Author Topic: You all have any goals for 2023?  (Read 5028 times)

rcjordan

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #30 on: April 09, 2023, 05:05:05 PM »
>doing it for over 40 years

DIY is my last resort for roofing, flashings, or waterproofing large living space surfaces --particularly flashings.  Doing a flashing properly is more of an art than a technical skill, combining physics (gravity, fluid dynamics) with construction know-how.  Over the years, I've seen more lousy flashings than good ones --usually thinly galvanized sheet metal, sometimes aluminum, and -rarely- copper.  Almost always, they are smeared with caulk and/or roofing cement.

ergophobe

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #31 on: April 10, 2023, 03:25:41 PM »
>>smeared with caulk

Which bought us one extra, nervous, and thankfully mild winter. We're so glad we had a pro handle it before this winter.

creative666

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #32 on: April 10, 2023, 06:06:04 PM »
Very late here, but mine were;

- Gardening
- Home renovations
- Diversify income stream

All on course so far;

- A lot of gardening done so far - pulled out a few small trees and redesigned portions inline with our plan
- Saving mode - some big things for spring
- Income stream has been diversified - attended my first fashion show as a photographer and booked three new jobs off the back of that

littleman

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #33 on: April 10, 2023, 07:45:22 PM »
>Any idea how much time it took?

This was a slab leak.  The contractor wanted to remove the hot water heater, break down the walls (for access) and jack hammer the floor to figure out which pipe was leaking.  He said all that was necessary to just find the leak.  He suspected the leaky pipe was one going under the slab to the closest bathroom (he was wrong), then  there was the bypass through the walls and ceiling on top of that.

After I said "hell no" and made up my mind to do it myself I started making strategic cuts in the sheet rock.   There are six going into the ground in a wall behind the hot water heater, three hot, three cold.  I knew the leak was on the hot side because the leak stops when I shut off the water supply to the hot water heater.  The pipes are in a real terrible spot, in a wall between the hot water heater and the gas heater.  Doing a lot of detective work by feeling the pipes and listening to them with a stethoscope I was able to figure out that the leaking pipe was actually a 3/4 in pipe that eventually runs up to supply hot water to the showers up stairs.    After figuring out the problem I set up a temporary piping system to deliver the hot water to the showers that was outside the walls, for that I used these press-on "sharkbite" fittings and PEX piping.  That part was kinda easy and it bought me some time to figure out a more permanent solution.   I took a few days and made a few more cuts in the walls and ceiling of the laundry closet to figure out the plan.  The townhouse is sort of a stupid design, but one good thing about it is that the utility stuff is all kinda close together.  There is a bit of a space above the laundry area where the ht water heater sits that has a low ceiling and houses  ducts for the heating and such.  I used that space to run the pipe after capping off the old path.  This was my first time soldering pipes.  I did copper to PEX and back to copper.  If it were the drinking water I probably would have done copper all the way, but using PEX mad the job a lot faster and easier.

It is hard to say what my total time in is, but I'd say maybe 20 hours total including the time to educate myself on how to do it and the detective work.  Labor was maybe eight hours.   I still have to patch up the walls and paint though.

One thing I've really started to notice is that a lot of "pros" do sh## work, this might be more true around here than other places.
« Last Edit: April 10, 2023, 08:01:17 PM by littleman »

ergophobe

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #34 on: April 12, 2023, 02:39:24 AM »
So even counting the whole 20 hours, you're still over the $400 to $500 I mentioned. The return on your time can be exceptional.

littleman

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #35 on: April 12, 2023, 02:58:04 AM »
Yeah, I think so.  I've been doing a lot of car and appliance repairs too.  I think for now on my default will be to see if I could do it myself first.

ergophobe

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #36 on: April 12, 2023, 05:09:20 AM »
Because of how hard it is to get people to come all the way out where we are, I've done a lot of stuff I would never have even tried 20 years ago, all thanks to YouTube.

My all-time greatest hit video is this one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUf4fLLl7FI

Two friends and I used the exact same banjo. At my best, I could get about 15 feet of tape laid in 3 minutes. At my worst, the tape end dropped, I reached for it, my foot broke through the lid of the bucket I was standing in and ended up ankle deep in joint compound, which I mostly ruined because of all the dirt on my feet. The guy in the video tapes an entire room in under 3 minutes. He is my hero. I cannot tell you how difficult we found every aspect of what he does effortlessly.

DrCool

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #37 on: April 12, 2023, 07:15:00 PM »
>>appliance repairs

Just fixed our washing machine. Would have been at least 2-3 weeks to get a repair guy out and no idea what they would have charged. It was a $15 part and took about 5 minutes to fix. There were at least a dozen Youtube videos showing the exact problem we were having so it was pretty easy to diagnose and repair.

My last washing machine repair attempt didn't go quite as well. Had to try to replace the bearing on the drum but for the life of me I couldn't get the old bearing out. I tried hammers, bigger hammers, and even fashioned a puller of sorts from some scrap wood, bolts, and washers and the thing wouldn't budge. The repair guys wanted to replace the whole drum ($1000 for that) and since it was an old one (and we hate front loaders) we just picked up a used $50 top loader.

rcjordan

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #38 on: April 12, 2023, 08:48:13 PM »
amazon is pretty good for dryer parts.

DrCool

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Re: You all have any goals for 2023?
« Reply #39 on: April 12, 2023, 10:21:24 PM »
>>amazon is pretty good for dryer parts

Yeah, they had them there but I didn't want to wait so I just got what I needed from the local appliance parts store. Luckily they had what I needed as it is a very common part that breaks.