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Designing your new condo or townhouse? Renovating your kitchen? Share your photos and project ideas with other experts here! We're not just modifying our cars anymore..
Electrical work is finished and he/she wants to add a subpanel after the fact? Are you upgrading service at all? Ie, you currently get 100A from the city, but electrician wants to make it 200A
I've been putting an effort into my lawn this year to see how good I can get it. Bought a soil analysis test, bought lime to neutralize the soil, fertilizer to adjust for nutrients that were missing based on the soil test, some top dressing and seed.
Well it's been ok but not as great as I'd hoped. I had a few bare areas from dead leaves and grubs over the winter and those unfortunately did not fill in.
However the areas with existing grass is looking pretty good.
Finally cut the lawn today after seeding about 4 weeks ago to see thr initial results of all my hard work and $$$ as well as cleaned my glass patio cover.
Next on the plan this weekend is to power wash the deck and patio furniture.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skyxx
Sonick is a genius. I won't go into detail what's so great about his post. But it's damn good!
2010 Toyota Rav4 Limited V6 - Wifey's Daily Driver
2009 BMW 128i - Daily Driver
2007 Toyota Rav4 Sport V6 - Sold
1999 Mazda Miata - Sold
2003 Mazda Protege5 - Sold
1987 BMW 325is - Sold
1990 Mazda Miata - Sold
Did you climb on top of the cover or cleaned from the ladder? It looks really clean!
Cleaned from the ladder. I think I saw the installers stand on the cover but I'm not sure what weight it could support. Would be way easier if I stood on it.
There are streaks for sure, if I was patient to dry and wipe the squeegee each time it would be cleaner, but I ain't got no time for that
But yeah I did it from the ladder, I bought two of these from Princess Auto last autumn and made a 12ft pole just for this purpose
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skyxx
Sonick is a genius. I won't go into detail what's so great about his post. But it's damn good!
2010 Toyota Rav4 Limited V6 - Wifey's Daily Driver
2009 BMW 128i - Daily Driver
2007 Toyota Rav4 Sport V6 - Sold
1999 Mazda Miata - Sold
2003 Mazda Protege5 - Sold
1987 BMW 325is - Sold
1990 Mazda Miata - Sold
If you can find the part numbers and can turn a wrench the shower cartridge is a very easy DIY. Bathroom fan may take a little more skill depending if it's a re/re of the same model or if you're changing our to something else but not outside the skillset of most RSers if you have experience tinkering with your car.
Cleaned from the ladder. I think I saw the installers stand on the cover but I'm not sure what weight it could support. Would be way easier if I stood on it.
There are streaks for sure, if I was patient to dry and wipe the squeegee each time it would be cleaner, but I ain't got no time for that
But yeah I did it from the ladder, I bought two of these from Princess Auto last autumn and made a 12ft pole just for this purpose
[IMG]... [/IMG]
The last people that washed and painted my awning used planks like this to get on top.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gerbs
Shower head + faucet is leaking will need to replace the cartridge behind the knob.
Anyone done this before or should I hire someone?
Bathroom fan is also rattling and noisy!
I've changed a few. Not all are the same. Delta was a one piece, just pull out the old and push in the new. I think the other brand was Moen, and that was 2 part a mixer and diverter. Had to make 2 trips to the store cuz I changing only 1 part didn't solve the problem.
It's pretty simple, just need some basic tools and know how to shut off the water. Some rough in valves can let you shut off right at your shower, otherwise you need to shut off your whole place. I had to shut off my whole house each time I did the shower valve.
FYI if yours is Delta, try to utilize the lifetime warranty. It was pretty painless to get them to mail me a replacement.
Electrical work is finished and he/she wants to add a subpanel after the fact? Are you upgrading service at all? Ie, you currently get 100A from the city, but electrician wants to make it 200A
they are still working on the wiring.
saying they need more space' they can totally use these dual circuits... say it might trip 100AMP wth
total BS. hot water tank (not even the instant heating ones), heat pump / aC, oven, dryer.. no EV.. 2600 sq ft.. 4 rooms.. ic an't see how we can trip 100AMP unless they wire like shit.
If you have your own shut off to your unit. DIY. Water isn't going to leak to other floors cuz the golden part of the rough in protrudes into the shower area, so excess water will drip into the shower and not behind the wall. Since you have already shut off the water to your suite, worst case is you have no water until a pro comes in and fixes it if you happen to fail. I skimmed the video, but that chrome ring removed by the belt, I was able to remove with my bare hands. If I wasn't able to use my hands I'd try gloved hands for more grip. I have a spare delta valve, looks the same as the one in the video. It only does on or off, if yours can choose hot and cold, then it's a different valve. If delta won't send you a new valve and mine is what you need, you can have it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 6793026
they are still working on the wiring.
saying they need more space' they can totally use these dual circuits... say it might trip 100AMP wth
total BS. hot water tank (not even the instant heating ones), heat pump / aC, oven, dryer.. no EV.. 2600 sq ft.. 4 rooms.. ic an't see how we can trip 100AMP unless they wire like shit.
100 amp house
hot water tank
oven
If space is the problem, tell them to use the tandem breakers. If they plan to keep it at 100A service and still adding in the new circuits, it'll trip anyways whether it's 1 panel or 2. My suspicion is that they just want more room to work instead of having to shove wires in a tight spot. Couple tandems should be cheaper than a subpanel, cuz you'd have to buy a breaker to put in the main to feed the sub.
I've been putting an effort into my lawn this year to see how good I can get it. Bought a soil analysis test, bought lime to neutralize the soil, fertilizer to adjust for nutrients that were missing based on the soil test, some top dressing and seed.
Well it's been ok but not as great as I'd hoped. I had a few bare areas from dead leaves and grubs over the winter and those unfortunately did not fill in.
However the areas with existing grass is looking pretty good.
Finally cut the lawn today after seeding about 4 weeks ago to see thr initial results of all my hard work and $$$ as well as cleaned my glass patio cover.
Next on the plan this weekend is to power wash the deck and patio furniture.
It's a 3-4 year process to start from scratch. I'm on year 3 now and there are still some patches and each year that passes the patchiness becomes less and less. It's a lot of work, especially if there's lots of shade, but patience is key!
I've also been working on a 10 year old apple tree for 3 years now, has also finally started to look good, thinking it will be ready in another 2 years.
I'm confused on what you're trying to do, but in that last picture no. You can't use 12V wiring for 120V and absolutely do not hook up 120V to a 12V device.
__________________ 1991 Toyota Celica GTFour RC // 2007 Toyota Rav4 V6 // 2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee
1992 Toyota Celica GT-S ["sold"] \\ 2007 Jeep Grand Cherokee CRD [sold] \\ 2000 Jeep Cherokee [sold] \\ 1997 Honda Prelude [sold] \\ 1992 Jeep YJ [sold/crashed] \\ 1987 Mazda RX-7 [sold] \\ 1987 Toyota Celica GT-S [crushed]
Quote:
Originally Posted by maksimizer
half those dudes are hotter than ,my GF.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RevYouUp
reading this thread is like waiting for goku to charge up a spirit bomb in dragon ball z
Quote:
Originally Posted by Good_KarMa
OH thank god. I thought u had sex with my wife. :cry:
Are they light switches or outlets beside the window?
If they are outlets you could just meret a jumper and install a new box where you want the light fixture and run the 120v from the existing box to the new light.
If you wanted to really half ass it you could even just drill a hole and fish the wire itself from the existing box and just tuck it behind the fixture lol.. presumably though that fixture has some sort of mounting box no?
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Dank memes cant melt steel beams
Basic Load (General lighting & receptacles), 2600sqft house: 30A
Range: 25A (50% of 12000W rated range)
Hot water tank: 5A (25% of rated load when house has an electric range)
AC: 30A (100% of rated value)
Electric Dryer: 7.5A (25% of rated load when house has an electric range)
=97.5A
It really is right on the cusp of that 100A service.
My point is that 6793026 is really out to lunch with his comment that the electrician was telling him BS that additional loads risked tripping...
If anyone is needing a custom door, I recently dealt with Terra Doors in south van, really great experience.
They built me a totally custom door for my suite for $650, whereas most place just wanted to stick me with a cut down 34 or 36 inch door, pre hung exterior flat panel door very high quality threshold and jam. Good experience overall with good communication through the entire process and even threw in free delivery given it made everything easier for both of us
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Dank memes cant melt steel beams
I have a different model than he does but mine was almost exactly the same in terms of opening and the issue, the lint sludge in the trap at the bottom. Started getting pump errors after about 10 minutes of drying. Did this and vacuumed/wiped down the sump and venting inside. Works like brand new now
If you have any sort of ability using a screw driver you can do this
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Dank memes cant melt steel beams
If anyone is needing a custom door, I recently dealt with Terra Doors in south van, really great experience.
They built me a totally custom door for my suite for $650, whereas most place just wanted to stick me with a cut down 34 or 36 inch door, pre hung exterior flat panel door very high quality threshold and jam. Good experience overall with good communication through the entire process and even threw in free delivery given it made everything easier for both of us
Who did you work with there?
That sounds reasonable. I need a custom door for my suite as well. The robbers broke the door around Christmas. We installed a metal gate, but a new door would be better.
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Need some help and suggestions from the RS collective hive mind on how to proceed after a basement flooding event.
The atmospheric river we had on Monday resulted in a section of my brother's basement flooding. His house is an old bungalow in a long rectangular shape, and the water pooled at one end where the fireplace is. We actually have no clue how or where the water came from -- on Monday night when the rain was coming down hard, he noticed that water just started seeping out from the laminate floor, and it gradually pooled up to about the size of a queen / king size bed. It never got very deep, and they were able to soak the water up when the rain stopped on Tuesday.
Obviously insurance has been called, and a restoration company has come to take an initial look. The restoration work will proceed, and will probably take a few months to complete. We've gone through the very same process a few years ago when my parents' bungalow basement suffered a really bad flood, so we know the drill in how the restoration will happen.
But what we don't know and desperately need help with is on identifying the water breach and getting that fixed. With my parents' home, that was the easy part because our sump pit drain got clogged, so the atmospheric river water backed up and overflowed from the sump pit, flooding the entire basement in a good 2" - 3" of water. But in my brother's case, we honestly have no idea -- the sump pit is not at that end of the house, and it didn't overflow.
It'd be pointless to do the restoration work if we are unable to identify the breach because the same flooding will happen all over again at the next atmospheric river event -- or maybe even just from heavy rain. The restoration company has already indicated that they can only do the restoration work, and has no interest in performing any work to identify and/or repair the breach.
So we are stuck here because we literally have no clue on how we can even proceed. We are thinking we need to hire somebody who can help us identify some potential sources of the breach, and perform the necessary work to eliminate those potential causes. We know that would likely be educated guesswork instead of definitively identifying where the breach is, but we are not even sure who we can/should talk to to get the ball rolling.
I know we have a lot of trades / construction knowledge in RS, and I know we have a lot of experienced home owners that are far more knowledgeable and resourceful than I am, so I am hoping I can tap into your brains to help my brother out.
Thank you for your help in advance.
Have you guys made any progress since? It's been a few months since it happened.
We recently did some work in the basement and your case made me think of two things that we were dealing with.
1. We had a small crack in the foundation, about 1 inch long. We learned that typically there's a waterproof paint that's added to the outside of the concrete foundation, at least for a house from our era. The crack meant the waterproofing at that spot was compromised. It wasn't a HUGE leak but the concrete surrounding the crack was damp during the atmospheric rivers. In the week that it was dry, the concrete dried off. We sealed it from the inside but it's not a true fix, it just keeps the water from coming through the crack, but concrete is porous so there will always be some moisture. The proper fix would be to dig up the concrete walkway that surrounds the house and properly seal it from the outside. I didn't want to embark on that right now as I simply don't have money.
2. We had to dig in the basement and we found ground water during the atmospheric river. We live on a hill so the ground water appeared on the deeper/more in the hill side of the house. We consulted some builders and engineers and they said if it's below the bottom of the foundation, it's not unexpected.
So combined those two things, you may run into a flooded basement without any visible source during very heavy rainfall.