Chancery vs Haworth
-
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 12:10 am
- Location: Five Oak Green, Kent
Following on from last year's driveway construction (a great success - thanks Tony) SWMBO has decided I'm going to bulid a patio this year :wink:
I've been looking around for materials and we're narrowed it down to a buff coloured riven. Looking at rough prices from Builder Center's website, Marshall's Chancery is virtually identical in price to their Haworth.
Haworth is thinner than Chancery (30 mm vs 45 mm) but if there's no real down side I'd rather have real stone than immitation!
Any views on Haworth vs Chancery for a patio?
Many thanks
Neil
I've been looking around for materials and we're narrowed it down to a buff coloured riven. Looking at rough prices from Builder Center's website, Marshall's Chancery is virtually identical in price to their Haworth.
Haworth is thinner than Chancery (30 mm vs 45 mm) but if there's no real down side I'd rather have real stone than immitation!
Any views on Haworth vs Chancery for a patio?
Many thanks
Neil
I tend to agree with you - I'd rather have 'real' stone than a concrete imitation, regardless of how good a copy it is.
However, there are plenty of other sandstones on the market that are as good as the Haworth for considerably less money. There are also a lot of sandstones out there that are rubbish, but, generally speaking, if you go with one of the 'names' on the Stone Paving Links page, you should be ok.
I'm not saying there's owt wrong with the Haworth Paving (other than I feel that choosing a "Yorkshire" name is intended to be deliberately misleading) - it's a fine paving, but there are lots of comparable flagstones out there and I think you should review a wider selection before making a choice.
From a construction point of view, both need to be laid on a full bed, and I recommend a 10:1 cement bound grit sand mix as the bedding material. You could get away with an unbound bed of clean grit sand for the Chancery, as it's a surprisingly tough flag, but, with the Haworth, or with any of the other imported sandstones, you really do need the added strength of a cement-bound bed.
However, there are plenty of other sandstones on the market that are as good as the Haworth for considerably less money. There are also a lot of sandstones out there that are rubbish, but, generally speaking, if you go with one of the 'names' on the Stone Paving Links page, you should be ok.
I'm not saying there's owt wrong with the Haworth Paving (other than I feel that choosing a "Yorkshire" name is intended to be deliberately misleading) - it's a fine paving, but there are lots of comparable flagstones out there and I think you should review a wider selection before making a choice.
From a construction point of view, both need to be laid on a full bed, and I recommend a 10:1 cement bound grit sand mix as the bedding material. You could get away with an unbound bed of clean grit sand for the Chancery, as it's a surprisingly tough flag, but, with the Haworth, or with any of the other imported sandstones, you really do need the added strength of a cement-bound bed.
-
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 12:10 am
- Location: Five Oak Green, Kent
Tell them I referred you and they'll make sure you don't get pissed around. :)
I was on the 'phone to their top man, also called Tony, this afternoon - if you want to see his face turn a lovely shade of puce, tell him this Tony has told you that they have a job lot of 420x420mm Raj sandstone that they want to shift! ;)
Their stock is, generally, of a good quality and I don't have any problem recommending them.
I was on the 'phone to their top man, also called Tony, this afternoon - if you want to see his face turn a lovely shade of puce, tell him this Tony has told you that they have a job lot of 420x420mm Raj sandstone that they want to shift! ;)
Their stock is, generally, of a good quality and I don't have any problem recommending them.
-
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 12:10 am
- Location: Five Oak Green, Kent
-
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2003 12:10 am
- Location: Five Oak Green, Kent
-
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Thu Mar 25, 2004 5:13 pm
- Location: Manufacturing & Distribution Centre in Shropshire, West Midlands. Nationwide Delivery. Display C
- Contact:
Have you considered Old Yorkshire Street Flags, or Old Lancashire Mill Flags from Westminster Stone (www.westminsterstone.com) - or their LivingStone natural stone products?