View attachment 117457 View attachment 117462 View attachment 117463 View attachment 117457 View attachment 117462 View attachment 117463 View attachment 117457 View attachment 117462 View attachment 117463 View attachment 117462 View attachment 117463 View attachment 117460 View attachment 117461 View attachment 117460 View attachment 117459 View attachment 117368 View attachment 117457 View attachment 117458 View attachment 117455 View attachment 117456 View attachment 117454 View attachment 117451 View attachment 117369 View attachment 117368 View attachment 117362 re the right hand black line on the wall drawn over the crack with a thick permanent marker; the lintel below that cracked wall is redundant, the opening that required the lintel is now blocked up but still not rendered (image), there doesn't appear to be a corresponding vertical crack in the outer leaf. 1.8m vertical crack No. 3 emanates from the top corner of a floor joist recess.
This room corner is on the 1st floor above the left side of the patio doors (image).
The wall on the left is over patio sliding patio doors, previous car port entrance.
There is also a horiz. crack in the outer leaf render of this wall (over patio doors).
I'll get some render/plaster off (they're both sand/cement rendered & skimmed) to expose the blockwork (and confirm cracks).
Render cracks have been there for many years. Both vertical cracks have had a rad in the vicinity of the crack at some point (redundant rad bracket holes to right of chair).
re vert. crack (No. 3) I was thinking of putting some of those helical rods into the inner leaf mortar courses to stabilise it and stop the crack simply reappearing after I attend to the cracked render/plaster. There are plenty of advisory web pages out there but they tend to show the outer leaf and it's usually a red brick wall that has cracked, often in conjunction with subsidence.
Would anyone advise also chasing crack No.3 out whilst I'm in, and pointing it up? If so, what depth? Mortar or resin mortar?
This room corner is on the 1st floor above the left side of the patio doors (image).
The wall on the left is over patio sliding patio doors, previous car port entrance.
There is also a horiz. crack in the outer leaf render of this wall (over patio doors).
I'll get some render/plaster off (they're both sand/cement rendered & skimmed) to expose the blockwork (and confirm cracks).
Render cracks have been there for many years. Both vertical cracks have had a rad in the vicinity of the crack at some point (redundant rad bracket holes to right of chair).
re vert. crack (No. 3) I was thinking of putting some of those helical rods into the inner leaf mortar courses to stabilise it and stop the crack simply reappearing after I attend to the cracked render/plaster. There are plenty of advisory web pages out there but they tend to show the outer leaf and it's usually a red brick wall that has cracked, often in conjunction with subsidence.
Would anyone advise also chasing crack No.3 out whilst I'm in, and pointing it up? If so, what depth? Mortar or resin mortar?
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