- If you’ve not got an overhang or it’s a fixed deck, fit starter clips along the outside edge of the frame and secure with screws provided with the composite decking. If you are working with an overhang, put the first board into position not exceeding 25mm. If you’re adding a fascia, put an off-cut of board under the overhang so you know it’ll be flush with the fascia.
- Pre-drill all fixing points, measuring in 30mm from the edge of the board. Secure the board to the joist below with composite decking screws.
- Slide a hidden fastener clip in so it sits within the groove of the deck board. It needs to be in the centre of the joist to keep the boards secure and ensure an expansion gap of 6mm. Tighten the clips until just tight, and repeat so there’s a clip at every joist.
- Add the next board, ensuring that the fastener clips sit within the groove – make sure you don’t force it. Repeat step 3.
- Continue steps 3 and 4 until you’re at the final board, which you should secure in the same way as you did the first.
Yarm
Yarm is a town in North Yorkshire, England. The community gets on the south financial institution of the River Tees and is traditionally part of the North Riding of Yorkshire. The bridge at Yarm marked the outermost reach of tidal flow up the River Tees up until the opening, in 1995, of the Tees Barrage, which now controls river flow above Stockton. As the last bridge on the river prior to the sea, it was superseded by a brand-new toll bridge opened in Stockton in 1771. The oldest part of the community, around the High Street, is positioned in a loop of the river, and the more recent parts of the community include the factor where the River Leven fulfills the River Tees. The community is governed as part of the Borough of Stockton-on-Tees.