.
I have a shed full of reclaimed wood, in fact the shed is made from reclaimed wood too!
On the issue of refurbishment, is there a way to do a scarf joint tht wont fail in years to come?
To me it seems better to replace a cill or box lining than trying to fit a different bit of wood into it.