Thursday, November 27, 2008

Busy, Busy Days

It was fantastic.
I got up and took the teen to school and took the trash to the transfer station and got rid of it and I was travelling back and I thought, HEY, places that sell brick are always closed when I am off of work, I'll stop in. So I stopped in to Knox Brick. Nice, nice folk. They showed me what they had and I hemmed and hawed. It was expensive and I didn;t really know how many I needed. I was just getting a feel for the prices, etc. The brick, you see, is to repair the tops of the chimneys (evident in the pictures). Turns out that old bricks are made a different size than new bricks. Also old bricks are solid and new bricks can be solid or hollow. Solids are more pricey. Bummer. So I started to go home and I saw another brick place. I don't know why the sudden and unplanned obsession with brick. This place looked closed, but they had a few pallets of brick and a couple people. They were going out of business. :( Too bad for them. Good for me - but I felt bad for them. They happened to have a very good match for my old brick in hollows and solids. They sold me a pallet (!) of hollows for $85 (that's 575 bricks) and GAVE me the 85 solids for free and I also bought four bags of morter for $5 each. I figure I can fix the chimneys and then instead of making the columns in front out of wood as originally planned, I can make them out of brick, too. I can make a brick mailbox. Maybe even a bread oven? Beyond that, I'm taking suggestions. ;)
OH - and they solved the transportation problem as well! They will deliver the pallet of brick for free on Monday! The place is Brickstone on Middlebrook Pike and they still have more brick if you are in Knoxville and need any.

I also looked into the metal roofing carried by 84 Lumber - it is manufactured by Metal Sales. I am looking at the "Classic Rib" in acrylic coated galvalume. It is exposed fastener. It is a project for another day, but I was curious on the pricing. It is $2.70 per linear foot (36" wide). Not including tax or delivery of course. Nor fasteners or closures, etc. I still don't know if this is the best price out there.

Vince and I ate out at Gondalier Restaurant. It was nice, though a lot of cheese. We are not used to that. But we needed our strength for...

The floor at the tiny bungalow!

We have since removed 90% of the livingroom floor. It needed it. We purchased a pallet of #3 common oak last weekend. I know we will have to cull out a lot, but with what is left over, we will floor the attic. Vincent and I got everything going - all set up and the tar paper down and the compressor set up and the flooring nailer adjusted, etc. Vincent and I then started nailing down the new floor, joining in with the old floor! He was a quick study. He's really smart! I like this age - 16 is a great age. Vincent has gotten to be really helpful. I'm proud of him. He and I managed to lay about 30 square feet of floor. It was a good feeling to finally leave the house in better shape than when we got there!

Now we hurt in places we didn't know we had.

Update on the other house... I have sealed the grout in the hall bathroom completely. All of it - with a tiny paintbrush... I also installed the backsplash and sidesplash. I also installed all new molding and shoe molding and the air vent. Then I caulked it all in. I cut the threshhold but still need to install it. That bathroom is looking like a million bucks! That's good since I decided to sell this house. ;) Yesterday I started mudding the drywall joints in the laundry room. I'll finish that tomorrow.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

A Little Election Night Home Improvement

I went and voted. Then I felt a lot of pent up energy. I tried to ignore it, but that didn't really work. I tried to just sit and plan and daydream my way out of it. But that didn't work either.
So I installed the granite vanity top in the hall bathroom at the Tallahassee house that has to be rented before I can move into my bungalow. Yeah, I have a lot on my plate.
First I carried the slab up to the bathroom. It was very heavy and I had to be careful because if you torque it in the wrong way, it will just snap in two. I've seen it happen. You have to hold the slab from the center hole. I had to take it from in the garage and around the outside of the house and then up the stairs. Then I grabbed the bowl and the clips. I put the slab onto the vanity and mounted the bolts into the pre-drilled (thank goodness!) holes. Then I put a generous bead of kitchen and bath adhesive caulk around the perimeter of the opening on the slab. I centered the sink basin onto the hole and held it in place with one hand as I installed the four clips, washers and nuts with the other. When everything was finger tight, I made sure the whole thing was centered and then tightened everything down. Then I carefully lowered the whole vanity top into the vanity. It fit perfectly! Looks NICE, eh?


Parker inspects the undermount sink bowl for cracks or imperfections. Finding none, he instructs me to proceed.



I have the slab on the vanity, balanced precariously.



Here is a closeup of one of the bolts installed into a pre-drilled hole.



And the whole thing is installed and together. No I have no pictures in between. I was holding the caulked bowl in one hand and tightening the clips with the other and then lowering the whole thing with both hands, so, sorry, no pics!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Rain in laundry room and Back porch finished - almost

So Vincent calls from downstairs: "MOM! There is a whole lot of PITA dripping from the ceiling down here!" Who says he doesn't have a sense of humor. Yeah, it was raining in the laundry room. The kind of rain that can't be ignored. He had just started the dishwasher. Dan had been downstairs earlier and reported that the place had been dry. I removed the items from the kitchen cabinet and found no real water. I looked in the laundry room and saw that the water was coming in from around a pipe. We couldn't really gather where the pipe was coming from though... It made no sense. I sawed a hole in the wall under the sink. Nothing. Everything seemed dry. I uninstalled the dishwasher. Ok, Dan helped (I love you sweetheart!). I sawed a hole behind the dishwasher. Nothing. Everything seemed dry. I drywalled back the dishwasher wall. We reinstalled the dishwasher. We scratched our heads. We ran water. We reinstalled the dishwasher. I went to connect it back to the water source and HEY! I got wet. Turns out it was a PVC leak under the sink. Hell and half of Germany later and it was a PVC leak under the sink. It was a terrible job of PVC plumbing under the sink, too, so I decided to purchase all new. So another trip to Lowes. $15 later and another hour and it was all back together and everything was cut to the right lengths and tight and perfect. ALL DRY! I drywalled back the hole behind the sink. That pipe in the ceiling in the laundry room? Probably just a vent. Do yourself a favor and check all PVC connections under the sink if you have a mysterious plumbing leak. Seems this one was intermittent. It's fixed now, so I'm much happier. But it was a setback because it caused me to have to take another day away from the goal of fixing the little house enough to move in...

Scott from Matthew Millsaps finished the back porch - almost. He came out, sistered two rafters, cut back the porch 15 inches, reworked the gutters, and re angled them, replaced the fascia boards, removed the wooden soffits and replaced them with the vinyl soffits that were there before (now the soffit vents actually vent!) and put in a drip edge and new .45 mil EPDM fully adhered rubber roof. They did the work well. They reused as much of my own materials as possible to keep my costs as low as possible - especially since this was an unexpected expense and since this will be the rented and eventually sold house. Not to say that the quality is not good - it is very good. A EPDM rubber roof is, IMO, the only way to go on this flat roof. There is not enough of an angle to use roll asphalt and other materials are more expensive. The drip edge all the way around will save the wood underneath from rotting out again. This basically saved the entire porch. The only thing left for him to do is reattach the downspout to the gutter and pin up the corner soffit where it came loose.

Now, I just have to build stairs. I plan on using premade stringers and reusing the treds because the treds are not rotten. I'll also use my other scrap pressure treated wood. Then I'll paint the whole thing brown to match the porch and it will look as new as it is - brand new. Unfortunately, I cannot leave the steps and rent out the house. It is not safe. :( Fortunately, I know how to build steps.

That leaves only 4 more "big" house projects. Finish the bathroom. To do that I need to install the vanity top, the faucet, and run the plumbing. I have done these tasks before and am happy to do them again. I need to drywall the ceiling in the laundry room and reinstall the light fixture. I also need to install the hot water heater and purchase and install a furnace. I can do the water heater and furnace after renting out the house because their counterparts still work - they are just not as efficient as they could be.

Tonight: BATHROOM VANITY.
Pictures at 11.