Doohickie
Cyburbian
- Messages
- 10,598
- Points
- 57
I feel seen.Directly before that, the owners were here at least 30 years and the husband was an engineer so he obviously felt qualified to do all of the work himself.
I feel seen.Directly before that, the owners were here at least 30 years and the husband was an engineer so he obviously felt qualified to do all of the work himself.
I'm not following what you mean by "a bulkhead."Completely understand. There were many nights while I was doing the demo and prep for my kitchen remodel where I just looked at things previous owners had done with utter disgust. As an example, the old kitchen had 30" cabinets with a bulkhead above. I knew that I'd likely have some vent plumbing to deal with, but wasn't expecting the electrical issues. Rather than do things properly (electric ran through the attic to kitchen) and come all the way over to the wall and go down through the top plate, they cut the corner through the bulkhead. Saving approximately 14" of wire back when wire was pennies a foot. However, this meant I had to completely rewire the entire kitchen. 12g romex is a lot more than pennies a foot these days.
Also referred to as soffit. It's a boxed in section between the ceiling and the tops of 30" high cabinets.I'm not following what you mean by "a bulkhead."
Ugh. Appraisal is kind of like just some dude's opinion, man.We've been in our house for around six years. The family next door to us bought that house a couple of months before we moved in, but spent six or seven months afterwards gutting the interior and remodeling. And, the result of their efforts is incredibly nice. Now that they have a couple of small children, they want to move to the adjoining school district, so their house hit the market this morning...for roughly $150k above what they'll eventually get for it. Yeesh. It's not going to help that their realtor also listed a similar house on this block today for...wait for it...about a $150k lower asking price.
Eleven days later, the house down the street is under contract, and the guys next door lowered their asking price this morning by $50k.We've been in our house for around six years. The family next door to us bought that house a couple of months before we moved in, but spent six or seven months afterwards gutting the interior and remodeling. And, the result of their efforts is incredibly nice. Now that they have a couple of small children, they want to move to the adjoining school district, so their house hit the market this morning...for roughly $150k above what they'll eventually get for it. Yeesh. It's not going to help that their realtor also listed a similar house on this block today for...wait for it...about a $150k lower asking price.
I like the lighter color blue. Personally, I'd pick a smaller pattern. Not tiny, just smaller.Currently this is the backsplash tile my wife and I have picked out
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Before we pull the trigger I decided to look at the tile website and see what else they have. I like this one too:
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I think it makes the room look a little lighter/airier. My wife said either one is fine but we both have a concern about having to match if we switch kitchen colors. Currently our walls are painted thusly
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What would you do? Pick the tile that's neutral, colorwize? Or go with the blue?
Everything goes the way of avocado appliances eventually.I just wonder if the current fashion tiles won't go the way of avocado appliances in a few years ...
The tile that was there when we moved in was dated but it wasn't awful. It is interesting I think that while the backsplash and wallpaper were complementary colors, the countertop was anything but. From the real estate listing for our house:I just wonder if the current fashion tiles won't go the way of avocado appliances in a few years ...
I was fortunate to visit Lisbon's tile museum, where blue was almost ubiquitous. The original name for tiles in Portugal was "azulejos", which means "blue things". In the beginning tiles were all blue. So much for your avocado obsolescence!Everything goes the way of avocado appliances eventually.
Still have to caulk but I got the grout done today.I got the last of the tile up today. Still need to grout and caulk. I'll post more pics when it's fully done.
Great jobFor a rank amateur (first time doing wall tile) I'm pretty happy with the way the tile came out, especially the grout and caulk lines. A bit of touch up paint and a couple other details and the kitchen is DONE.
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I am not looking forward to seeing what is behind the fridge or in the little cracks between the oven and the counters.
As a former mover, I could tell some stories about finding all manner of things behind appliances, under beds, between sofa cushions, in closets. It pays to spend a few minutes checking ahead of the crew's arrival.I am not looking forward to seeing what is behind the fridge or in the little cracks between the oven and the counters.
Didn't use the company I told you about the the windows, did you?New windows ordered. Went with a company that had a special, and Hubby still had some sticker shock. But we're replacing 1/2 the windows, all on one side of the house, and I'm getting the half-moon window tinted.
I'll post some photos once the windows arrive and get installed.
Next up: removing carpet, putting down new flooring, maybe some new bathroom tile.
Our kitchen appliances are all about 30+ years old and looking a little worse for wear and all have at least one function not working but otherwise get the job done... until this weekend when our dishwasher finally died completely. After looking all summer and thinking about it, we finally bit the bullet today and ordered all new appliances. I'm very much looking forward to a much quieter dishwasher and no longer having a side-by-side fridge/freezer. I am not looking forward to seeing what is behind the fridge or in the little cracks between the oven and the counters.
You must count how many times you run the dishwasher and let us know when it finally needs some work 20 years later.Just replaced our LG washer and dryer (8 years) with a Speed Queen set. Supposed to be real commercial quality with 10,000 uses and 20+ years. We shall see. This is our fourth washer/dryer set in 24 years (married 26). New water heater (third in house in 20 years).
The outside exhaust was a must-have for the house I'm about to start building. It was an add-on to vent but I think it's essential. Those non-vented hoods suck and do nothing to clear the air. I went with just a cooktop under the exhaust hood and then instead of a double wall oven it's one oven and one microwave. I love the look of it.Thought the over the range microwave bit the bullet this morning. I unplugged it and plugged it in again and now it seems to be working again. What I would really like is a power range hood that exhausts outside.
100% Every house that I was a construction manager on had exterior exhaust in the kitchen because I insisted on it. The 100+ year old rowhome we gutted has an exterior vented exhaust, the beach house does not. The stove is unfortunately on the wall that has a huge vaulted ceiling and away from the exterior wall so there’s no economical way to deal with it.The outside exhaust was a must-have for the house I'm about to start building. It was an add-on to vent but I think it's essential. Those non-vented hoods suck and do nothing to clear the air. I went with just a cooktop under the exhaust hood and then instead of a double wall oven it's one oven and one microwave. I love the look of it.
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On our third dishwasher in the house.You must count how many times you run the dishwasher and let us know when it finally needs some work 20 years later.
On our third dishwasher in the house.
Just put a compression valve on the end of the existing water line behind the fridge and connect it with a length of stainless braided hose. Requires almost no tools and almost no know how. Cut pipe, slide on nut, slide on compression olive, put pipe in valve, tighten it down. Problem solved.This install has turned into a total cluster f*ck.
Take down the old microwave to find that the tile backsplash actually goes all the way up behind the cabinet but thankfully we could re-jigger the existing bracket enough to make it work with the new microwave without having to get another crew who can drill into the tile.
Remove the old oven but the elbow for the gas connection is massive and at a totally different angle than what will work with the new oven. Oh... it's also slightly loose and has probably had a small gas leak for years. We lucked out that one of our installers is a pipefitter and can take care of that for us.
Then we move on to the dishwasher, which was the impetus for us finally buying new appliances in the first place - old dishwasher was probably close to 30-years-old and finally died completely about a week ago. First the shut off valve to the dishwasher turns and turns but doesn't do anything. I bought from Home Depot and their policy doesn't allow them to shut off at the main valve so the option is to leave the old dishwasher in place and then leave us the new dishwasher and call a plumber or a separate installer to come out. One of the guys in the crew says he's happy to handle it for us though... for a price. But he does refund our install, the price for the parts package, and the haul away fee and gives us a price actually about $50 cheaper (and still hauls away our old dishwasher. Fine, let's do it. Turn off the water to the whole house and then remove the old dishwasher only to find a big a55 hole in the slab under it that somebody covered with sheetrock, probably 20+ years ago to repair some damage from a leak or something. Luckily we had enough pieces of wood around that we could remove the sheetrock and build a level area from the wood that was flush with the rest of the flooring. Get the new dishwasher installed, turn back on the water, and go to run it and water is leaking out of the front panel and it's just beeping like crazy. FML!
Can't refuse delivery of the dishwasher because it's already installed. Do a few things and try to run it again and it appears to maybe now be working correctly? Who knows. Installers say the best bet is to call Home Depot within 48 hours and say I installed it since I didn't mind turning on/off the main water supply and that it's just not working correctly. Home Depot will likely just mark this one as defective and send out another... only problem is I'm going to run into the same issue with the faulty shut-off valve so I need to try to get the same installers or call them before the new one gets here and they'll pull the old one out for me and then come back and install the new one once it's delivered.
The hits keep coming though because just to be safe and make sure the counter depth fridge we plan to order will work, we pull out the old one to check the shut off valve.... and it's not there. Instead, we've got about 15' of copper pipe that, the best we can tell, is tucked away under the cabinetry running along the wall and making a couple 90º turns to a shut off valve under the sink (at least that shut off valve does appear to be working). So now once we get a new fridge I've got to call somebody out to try to pull a plastic or braided line through there somehow since the fitting on the copper line is so old it's unlikely to fit on the new fridge once it's remove from the old one. SMH
What a PITA.
And my wife wonders why I never bother with any sort of home improvement projects.
Just put a compression valve on the end of the existing water line behind the fridge and connect it with a length of stainless braided hose. Requires almost no tools and almost no know how. Cut pipe, slide on nut, slide on compression olive, put pipe in valve, tighten it down. Problem solved.
Additionally, does the dishwasher have it's own line and shut off? It isn't just tee'd off the hot water supply for the kitchen sink either with or without a shutoff valve? If you are going to have to turn the water off anyway, do yourself a favor and replace the shut off for the dishwasher with a quarter turn stop.
I was in a small appliance shop last week picking up a chord for a city project. A contractor was begging the owner to give him a price match on something from one of the big boxes. He couldn't because it was some sort of special pricing from the brand. The contractor was doing everything he could to not have to buy from the big box because of the issues he's had with them. The funny thing is the small appliance shop owner has a store that is a wreck and some of the worst customer service skills I've ever seen, but he does what he says he's going to do, delivers on time, and will take back a product if its defective.I learned years ago to not buy appliances from the big box stores. Generally you are better off ordering from a local appliance store if you have one. Even though it may cost more, the installation usually goes much more smoothly as it's not subcontracted out and their installers can deal with a variety of issues.
The things you learn when you actually read the operators manual!![]()