ai6yr, to design
ai6yr, to windows

Hmm, found the performance stats on my old windows... 2006. Dismal compard with current recommendations, even though double paned.

ai6yr,
KydiaMusic, to random
@KydiaMusic@mastodon.social avatar

Spouse and I are finally looking at replacing our oven & fridge this year.
But the new oven and fridge won't quite fit into the spaces where the old appliances are. We need to take out 3 cabinets and also build a fridge box and rip out the layers of vinyl the fridge is NOT supposed to sit on and thus replace the flooring oh and also the countertop on the OTHER side sticks out too far and so why not replace the countertops and that also means replacing the backsplash...it snowballs. 😩
🧵 1/

KydiaMusic,
@KydiaMusic@mastodon.social avatar

What's frustrating is we've wanted to remodel the kitchen from the beginning, but NOT LIKE THIS. We want to (eventually) move the staircase and reconfigure the kitchen layout b/c right now it isn't very efficient (countertops all broken up for very little usable space). I didn't want to spend much money on interim updates, but we can't afford to do a full remodel right now, and our appliances might completely break at any moment. :welp:

ai6yr, (edited ) to random

Coat#3 on the bathtub refinishing did the trick! A ton of work, most certainly very labor intensive, and the epoxy fumes are 10/10 bad, but it was acceptable in an empty house.

ai6yr, (edited ) to random

Woohoo! Extra excitement Saturday night, sealed the grout and tile in the bathrooms/kitchen with some free grout/tile sealant from our city's material reuse store (diverts things returned to hazmat).

ai6yr, to Plumbing

Well, no witty political commentary from me. You can just look at my new tub drain.

ai6yr, to diy

Re-caulked the tub (exciting, I know!) - next, to remove the old corroded drain plug (wanted to wait until I had completed resurfacing...). Need to remember to do that sooner, rather than later.

ai6yr, to diy

Okay, what bozo caulked this sink wrong 20 years ago?!? Oh wait, that would be me. They should have taped it before caulking for a cleaner line, like this...

Sink after recalling, showing minimal caulk spillover and clean line.

ai6yr, to movies

"We can wrap you in a full-body suit of neoprene, heat-resistant rubber. Or we can raise the temperature in Cosmo's office to 98.6 degrees - which is probably what we'll have to do, because the neoprene would suffocate you. "

ai6yr,

(This random quote thanks to my having to turn the heat up at my house to 70F apply epoxy coating to my tub).

ai6yr, (edited )

That went quick. Full vapor canister respirator absolutely required, and I did end up opening up a window to the cold world outside for some additional ventilation, with a fan pointed into this room (close it up for drying for the next few hours). Eyes started watering so I figured out more air needed.! Another coat between 4 and 6 hours required.

ai6yr,

Coat#2. Still have some material left but going to leave it at this, unless some massive issue shows up. Entire house is most certainly full of nasty fumes: would not do this in an occupied building without some serious ventilation. Despite the weather, decided it is better to vent to the outdoors, so opened up a window elsewhere in the house and have a fan directed into this room.

ai6yr, (edited ) to diy

Prep instructions: clean tub. Sand/steel wool. Clean tub. Steel wool. Clean the tub again, why don't you. Do it again for good measure. Hey, why aren't you scrubbing your tub. Do it again.

ai6yr, to windows

Replaced a single pane, 1978-79 window with a very, very expensive modern equivalent. Why? Heatwaves. Lots of them in the future. Don't know how much it will help... but better than what was there before.

U factor of 0.26, SHGC 0.16

ai6yr,

DOE Energy Star suggestion for windows in our part of Southern California (South-Central) is a U-Factor of less than or equal to 0.28, and a SHGC of less than or equal to 0.23. These windows were spec'd SIGNIFICANTLY above that level, because they likely will never be replaced again (at least, not by me). https://efficientwindows.org/energystar/

ai6yr, to random

Exercised the "never say no to contractors moving up an install" rule. (window contractors had a cancellation, so they're showing up at 8am tomorrow!!).

ai6yr, to random

Interesting, there is paint with additives to prevent growth of mold and mildew. Going with that for my bathroom repainting (plus adding a fan, hopefully). The original design of the 1979 bathrooms in my tract were abysmal, and even after we changed things out, not great. Originally they had a window, and then a glass bath/shower door (to the window), and then another bath/shower door to the rest of the bathroom, thus trapping moisture up against a window with NO ESCAPE. (note: all the recently sold homes in my neighborhood appear to have full remodels of their bathrooms... probably ran into those issues).

ai6yr, to random

Men in hazmat suits have left... and they should have followed all the proper procedures... but going to run the Corsi Rosenthal box anyway, LOL.

ai6yr, to Law

Hmm... California Title 8, Subchapter 4, Article 3, 1526. https://www.dir.ca.gov/title8/1526.html

ai6yr, to random

Friend of mine told me my disaster remodeling is a "Ship of Theseus" thought experiment.

ai6yr, to random

If you have this lovely linoleum tile pattern from 1978/1979, it has asbestos in it.

ai6yr, to random

Remodeling tip: good idea to have extra lighting in the rooms you have contractors working on. One room we had in our disaster remodel had no lights (due to the disaster) and they hadn't done a great job. I installed track lighting in there last week and I think they noticed all the stuff they missed because they couldn't see with their piddly work lights... they're working on stuff in there now. 🤔

ai6yr, to random

Before/after OCD insulating spree with FLIR and expanding foam. First image shows a massive thermal hole (between the fish) against a hot South facing wall. Second image is the same hole filled with expanding foam (cooler than the rest of the wall). Very expensive vs. Fiberglass batts, but this room typically overheats badly in summer.

Same wall a week later after insulating with foam, purple surrounded by orange and yellow, indicating it is much cooler than surrounding wall. You can tell it is the same wall by the fish painted on it.

ai6yr, to random

PNNL guide to building homes to be more resistant to wildfires.

"The guides in this section of the Disaster Resistance tool will focus less on structural fires caused from within, by cooking, heating or electrical malfunctions, and more on the threat that comes from outside, the threat of wildfire to homes located in the WUI. These guides focus on measures builders and home owners can take to increase the home’s chances of surviving even without suppression activities by firefighters..."

https://basc.pnnl.gov/information/wildfire-overview

#wildfires #DisasterPreparedness #disasters #construction #remodeling

ai6yr, to random

(Re) installed track lighting today. It turns out the Hampton Bay (Home Depot) track lighting is standard "H-type", so it is actually compatible with a significant number of alternative fixtures (even hanging pendant lamps, spotlights).

ai6yr, to random

Adding to the renovation to-do list: adding a bathroom fan to an exterior wall through stucco. (have a good idea of how to do it, but drilling holes in stucco in the right place will require care; and the vent will be on a second floor, which is a PITA). Ventilation in 1970's era bathrooms here is dismal (unless you LIKE mold)

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