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Twistfix

Twistfix Contact Details

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Peter House, Oxford Street
Manchester
Lancashire
M1 5AN
England UK

About Twistfix

Welcome to Twistfix, an online store for the supply of specialised building products to the construction and refurbishment industries. Twistfix supplies an array of best quality and easy to use products for specialist contractors, conscientious builders who are looking to widen their skill base and even the competent do-it-yourself enthusiast.

Twistfix damp proof products make damp proofing walls quick, easy and cost effective. Buy crack reinforcement ties or a wall crack repair kit for repairing cracked walls at trade prices. Select from a range of professional replacement wall ties or buy tanking membranes for waterproofing walls in a damp cellar or basement.

For those looking for a contractor with the specialist skills to resolve a specific issue, use our Find a Contractor facility and have a local builder who has registered for that skill contact you.

Just looking for answers to a building or renovation problem? Trawl through our forum, it is there to help.  Alternatively call our help line for product specific technical assistance.

For wall ties, crack repair, basement waterproofing, damp proofing products and much more, shop at Twistfix for top quality supplies, low cost prices and the best service in the UK.

What We Do...
  • Chemicals
  • Crack Repair
  • Damp
  • Eco
  • Fixings
  • Roofing
  • Tools
  • Wall Ties
  • Waterproofing

Repair Cracked Walls
How do cracks in walls develop?


Cracks in walls are the result of movement beyond that which can be accommodated by the masonry construction materials. A wall tends to crack where masonry is over-stressed and least restrained, such as at window and door openings or at corners.  Stress and movement is usually caused by variations in moisture content in the walls, or in the ground that supports them, temperature variations or chemical reactions. Some movements are cyclic and reversible, many are permanent.

Cracks in walls can be divided into three categories:
  • active - cracks in masonry that are increasing in width and/or length
  • passive - cracks in walls that are not increasing in width or length and
  • cyclic - cracks in brickwork that open and close seasonally.

    Unless one knows the history of the building, and knows that the cracks fall into the passive or cyclic categories, it can be difficult to determine the type of wall crack or the appropriate method of repairing it.  Generally, cracks that are passive or cyclic and less than 5mm in width can be repaired by simple DIY brickwork stitching techniques that improve the tensile and flexural strength of masonry walls such as to accommodate small and/or cyclic movements.  Repairing wall cracks that are active or that are greater than 5mm in width should only be carried out under the guidance of a structural engineer.

    Repairing Cracks in Walls?

    How to repair cracks in walls?
    Shaped and twisted stainless steel rods are bonded into the walls, stitching the masonry across the cracks at regular intervals.  The brick stitching system allows the cracked wall to behave as a reinforced non-fractured unit.  Having a helical configuration the crack stitch rods physically interlock with the bonding agent and exhibit a unique and resilient torsional spring-like quality that allows small amounts of wall movement and recovery to occur without brittle failures.

    How are wall stitching bars installed?
    Installation is straight-forward.  A horizontal channel is cut in the masonry, usually in the bed joint where installation can be easiest disguised.  The slots are flushed with clean water immediately prior to the installation of a high performance shrink-compensated cementitious grout. Brick stitching bars are simply pushed into the grout, ensuring full encasulation of the bars along their length. The helical bars extend 500mm each side of the cracks to dissapate loads and disperse them evenly into the wall structure.

    When can resin be used to bond helical bars into masonry?
    The use of resins for masonry crack stitching is discouraged unless the load potential on the helical bars is wholly axial (parallel to the helical rods).  When used as a fully encapsilated bar-bonding agent for repairing cracked walls, resins do not cope well with shear forces (perpendicular to the rod) and should be avoided where there is cross-plane movement potential.

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