Cutaway diagram showing 12mm Histoglass-equivalent slim conservation double-glazed sealed unit — 4-4-4 with krypton fill and Low-E coating, listed-building sightline-match spec
Cutaway diagram showing 12mm Histoglass-equivalent slim conservation double-glazed sealed unit — 4-4-4 with krypton fill and Low-E coating, listed-building sightline-match spec

12mm Histoglass-Equivalent Slim Conservation Unit

From £45
  • BS EN 1279
  • FENSA registered
  • 10-year warranty
  • Made in Bristol, UK
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Description

Listed-building-approved sightline with double-glazed thermal performance. A 12mm slim double-glazed sealed unit (4mm clear / 4mm krypton cavity / 4mm clear with Planitherm Total+ soft-coat) — built to match the appearance and sightline of the original single-glazed unit it replaces, while delivering centre-pane U-value of ~1.6 W/m²K. The Histoglass-equivalent spec is the standard offering UK conservation officers approve for Grade II and Grade II* listed sash and casement windows.

Histoglass is a registered trademark of Cambridge-based Slim-Lite Glass, the original UK slim-cavity-Krypton specialist. The "Histoglass equivalent" specification is the industry shorthand for a 12mm sealed unit with a krypton-filled narrow cavity (4mm) and a low-E inner pane, manufactured to match the sightline of a 4mm or 6mm single-glazed pane within ±1mm tolerance. Conservation officers regularly approve this spec because the unit reads as single-glass-equivalent from the street, while the homeowner gets meaningful thermal performance.

Technical specification

Overall thickness 12mm ± 0.5mm
Build-up 4mm clear / 4mm krypton-filled cavity / 4mm clear with Planitherm Total+ soft-coat (face 3)
Gas fill 90% krypton (BS EN 1279-3)
Spacer bar Narrow steel spacer, black powder-coated — reads as a dark hairline at sightline edge
U-value (centre-pane) ~1.6 W/m²K
g-value 0.60
Light transmittance ~77%
Sightline match ≤1mm from 4mm single-glazed original — conservation-officer-approved appearance
Standards BS EN 1279, BS EN 673, BS EN 410, Historic England Technical Guidance Note (HETGN) on slim-cavity glazing

Where this unit is the right call

  • Grade II and Grade II* listed buildings with conservation-officer approval for slim DG retrofit — the standard spec your local authority's conservation officer will likely permit. Confirm in writing before ordering; consent requirements vary by authority.
  • Conservation areas with Article 4 directions restricting window changes — slim DG with sightline-match spec typically clears Article 4 requirements where full-fat double does not.
  • Georgian and Victorian sash windows being upgraded thermally without losing the original lambs-tongue glazing-bar profile — the 12mm slim unit drops into rebated bars where 24mm units force bar profile changes.
  • Period casement windows in heritage settings — Edwardian cottage casements, Arts and Crafts ranges, Lutyens and Voysey heritage projects.
  • Properties where full single-pane replacement is uneconomic but planning constraints rule out 24mm DG — the slim 12mm sits in the gap: better than single, conservation-compliant, half the cost of true Histoglass-branded equivalent.

For even thinner builds where 12mm overall is still too visible at the rebate, the 11.5mm Ultra-Slim Conservation Double Glazed Unit is the next step down — at the edge of commercial manufacturing yield. For 14mm slim with more cavity volume (slightly better thermals, slightly more visible at sightline), see the 14mm Slim Krypton Conservation Double Glazed Unit. The slim double glazing topical page walks the conservation-glazing decision tree in depth.

Stock sizes and pricing

Four heritage-window-appropriate stock sizes below — the smaller bespoke market for listed-building glazing means we cap at 1200×1000mm; for larger heritage apertures, custom-sized units are priced via the configurator. Dispatch is 14-21 working days from order (slim-cavity krypton-fill manufacturing is sequential and yield-sensitive). Trade and conservation-architect accounts: tiered pricing on log-in.

Certification and standards

UKCA mark, BS EN 1279 Declaration of Performance, krypton-fill certificate (BS EN 1279-3 tested at ≥85% initial fill), narrow steel spacer identification, Planitherm low-E coating face identification (face 3), and a Listed-Building Compatibility Statement on request — referencing the Historic England Technical Guidance Note (HETGN) on slim-cavity glazing for sash and casement windows. For conservation-officer submission, we supply a CAD-rendered sightline comparison (original single vs replacement 12mm slim) on request.

Frequently asked questions

Will my conservation officer actually approve this?

Approval is case-by-case and authority-by-authority. The 12mm Histoglass-equivalent spec is on the more-permissive end of conservation glazing — most authorities permit it where 24mm DG would be refused, on the basis that the sightline match preserves the original window appearance. We supply a Listed-Building Compatibility Statement with each order for conservation-officer submission. Get the consent in writing before ordering; conservation-officer rules vary widely between Westminster, Cambridge, Bath, and rural authorities.

How is this different from genuine branded Histoglass?

Genuine Histoglass (Slim-Lite Glass, Cambridge) is the trademark-protected original — manufactured to a specific specification with documented production records used in many high-profile listed-building consents. Our 12mm Histoglass-equivalent uses the same build-up (4-4-4 krypton + low-E) and meets the same sightline tolerance, manufactured to BS EN 1279, but cannot use the Histoglass brand name. Performance is equivalent; the brand is the difference. For projects where the consent specifies "Histoglass or equivalent", our spec satisfies the "equivalent" clause.

What's the lifespan of slim-cavity krypton?

10-15 years before edge-seal degradation, vs 15-25 years for standard double glazing. The narrower cavity puts more thermal cycling stress on the edge seal, and krypton's higher molecular weight (vs argon) means slower fill loss but tighter seal-integrity tolerances. We warrant 10 years on edge-seal integrity; realistic field life is 12-15 years before misting becomes likely on south-facing aspects.

U-value vs full-fat double glazing — what am I giving up?

Centre-pane U-value: 12mm slim krypton = ~1.6 W/m²K vs 28mm Low-E argon double = 1.1 W/m²K. The slim unit is ~45% worse on paper. In practice, the slim unit is still ~3× better than the original single-glazed pane (single = 5.7 W/m²K). For heritage applications, the conservation-officer-compliance constraint trumps the thermal-optimisation argument — you can't fit 28mm in the original rebate without losing the listed-building consent.

Will I see the spacer at the edge?

The narrow black powder-coated steel spacer reads as a dark hairline at the rebate edge — typically 4-6mm wide visible from inside, less from outside (the original putty or beading covers most of it). Most homeowners find this acceptable; some conservation officers require black aluminium foil tape over the spacer to further reduce visual signature.

Can I get this in shaped (arched, raked) for Gothic-revival windows?

Yes — at the edge of manufacturing yield. Arched and raked slim-cavity krypton units cost roughly 1.8-2.0× the equivalent rectangular unit, with lead times of 21-28 working days. Send a physical cardboard template or accurate CAD for shape-cut.

Warranty in field service?

10 years on edge-seal integrity (BS EN 1279-2 accelerated weathering). 10 years on krypton retention to ≥80% of initial fill. 10 years on Planitherm low-E coating performance. Transit damage covered 14 days from delivery — slim units are more fragile than full-fat double; brief the installer on handling protocol before delivery.

Material

Glass Composition

Each sealed unit is constructed from float glass manufactured to BS EN 572 standards. Available in clear, low-iron, or tinted variants depending on your specification requirements.

Spacer Bars

We use warm-edge spacer bars as standard, which significantly reduce thermal bridging at the glass edge. Options include stainless steel, aluminium, or composite spacers in black, grey, or silver finishes.

Gas Fill

Standard units come with dry air fill. Argon gas fill is available as an upgrade, improving thermal performance by approximately 0.3 W/m²K. Krypton gas is available for maximum performance in slim-profile units.

Sealants

All units feature a dual-seal system: primary seal of polyisobutylene (PIB) for gas retention, and secondary seal of polysulphide or silicone for structural integrity. This dual-seal construction provides a minimum 20-year service life under normal conditions.

Care

First Six Months: Monthly Checks

Watching for Condensation

Condensation between panes indicates seal failure requiring complete unit replacement. Temporary external condensation is normal when outdoor temperature drops below dew point (typically below 5°C).

External condensation evaporates within 2-3 hours after sunrise. This is actually a good sign showing your glazing insulates effectively.

Testing Hardware Function

Window hardware should operate through 30 complete open/close cycles without resistance. Friction hinges maintain 90° opening position without sagging.

Increased resistance indicates debris accumulation in track channels. This requires cleaning to prevent hardware damage.

Every Three Months

Inspecting Seals

Perimeter seals should show no gaps, tears, or separation from the frame. Seal degradation appears as grey discolouration or hardening texture.

Replace seals at the first sign of deterioration. This prevents water ingress and maintains thermal performance.

Verifying Drainage

Weep hole covers should lift easily. Channels should drain within 30 seconds when you pour 50ml water into the frame cavity.

Blocked drainage requires clearing with a 5mm diameter nylon brush or compressed air at 30-40 PSI. Never use sharp metal objects that might damage drainage channels.

Lubricating Hardware

Friction stays, hinges, and locking mechanisms need lubrication. Apply 3-4 drops of 3-in-One oil per hinge point, or use PTFE-based dry lubricant.

Avoid WD-40 and petroleum-based lubricants. These attract dust and create gummy residue that degrades hardware function over time.

Twice a Year: Deep Clean

Cleaning Frames Properly

Wash frames with pH-neutral detergent (pH 6-8) diluted at 1:20 ratio with warm water (15-25°C). Use a soft cloth or sponge.

Never use abrasive cleaners containing pumice, silica, or alkaline compounds above pH 10. These etch uPVC surfaces and remove protective UV stabilisers that prevent yellowing.

Cleaning Glass Surfaces

Use microfibre cloths (300-400 GSM density) with 1:10 white vinegar solution. This removes mineral deposits without scratching Low-E coatings.

Overlap squeegee strokes by 20mm to prevent streaking. Avoid paper towels - their wood fibre content scratches soft Low-E coatings.

Conditioning Gaskets

EPDM and neoprene gaskets need silicone spray lubricant (silicone concentration 30-40%) to maintain flexibility. This simple step extends gasket life significantly.

Untreated gaskets harden within 5-7 years. Hardened gaskets lose compression properties and allow air infiltration that increases heating costs.

Annual Professional Check

Testing Thermal Performance

Thermal imaging identifies areas exceeding target U-value by more than 0.2 W/m²K. Double glazing should maintain 1.2-1.4 W/m²K. Triple glazing should maintain 0.8-1.0 W/m²K.

These values apply when glazing is properly installed and maintained according to manufacturer specifications.

Checking Seal Integrity

Inert gas concentration testing measures argon retention in sealed units. Argon concentration below 85% of original fill (starting at 90-95% fill) indicates seal breach.

This requires unit replacement within 12 months to prevent complete seal failure and internal condensation.

Adjusting Hardware

Euro-cylinder locks adjust at three points: height, width, and compression. Use a 4mm Allen key for adjustments.

Properly adjusted locks engage at 5-8mm penetration depth without forcing. Misadjustment causes lock mechanism failure within 3-4 years of installation.

Installation

Preparing for Installation

Understanding Frame Capacity

Your existing frames need proper assessment before new glazing installation. Triple glazing units weigh 28-32 kg/m², whilst double glazing weighs 18-20 kg/m². This weight difference matters significantly.

Timber frames older than 25 years require reinforcement. Steel or aluminium angle brackets install at 300mm intervals to support the additional weight. uPVC frames manufactured before 2002 lack internal reinforcement chambers and need complete replacement rather than retrofit.

Getting the Frame Square

Frame squareness directly affects glazing performance. Diagonal measurements must match within ±2mm for openings under 1200mm width. Larger openings allow ±3mm tolerance.

Out-of-square frames cause uneven seal compression. This irregularity reduces the expected 20-year lifespan down to just 8-12 years.

Setting Up Drainage

Proper drainage prevents water damage. Weep holes position at 600mm intervals along the bottom frame rail. Each hole measures 8mm diameter and angles 15° outward.

Blocked drainage allows water accumulation exceeding 200ml capacity. This leads to seal degradation within 18 months of installation.

Installation Process

Installing Glazing Beads Correctly

External glazing beads follow a specific sequence: bottom first, then sides, finally top. Internal beads reverse this order: top first, then sides, then bottom.

This sequence prevents glass unit sagging during installation. It maintains the critical 3mm minimum edge clearance around the entire perimeter.

Positioning Setting Blocks

Distance pieces position at quarter points along the bottom edge. Units under 1200mm width need two blocks. Units between 1200-2400mm require three blocks.

Setting blocks measure 25mm wide × 5mm thick. They use neoprene or EPDM rubber with Shore A hardness between 60-70.

Applying Sealants Properly

Low-modulus neutral-cure silicone applies at 6-8mm bead width with continuous coverage. Two-part polysulphide sealants cure at 3mm depth per 24 hours at 20°C ambient temperature.

Full cure takes 7-10 days. Avoid exposure to cleaning agents during this period.

Maintaining Edge Clearances

Glass edges maintain 3mm minimum clearance from frame on all sides. Inadequate clearance causes thermal stress cracking.

This cracking occurs when temperature differentials exceed 30°C between glass edges and centre pane.

Preventing Heat Loss

Insulating Frame Cavities

Frame cavities fill with polyurethane foam (0.024-0.028 W/mK thermal conductivity) or PIR board cut to exact dimensions. Gaps exceeding 2mm reduce frame U-value performance by 0.15-0.22 W/m²K.

Creating Expansion Gaps

Perimeter expansion gaps maintain 10-12mm width around the frame exterior. These fill with closed-cell polyethylene foam backer rod before external sealant application.

Temperature fluctuations cause uPVC frame expansion and contraction. Frames move 0.6mm per metre for every 10°C temperature change.

Warranty

Required Documentation

Maintain installation certificates, warranty documents, and maintenance logs in a safe place. Warranty claims require evidence of annual maintenance.

This maintenance must be performed by qualified installers or documented DIY maintenance following manufacturer specifications exactly.

Actions That Void Warranties

Warranty exclusions include several specific actions. Never drill frame members or apply paint and coatings to uPVC surfaces.

Don't install aftermarket restrictors without manufacturer approval. Avoid abrasive cleaners and never attempt to modify sealed units yourself.

Inspection Requirements

Manufacturers require access for inspection within 10 working days of warranty claim submission. Failed units must remain in place until inspection occurs.

Retain failed units until replacement authorisation is provided. This typically takes 14-21 days from the inspection date.

Shipping & Returns
  • Free UK mainland shipping on orders over £300
  • Made to order — lead time confirmed at order confirmation
  • Non-mainland UK (Northern Ireland, Channel Islands, Isle of Man, Highlands & Islands): email orders@panerelief.co.uk for a delivery quote
  • Returns: made-to-measure glass is manufactured to your exact specification and cannot be returned for change of mind (UK Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013 exemption for personalised goods). Units faulty on arrival are replaced free of charge — report within 48 hours of delivery.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about this product before ordering.

  • Our insulated glass units achieve U-values as low as 1.0 W/m²K with argon gas fill and low-emissivity coatings. The exact U-value depends on your chosen glass specification, spacer bar type, and gas fill. We can provide a detailed thermal calculation for your specific configuration on request.

  • Yes, we manufacture bespoke units to your exact specifications. Simply provide the width, height, and glass configuration you need. There is no minimum order quantity for custom sizes, and we can accommodate most non-standard shapes including arched, circular, and raked units.

  • Standard units ship within 2–3 weeks from order confirmation. Custom specifications such as toughened, laminated, or triple-glazed units may take 3–4 weeks depending on glass availability. We will confirm the exact lead time when we process your order.

  • We supply direct to trade — our units are designed for professional installation by qualified glaziers and window fitters. Each unit ships with fitting instructions and gasket recommendations. If you need installation support, we can recommend approved installers in your area.

Sealed Unit Replacement

How to Replace a Sealed Unit

Follow these steps for a professional sealed unit replacement. Always wear protective gloves and eyewear when handling glass.

1

Measure the Opening

Measure the width and height of the glass (not the frame) in at least three places. Take the smallest measurement and deduct 2mm for clearance. This gives you your order size.

2

Remove the Beading

Starting with the longest bead, insert a stiff putty knife or glazing chisel into the gap between bead and frame. Gently lever outward. For uPVC, the bead will unclip. For timber, carefully prise the pinned bead away.

Number each bead as you remove it so they go back in the correct position.
3

Remove the Old Unit

Using suction cups, carefully lift the failed sealed unit out of the frame. Tilt the top edge toward you first, then lift clear. Have a second person assist with larger units.

Always wear cut-resistant gloves and safety glasses when handling glass.
4

Clean the Frame Rebate

Remove any old sealant, dirt, or glazing tape from the rebate using a scraper and white spirit. The rebate must be clean and dry for the new unit to sit properly and for sealant to adhere.

5

Position the Packers

Place setting blocks at the quarter and three-quarter points along the bottom of the frame. These support the weight of the glass and ensure even distribution. Use 5mm packers for standard units.

6

Insert the New Sealed Unit

Lower the new unit into the frame, resting it on the packers. Push the unit back into the rebate until it sits square. Check that the gap is even all around — adjust packers if needed.

7

Refit the Beading

Starting with the shortest bead, press each one firmly back into position. For uPVC, tap with a rubber mallet until it clicks home. For timber, pin back in place. Ensure all beads are flush with the frame.

8

Check & Finish

Use a spirit level to confirm the unit is sitting level. Check all four edges for even gaps. Clean the glass with a soft cloth. The new unit should operate smoothly within the window.

Tools & Materials Needed
Tape measureGlazing chisel or stiff putty knifeSuction cupsSetting blocks / packersLow-modulus silicone sealantSealant gunCloth and white spiritSafety glovesSafety glasses

Not confident doing this yourself? We offer professional installation across Bristol and the South West.

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