What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
^^^
Tell me about it; turns out the crappy upper cabinet they installed was actually holding the cove ceiling in the Dining Room up after they hacked the wall studs out.
We found that out the hard way: the cove ceiling cracked like mad once the cabinet was dropped. Nothing like "structural casework" .
Thank god this isn't a load bearing wall.
Tell me about it; turns out the crappy upper cabinet they installed was actually holding the cove ceiling in the Dining Room up after they hacked the wall studs out.
We found that out the hard way: the cove ceiling cracked like mad once the cabinet was dropped. Nothing like "structural casework" .
Thank god this isn't a load bearing wall.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I'm digging the 2x4s that are actually 2 inches by 4 inches. Did the house originally have knob and tube electrical?
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I passed on this thread for awhile and missed out on some cool stuff. Nice work there Vince and Jim! Re-models, major or minor are the best. I've done several and five with Ramona. One was a scrape and rebuild in Old Town Alexandria on a lot platted by G.W. himself.
I have had many head scratching sessions when I opened up a wall and see someone else's work. Our house in OKC was a good case in example. When we got to remodeling the loft, the pressboard flooring was cupped along the edges. The PO's contractor used nails instead of screws. In the process of screwing the edges back down, there was an arc and the floor ignited. After putting the fire out, I found not only the that the subfloor was laid incorrectly… but the romex was run through the gaps in the bottom layer. Ripped up all the subfloor and found more horrors. The PO added another electrical box in the attic for his new AC condenser. He must have run short on the 8 gauge wire so he joined it with some left over 12 gauge romex. Just wire nutted it together and wrapped in a wad of electrical tap as big as softball. Why folks do stuff like this and take shortcuts, I'll never know.
Last year, we put a new roof on one of our rental houses in Ponca City. Day 1 & 2 hovered in the high 50s. Day 3 the high was 14 F. Not fun on the roof in that temp, but thankfully no ice or snow.
Ramona was handy with the roofing shovel.
Yuri and David suffered the most on day 3. I had loading and unloading duties with the front loader.
I think the powers to be don't think I have enough to do. The furnace suffered a voltage surge during one of the ongoing midnight hail & thunderstorms a couple days ago. Possibly fried the board but definitely toasted the blower on the 11 year old Bryant furnace. Parts are half the cost of a new furnace ($1200). Going try to replace ECM module on the blower motor and hope that was the only casualty.
More pics Jim & Vince!
I have had many head scratching sessions when I opened up a wall and see someone else's work. Our house in OKC was a good case in example. When we got to remodeling the loft, the pressboard flooring was cupped along the edges. The PO's contractor used nails instead of screws. In the process of screwing the edges back down, there was an arc and the floor ignited. After putting the fire out, I found not only the that the subfloor was laid incorrectly… but the romex was run through the gaps in the bottom layer. Ripped up all the subfloor and found more horrors. The PO added another electrical box in the attic for his new AC condenser. He must have run short on the 8 gauge wire so he joined it with some left over 12 gauge romex. Just wire nutted it together and wrapped in a wad of electrical tap as big as softball. Why folks do stuff like this and take shortcuts, I'll never know.
Last year, we put a new roof on one of our rental houses in Ponca City. Day 1 & 2 hovered in the high 50s. Day 3 the high was 14 F. Not fun on the roof in that temp, but thankfully no ice or snow.
Ramona was handy with the roofing shovel.
Yuri and David suffered the most on day 3. I had loading and unloading duties with the front loader.
I think the powers to be don't think I have enough to do. The furnace suffered a voltage surge during one of the ongoing midnight hail & thunderstorms a couple days ago. Possibly fried the board but definitely toasted the blower on the 11 year old Bryant furnace. Parts are half the cost of a new furnace ($1200). Going try to replace ECM module on the blower motor and hope that was the only casualty.
More pics Jim & Vince!
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Actually the lumber is true 2" thick but is 3 1/2" in the other dimension (a pretty fat 3 1/2", but clearly not 4"). The wall between the Laundry and the Closet behind it was framed with 2x3's which are almost square: 2"x2.5". Those studs dense, heavy Douglas Fir which have been baked and dried in the walls over the last 86 years. They are hard as rock.Karl Grau wrote:I'm digging the 2x4s that are actually 2 inches by 4 inches. Did the house originally have knob and tube electrical?
The wiring is/was all in 1/2" black iron conduit; this house was obviously a higher quality build for the day. There were many things in this house that point to it being slightly more custom and having had a bigger budget behind it:
-Black Iron conduit & boxes (including in the detached Garage)
-Lighting: there were wall sconces everywhere in this house, the Living Room alone had 6 and even had a special project lamp which lit up the wall above the fireplace. When we bought the house and had it re-wired, the electricians found the projector still up there in the housing built into the vaulted ceiling (the house was remodeled in 1942 where a lot of sconces and this projector where covered over; date was confirmed when we pulled the newspaper out of one of the wall sconce boxes)
-High, coved plaster ceilings in all rooms (except the Kitchen)
-High vaulted ceiling in the large Living Room (13.5x22)
-Large Kitchen with attached Breakfast Nook with casement windows all around
-The Kitchen had some interesting features: namely a built-in trash chute with an opening in the tile countertop next to the sink. It emptied into a galvanized box under the counter with an access door to the outside. The hole in the counter had been covered over decades before we got this house, but they left the box there; when we installed a dishwasher, I removed it and the cabinet framing around it. The box still had the original sticker on it (what was left of it at least): it was made by the Acme Sanitary Company (or something like that) here in Los Angeles.
-Size: it's a 1,400 s.f. with only 2 Bedrooms; the Bedrooms are large (11x13 and 11.5x17) both with French Doors and Windows onto the rear yard. It has a large separate Dining Room with 8'-0" of French Doors onto the front porch
-True walk-in Closets for each Bedroom, each with small casement windows
-Hardwood flooring throughout except the Kitchen/Breakfast/Laundry which had Linoleum (always designed and built this way since they changed the sub-floor to 1 3/4" T&G planks). This alone is not uncommon for any house of this era, but is a high quality feature nonetheless (at least compared to track housing today). Some goes for the Bath with the 1" hex tiles on the floor.
-The Garage is an oversized one car (14x28) and had some kind of early version of drywall on the walls. It was thin and very brittle and had some kind of factory finish on it; I'm sure it was loaded with Asbestos and likely shortened my life when I took it down. I think I saw a tag on the back of a panel that marked it as being made here in Los Angeles; this house seems to have been a testbed for a lot of local specialty fittings.
It was built well and has stood the test of time including being moved across town, they even moved the garage with it.
Here is the complete photo folder of both the Living Room and ongoing Kitchen remodels:http://s499.photobucket.com/user/vinceg ... %20Remodel
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
LOL. Story of my life too.geordi wrote:I think the powers to be don't think I have enough to do.
Cool pics guys. It's comforting to see the DIY spirit in other aspects besides our bimmers.
Anyway, if you're interested to see more of my crap renovations, here are a couple of snapshots of some of the renovation work I did on POS this house. As I write this I'm wondering what possessed me to buy this money pit in the first place.
Oh well. It's only money and you can't take it with you.
I rebuilt my shed.
Nice thing about it is it doesn't leak anymore like the old POS.
Installed a couple of heat pump systems, one for the new addition and the other for the garage.
Got keep comfy working on my bimmers.
I installed the air handler horizontally in the closet of the addition.
It will be enclosed with sliding doors for easy access.
I rebuilt my stairs because when we pulled the burgundy (yuk) carpet up we found a million staples in the shity pine treads.
So I ripped this sucker out,
The loft was covered in the same burgundy carpet so that got ripped out at the same time.
The house was a construction zone for a couple of months as the stairs were being built and the bamboo flooring went in on the second floor.
But the end result was satisfying,
I'm still unsure what I will do about that crap beam though.
The addition is progressing somewhat at a leisurely pace because life got in the way.
But it has gone from this,
to this,
Comments on my tape and mud job are welcome.
I'm now working on the bathroom installing cement board and drywall.
cheers.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Awesome job! So its a two story addition? If thats a master suite in the making on the second level, you may find staying there all morning Drywall work looks well done. Last home re-no, we used venetian plaster in the rooms. I'm an ok drywaller, but the venetian plaster is more forgiving, though time consuming.
We had some very dark beams on our light colored ceiling that Ramona wanted to soften up. She painted them with a milky, white based paint (I'm trying to remember the brand). Then hand sanded them to the desired color. You can see them in the photo below. In the second pic, the wall surfaces are venetian plaster with yellow pigment added to the plaster. Yeah, that's a veneer stone. Ramona likes to take new and make old. The wet bar became my IT closet.
Is it you don't like that the beam white and it stands out? Can you strip and return it to its wood grain for staining? Or maybe paint it a darker color then sand it down to soften the white. If you want it white, you could paint your handrails, spindles and stair risers white and it would blend in better.demetk wrote:I'm still unsure what I will do about that crap beam though.
We had some very dark beams on our light colored ceiling that Ramona wanted to soften up. She painted them with a milky, white based paint (I'm trying to remember the brand). Then hand sanded them to the desired color. You can see them in the photo below. In the second pic, the wall surfaces are venetian plaster with yellow pigment added to the plaster. Yeah, that's a veneer stone. Ramona likes to take new and make old. The wet bar became my IT closet.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I think he's referring to the older one running parallel under the loft. It looks pretty checked with a bunch of crap on it.There's pretty much no way to clean it up
I would consider cladding it and painting it out like the other new beam it all you want to do is make it disappear. That way you make the staircase the centerpiece, which is where you put all you effort.
I would consider cladding it and painting it out like the other new beam it all you want to do is make it disappear. That way you make the staircase the centerpiece, which is where you put all you effort.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Exactly right. At the moment it's the focal point. I wish I could just replace it with some inset laminated beams and have a flat ceiling, but that white fake beam is actually 2 2x10's tying the front wall into the second floor. If the house had a actual ridge beam then it would be easy to cut everything out. So it just sits there until I decide what to do with it. My wife says the same thing, just cover it with drywall and that would make it disappear. But that would be the easy way out.vinceg101 wrote:I think he's referring to the older one running parallel under the loft. It looks pretty checked with a bunch of crap on it.There's pretty much no way to clean it up
I would consider cladding it and painting it out like the other new beam it all you want to do is make it disappear. That way you make the staircase the centerpiece, which is where you put all you effort.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Rebuilt this thing after 25 or 30 years of neglect. Got a little frustrated at the corner there and need to rework it a bit.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Quite nice. Next time, instead of a wrenching party at my place, I think I'll do a rock laying party.ahab wrote:Rebuilt this thing after 25 or 30 years of neglect. Got a little frustrated at the corner there and need to rework it a bit.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Next time, you're coming to my place for an ITB balacing party!
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Yeah baby. Does that involve rocks?ahab wrote:Next time, you're coming to my place for an ITB balacing party!
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
In a glass maybe.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I finally got the 6 can lights with LED bulb/trim installed in the back area of my garage, where the laundry and general workbench is.
yeah its a mess, but its 'getting there'.
6" IC remodel housing with a 10w LED lamp, does about 900 lumens, its weird having all this light ON my task and not IN my eyes.
I can finally take down the hideous dual 8' T12 lamp. These 6 cans putting out over 5000 lumens use less energy than a single 8' T12 bulbs with vastly superior light color and quality.
A little while ago I also got these cool linear shelves installed in the laundry area.
2x12 attached to the walls into studs using pocket hole screws, 2.5". I've found this to be a wonderful technique for creating invisible support for wall shelves. The vertical support, also attached with pocket screws into a stud, does most of the real supporting, I can stack bodies on these shelves.
The metal cladding is some 12" wide with a 1.5" front lip galvanized steel I bought from a guy via CL, I think its for HVAC duct building, but its perfect for cladding a 2x12 and creating a cool industrial look.
yeah its a mess, but its 'getting there'.
6" IC remodel housing with a 10w LED lamp, does about 900 lumens, its weird having all this light ON my task and not IN my eyes.
I can finally take down the hideous dual 8' T12 lamp. These 6 cans putting out over 5000 lumens use less energy than a single 8' T12 bulbs with vastly superior light color and quality.
A little while ago I also got these cool linear shelves installed in the laundry area.
2x12 attached to the walls into studs using pocket hole screws, 2.5". I've found this to be a wonderful technique for creating invisible support for wall shelves. The vertical support, also attached with pocket screws into a stud, does most of the real supporting, I can stack bodies on these shelves.
The metal cladding is some 12" wide with a 1.5" front lip galvanized steel I bought from a guy via CL, I think its for HVAC duct building, but its perfect for cladding a 2x12 and creating a cool industrial look.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I need to look into LEDs more thoroughly for the garage and workshop. (and BTW, your pics don't work for me)
After forgetting to turn the lights off in the workshop for like the 500th time, I put in a timer switch. Because I live for danger (and that I knew there was no actual danger), I did it without turning the power off.
After forgetting to turn the lights off in the workshop for like the 500th time, I put in a timer switch. Because I live for danger (and that I knew there was no actual danger), I did it without turning the power off.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I think a normal switch with those bungees tied in with assorted weights of tiny rocks would be a more eco friendly timer for your CA folks.Karl Grau wrote:I need to look into LEDs more thoroughly for the garage and workshop. (and BTW, your pics don't work for me)
After forgetting to turn the lights off in the workshop for like the 500th time, I put in a timer switch. Because I live for danger (and that I knew there was no actual danger), I did it without turning the power off.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Nice dry stack Ahab. Stone work is the best. Good, solid manual labor that leaves me feeling exhausted at the end of the day. Great mental exercise too finding the pattern with the stone and putting it together. My chisels and hammers will travel!
The stone that was on the fireplace in the above photo, became the bench & wall in the back yard in the below photos. Part of the wooden mantel was recycled too.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
geordi wrote:I think a normal switch with those bungees tied in with assorted weights of tiny rocks would be a more eco friendly timer for your CA folks.
It looks like you're pretty eco friendly yourself. A Eco Okie if you will.geordi wrote:The stone that was on the fireplace in the above photo, became the bench & wall in the back yard in the below photos. Part of the wooden mantel was recycled too.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Installed this!
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Interesting. Just watch out when it finally becomes self aware.e28Sean wrote:Installed this!
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I see a potential huge catfight between Nest and Alexa.demetk wrote:Interesting. Just watch out when it finally becomes self aware.
I think it is interesting too but I can heat my house for 3-4 winters for what it costs.
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I'd love to put on in, but not in my house, but a county building I manage. Customers and regulars have figured out the programmable ones there and overridden the default return to settings, so when they're hot they don't turn it off for 2 hours, they turn it off, period. Or to 80, for perhaps weeks. Yeah, this building doesn't get much use.demetk wrote:Interesting. Just watch out when it finally becomes self aware.e28Sean wrote:Installed this!
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Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
I went to building and safety and got an official address.
Looks like I'll be joining this thread. I've been paying on a small lot in the San Bernadino mountains and I'm getting ready to build a cool mountain retreat up there in a few months!
The plan is to build 2 Aero Houses and connect them with a deck, and (hopefully) some kind of covered parking in the rear.
Wish me luck, it's my first property and I'm stoked!
Looks like I'll be joining this thread. I've been paying on a small lot in the San Bernadino mountains and I'm getting ready to build a cool mountain retreat up there in a few months!
The plan is to build 2 Aero Houses and connect them with a deck, and (hopefully) some kind of covered parking in the rear.
Wish me luck, it's my first property and I'm stoked!
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Oh yeah. That sounds like it's going to be a lot of fun. How's the view?Acid House wrote:I went to building and safety and got an official address.
Looks like I'll be joining this thread. I've been paying on a small lot in the San Bernadino mountains and I'm getting ready to build a cool mountain retreat up there in a few months!
The plan is to build 2 Aero Houses and connect them with a deck, and (hopefully) some kind of covered parking in the rear.
Wish me luck, it's my first property and I'm stoked!
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- Posts: 580
- Joined: Dec 04, 2012 2:06 AM
Re: What Did You Do To Your House Recently?
Nothing crazy but here is essentially the ground level view that you'd see out the front of the larger aero house. The ground floor and loft will be raised in piers though, rather than graded and poured. I've already got some solar spotlights on those big pines and kissing the boulders, it's going to be a magical place when it's all done I'm super excited!demetk wrote:Oh yeah. That sounds like it's going to be a lot of fun. How's the view?Acid House wrote:I went to building and safety and got an official address.
Looks like I'll be joining this thread. I've been paying on a small lot in the San Bernadino mountains and I'm getting ready to build a cool mountain retreat up there in a few months!
The plan is to build 2 Aero Houses and connect them with a deck, and (hopefully) some kind of covered parking in the rear.
Wish me luck, it's my first property and I'm stoked!
Also it will be an exercise in forward thinking technology, I'm going to put some cool inventions in there to accomplish some normally energy intensive home needs, and utilize solar power (photovoltaic and other ways) to power most if not all of the household.
Last edited by Acid House on Apr 23, 2015 6:58 PM, edited 1 time in total.