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#41
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![]() "cshenk" wrote Snipped but LOL! Best part was no floor anchoring. That was the least fun part of finishing a basement but it's got to be done and done right. Yep. One of the best things anyone has invented for building recently, is the self tapping concrete screw. Trying to anchor anything in old concrete used to mean a gunpowder powered nail, but now, drill a hole and drive a screw. So easy. Also, if any of you don't yet have an impact driver (cordless) you need to get one. They are the stuff for driving hard to drive things like concrete screws, and deck type screws. -- Jim in NC |
#42
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![]() "HeyBub" wrote in message m... BOOKS? In a LIBRARY? How quaint. Mine has hand puppets, games, wall art, toys, videos, and a few other odds and ends. They do have a spinner rack containing historical romances ("bodice rippers") with a sign: "Leave two, take two". Our local library has a gazillion or so books, along with some CD and DVDs. Haven't seen any toys or hand-puppets outside the little section they have tucked away in one corner for moms and young kids. I can say with confidence that 90%+ of their space is devoted to books. They're happy to bring in titles from other libraries upon request too. Libraries have abrogated their classical role as repositories of information. Most should be burnt to the ground and the ashes scattered. Not to worry, you won't be burning books! You forgot to mention lynching the librarians. To be even more topical, there are libraries in Berkeley that loans tools (power saws, pressure washers, ladders, post hole diggers, etc.). Buncha goddamn communists, you ask me. Heaven forbid that anyone should be able to fix up their home without somebody making a profit off it. Come to think of it the whole idea of people being able to *borrow* books rather than buying them is pretty damned commie too. |
#43
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"HeyBub" wrote in message
m... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I have a theory that the internet is behind the pathetic trend toward helplessness. I wonder how many youngsters consider going to the library for a book to help them with a project they've never attempted. Does anyone even notice that there are shelves full of books as you walk into Home Depot or Lowe's? BOOKS? In a LIBRARY? How quaint. Mine has hand puppets, games, wall art, toys, videos, and a few other odds and ends. They do have a spinner rack containing historical romances ("bodice rippers") with a sign: "Leave two, take two". Libraries have abrogated their classical role as repositories of information. Most should be burnt to the ground and the ashes scattered. Not to worry, you won't be burning books! To be even more topical, there are libraries in Berkeley that loans tools (power saws, pressure washers, ladders, post hole diggers, etc.). Buncha goddamn communists, you ask me. If that's how things are where you live, it's because of YOU. |
#44
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On 8/7/2010 4:12 PM, JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
wrote in message m... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I have a theory that the internet is behind the pathetic trend toward helplessness. I wonder how many youngsters consider going to the library for a book to help them with a project they've never attempted. Does anyone even notice that there are shelves full of books as you walk into Home Depot or Lowe's? BOOKS? In a LIBRARY? How quaint. Mine has hand puppets, games, wall art, toys, videos, and a few other odds and ends. They do have a spinner rack containing historical romances ("bodice rippers") with a sign: "Leave two, take two". Libraries have abrogated their classical role as repositories of information. Most should be burnt to the ground and the ashes scattered. Not to worry, you won't be burning books! To be even more topical, there are libraries in Berkeley that loans tools (power saws, pressure washers, ladders, post hole diggers, etc.). Buncha goddamn communists, you ask me. If that's how things are where you live, it's because of YOU. Uh, how is what the libraries contain "because of HIM"? In most towns the library has limited shelf space and tosses anything that doesn't move regularly. Are you saying that he should go regularly check out carpentry books that cover material that he has long since mastered just so the library will keep them? |
#45
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On Sat, 7 Aug 2010 09:29:02 -0700, "DGDevin" wrote:
"aemeijers" wrote in message m... I ain't proud- for stuff I don't know how to do, I'll seek out someone who does, even when I have to pay for it. And with the passing years, my understanding of the holes in my expertise has become more detailed. Oh yeah, that's why I hired a guy to do the plaster in our bedroom rather than make a mess of it myself. I also hired somebody to refinish the hardware floor, although having watched it done I'd be prepared to tackle that myself next time. The stuff like baseboard and painting and redoing my wife's closet I did because I figured I could. Plaster is an art, not something I'd ever have the time or need to learn. I also hired someone to put in a hardwood (bamboo, actually) floor. I wish I'd just bitten the bullet and done it myself. I had never seen it done and thought it would have taken a lot more knowledge to do. I did tile without having seen it done and there's a lot more to tile, IMO. BTW, if you want to get on your wife's good side, design and build her a new closet that increases her clothing storage capacity by 50% in the same closet--that's Eggs Benedict for breakfast for quite some time. She would never do that to me. Though on second thought, she might because it does take me a lot of time to actually finish projects. ;-) |
#46
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DGDevin wrote:
"HeyBub" wrote in message m... BOOKS? In a LIBRARY? How quaint. Mine has hand puppets, games, wall art, toys, videos, and a few other odds and ends. They do have a spinner rack containing historical romances ("bodice rippers") with a sign: "Leave two, take two". Our local library has a gazillion or so books, along with some CD and DVDs. Haven't seen any toys or hand-puppets outside the little section they have tucked away in one corner for moms and young kids. I can say with confidence that 90%+ of their space is devoted to books. They're happy to bring in titles from other libraries upon request too. Go to the circulation desk and ask for the following: * Encyclopedia Judaica * Marquis Who's Who * Cumulative Books In Print * Oxford English Dictionary * Physician's Desk Reference Report back. Libraries have abrogated their classical role as repositories of information. Most should be burnt to the ground and the ashes scattered. Not to worry, you won't be burning books! You forgot to mention lynching the librarians. Good idea! It will put a stop to the following category of conversations: Cop: "Did you report a man exposing himself?" Librarian: "Yes, I did. He exposed himself right over there - at the computer in the children's section." Cop: "Do you know who it was?" Librarian: "Yes." Cop: "(???) Well, who was it?" Librarian: "I'm not going to tell you because we respect our patron's privacy." To be even more topical, there are libraries in Berkeley that loans tools (power saws, pressure washers, ladders, post hole diggers, etc.). Buncha goddamn communists, you ask me. Heaven forbid that anyone should be able to fix up their home without somebody making a profit off it. Come to think of it the whole idea of people being able to *borrow* books rather than buying them is pretty damned commie too. Lending libraries started during the Middle Ages because books were expensive. Used books can be had for as little as ten cents on Amazon, so the original need for libraries has vanished. It's the foot-in-the-water problem. What's to stop Berkeley from loaning out party supplies (you need 200 folding chairs for a garden wedding), selling ice-cream or gasoline at cost, operating parking lots, or, God forbid, offering free medical services? |
#47
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HeyBub wrote:
DGDevin wrote: "HeyBub" wrote in message m... BOOKS? In a LIBRARY? How quaint. Mine has hand puppets, games, wall art, toys, videos, and a few other odds and ends. They do have a spinner rack containing historical romances ("bodice rippers") with a sign: "Leave two, take two". Our local library has a gazillion or so books, along with some CD and DVDs. Haven't seen any toys or hand-puppets outside the little section they have tucked away in one corner for moms and young kids. I can say with confidence that 90%+ of their space is devoted to books. They're happy to bring in titles from other libraries upon request too. Go to the circulation desk and ask for the following: * Encyclopedia Judaica * Marquis Who's Who * Cumulative Books In Print * Oxford English Dictionary * Physician's Desk Reference Report back. Even in a 'real' library, like at a major university, hardcopy versions of expensive reference works are getting rare. Cheaper and safer for them to have the DVD version on a local server, or use their house terminals as a portal to the by-subscription secure (and not visible to the public internet) web site. Of course, if the power goes out, and the long haul telecom fails in long term fashion, we're all gonna start missing the dead-tree editions. (Even the illiterati barbarians know how to use books to start a fire come winter.) -- aem sends... -- aem sends... |
#48
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aemeijers wrote:
Go to the circulation desk and ask for the following: * Encyclopedia Judaica * Marquis Who's Who * Cumulative Books In Print * Oxford English Dictionary * Physician's Desk Reference Report back. Even in a 'real' library, like at a major university, hardcopy versions of expensive reference works are getting rare. Cheaper and safer for them to have the DVD version on a local server, or use their house terminals as a portal to the by-subscription secure (and not visible to the public internet) web site. Of course, if the power goes out, and the long haul telecom fails in long term fashion, we're all gonna start missing the dead-tree editions. (Even the illiterati barbarians know how to use books to start a fire come winter.) Yep. Electronic books are the coming thing. There's even a free, open source, software package (Calibre) that allows you to store unlimited books on your computer's hard drive, transfer them between your ebook reader, and change formats so your Kindle can read a Sony download. If you get a chance, read an old (1989) novel, "Cyberbook" by Ben Bova. It deals with a young engineer trying to introduce an electronic book. Actually, Cyberbook is a spoof of the book industry. For example, Web Press (the fictious publisher) hires an efficiency expert who demands that the company save five cents per hundredweight on the glue used in perfect bindings (paperbacks). Unfortunately, the new glue has two problems: (1) At temperatures greater than one hundred degrees (as in a UPS truck), the glue decomposes, and (2) The decomposing glue not only releases the pages it also releases an hallucinatory gas such that the hippies in each bookstore's receiving department are compelled to rip off their clothes and run into the selling area screaming "French people are burning me with cigarettes!" If you've ever imagined a naked bookstore employee, you can imagine how ghastly the situation became. Also, again in the name of efficiency, Web Press automated their warehouse. Robotic machines traveled the warehouse on rails picking cases of books from the shelves. Unfortunately, due to an oversight, the robots could only reach four shelves high, and the warehouse had five shelves. This oddity was overcome by the simple expedient of hiring dwarves to ride atop the robots to reach the higher shelf. This in turn generated another problem inasmuch as the dwarves often fell off the robots and were run over... |
#49
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On Aug 7, 7:27*am, "Robert Green" wrote:
"DGDevin" wrote in message m... "Robert Green" wrote in message ... In short, WD has failed to teach her how to do nearly everything that ten years of experience makes it seem easy. *There was never any admission she was in over her head. *This was someone else's fault. *She did not know all the things she needed to know and did not even KNOW how deficient her knowledge was! Well I've never had any training on how to fix or modify PCs, yet over the . . . For at least ten years, there WAS no formal training in PCs to speak of, but if you read the instructions, the trade mags, BBS faqs and the like AND you had a feel for such things, you could easily learn enough to get by better than most. *I've built about thirty machines and fixed God knows how many more. *I've ruined a lot of gear, too - but experience gained is proportional to the amount of equipment destroyed (-:. *I also got a lot of stuff after the fact - like people blowing a power supply trying to install an AGP video card in a machine without an AGP video card slot. *Botched memory and hard drive upgrades accounted for a lot of the DOA's that ended up on my workbench. . . . years (my first PC had an 8088 processor) *I've successfully installed hard drives, audio and video cards, power supplies and so on. *I think the trick is in being able to honestly gauge what one can or cannot do, and in being able to follow instructions (and know when to call for help). *Some people just don't seem set up for that sort of problem solving. *I once ran a business where we made good money undoing the "repairs" and "customizing" such folks did.... If you can do a brake job, you can do a lot of PC repair. *The devil is in the details. *But what do you do when you've got a new drive that just won't boot no matter what? *Or a new CD burner that keeps spitting out coasters (back when blanks were $5 each!)? * Or a modem that won't stay on line? That's where skill, experience and good problem solving skills come into play. (Don't get me started on problem solving skills. *We hired a lot of "wannabees" in our IT department because management was unwilling to pay top dollar for really good people. *What they didn't realize was that by hiring incompetents to service machines that engineers, accountants, lawyers and others depended on to do THEIR work, net productivity plummeted. *It was really false economy.) You can tell by watching which techies evaluate all the clues first and which guys come in and do a "defrag" as the universal solution to all problems without a single actual thought about what the problem is or how to fix it. *It's almost like Dell tech support, gleefully leading people to restore from the system disks without mentioning it would wipe out all their existing data. Putting up a wall must seem the same to some people. *At one time, in real life or on TV, they see some master carpenter put up a wall and it looks SO easy. *They know they can make all those same motions so off they go, never even bothering to check out a Time-Life book from the library (old world) or Google it on line (new world). I find watching someone who knows what he is doing to be way more educational than an instruction manual could possibly be (at least for me). And if you're paying attention you notice things, like the carpenter is driving nails in sort of a criss-cross fashion and without being told why it seems to make sense. The person I am describing was so self-absorbed she would not notice in a million years how a craftsman did their work. *She moved out of a rooftop condo at a LOSS at the height of the real estate boom because the roof leaked in the rain. *She would go slate blank whenever confronted with something that was "too hard" like condo maintenance, computers, cars or income taxes. I don't know if this building/fixing ability is something we're born with (or without) or if it can be learned, but clearly a lot of otherwise functioning adults don't see to have it. You can say that again. *My sister couldn't survive in the modern world without technical assistance from my BIL and my nephew. *I think it's genetic because as soon I turned thirteen, I was building, building, building. Fortunately, I had some great carpenters and cabinet makers to watch. *That makes a big difference but some people could be watching Michaelangelo creating a sculpture and not learn one thing about his technique. But who knows, the same people who can't figure out how to hook up a hard drive or nail a stud in place probably have other talents--at least I hope so. Let's hope so. *I tend to find cluelessness in one area is often a good sign of cluelessness in others. *But I think in these cases it's more than that. It's not knowing that you don't know what you're doing. *That's a slightly more dangerous sort of ignorance than garden-variety dumb. -- Bobby G.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - My paperwork skills SUCK ![]() But I have great mechanical ability to fix things, can strike up a conversation with a total stranger and tend to be a good surviivor when things go bad. |
#50
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On Aug 6, 6:36*pm, (Doug Miller) wrote:
I'm just finishing the demolition phase of a minor remodeling project in my basement, removing about 8 feet of wall installed by a previous homeowner.. This project teaches a lesson: How NOT to Build a Wall, in Ten Easy Steps 1. Install the studs at random intervals. 2. Don't bother securing the bottom plate to the floor. If you cut a few of the studs just a bit long, and force-fit them, friction will keep the bottom plate in place. 3. Don't bother nailing those studs in place. Friction, remember? 4. Attach remaining studs to plates with six-penny box nails. 5. Use eight at each end because they're so small. 6. It's OK to use untreated lumber for the bottom plate. Water seepage won't harm fir, will it? 7. Use regular sheetrock for the entire wall. Water seepage won't harm that either, will it? 8. The doorpost doesn't need to be attached to the bottom plate. The sheetrock will keep it from moving. 9. Nail the sheetrock every 3 inches along each vertical edge. 10. That gives you enough nails that you don't need to nail it anywhere else. And don't _even_ get me started on the electrical code violations I found inside that wall... Why, oh why, do people with no knowledge or experience of the building trades imagine that they are competent to do their own construction? When I got around to changing the old kitchen into a bedroom after adding an addition, I found that the proud former owner had used scraps of sheetrock to do the walls. Pieces as small a 1' square! the price of mud he used probablywould have bought new sheetrock. Harry K |
#51
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On 8/08/10 9:56 AM, Harry K wrote:
On Aug 6, 6:36 pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: I'm just finishing the demolition phase of a minor remodeling project in my basement, removing about 8 feet of wall installed by a previous homeowner. This project teaches a lesson: How NOT to Build a Wall, in Ten Easy Steps 1. Install the studs at random intervals. 2. Don't bother securing the bottom plate to the floor. If you cut a few of the studs just a bit long, and force-fit them, friction will keep the bottom plate in place. 3. Don't bother nailing those studs in place. Friction, remember? 4. Attach remaining studs to plates with six-penny box nails. 5. Use eight at each end because they're so small. 6. It's OK to use untreated lumber for the bottom plate. Water seepage won't harm fir, will it? 7. Use regular sheetrock for the entire wall. Water seepage won't harm that either, will it? 8. The doorpost doesn't need to be attached to the bottom plate. The sheetrock will keep it from moving. 9. Nail the sheetrock every 3 inches along each vertical edge. 10. That gives you enough nails that you don't need to nail it anywhere else. And don't _even_ get me started on the electrical code violations I found inside that wall... Why, oh why, do people with no knowledge or experience of the building trades imagine that they are competent to do their own construction? When I got around to changing the old kitchen into a bedroom after adding an addition, I found that the proud former owner had used scraps of sheetrock to do the walls. Pieces as small a 1' square! the price of mud he used probablywould have bought new sheetrock. I don't even want to know how you hand a 1' square piece of drywall on studs with a 16" centre. yikes. -- Froz... The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance. |
#52
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In article ,
FrozenNorth wrote: I don't even want to know how you hand a 1' square piece of drywall on studs with a 16" centre. yikes. Why wouldn't you want to know? You could be lost in a post-apocalyptic wasteland some day, with your survival dependent on realizing that by rotating a 12" square 45 degrees you can span the better part of 17". |
#53
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In ,
Doug Miller typed: I'm just finishing the demolition phase of a minor remodeling project in my basement, removing about 8 feet of wall installed by a previous homeowner. This project teaches a lesson: How NOT to Build a Wall, in Ten Easy Steps 1. Install the studs at random intervals. 2. Don't bother securing the bottom plate to the floor. If you cut a few of the studs just a bit long, and force-fit them, friction will keep the bottom plate in place. 3. Don't bother nailing those studs in place. Friction, remember? 4. Attach remaining studs to plates with six-penny box nails. 5. Use eight at each end because they're so small. 6. It's OK to use untreated lumber for the bottom plate. Water seepage won't harm fir, will it? 7. Use regular sheetrock for the entire wall. Water seepage won't harm that either, will it? 8. The doorpost doesn't need to be attached to the bottom plate. The sheetrock will keep it from moving. 9. Nail the sheetrock every 3 inches along each vertical edge. 10. That gives you enough nails that you don't need to nail it anywhere else. And don't _even_ get me started on the electrical code violations I found inside that wall... Why, oh why, do people with no knowledge or experience of the building trades imagine that they are competent to do their own construction? Not all do; some post here instead. |
#54
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On Aug 8, 7:47*am, FrozenNorth
wrote: On 8/08/10 9:56 AM, Harry K wrote: On Aug 6, 6:36 pm, (Doug Miller) wrote: I'm just finishing the demolition phase of a minor remodeling project in my basement, removing about 8 feet of wall installed by a previous homeowner. This project teaches a lesson: How NOT to Build a Wall, in Ten Easy Steps 1. Install the studs at random intervals. 2. Don't bother securing the bottom plate to the floor. If you cut a few of the studs just a bit long, and force-fit them, friction will keep the bottom plate in place. 3. Don't bother nailing those studs in place. Friction, remember? 4. Attach remaining studs to plates with six-penny box nails. 5. Use eight at each end because they're so small. 6. It's OK to use untreated lumber for the bottom plate. Water seepage won't harm fir, will it? 7. Use regular sheetrock for the entire wall. Water seepage won't harm that either, will it? 8. The doorpost doesn't need to be attached to the bottom plate. The sheetrock will keep it from moving. 9. Nail the sheetrock every 3 inches along each vertical edge. 10. That gives you enough nails that you don't need to nail it anywhere else. And don't _even_ get me started on the electrical code violations I found inside that wall... Why, oh why, do people with no knowledge or experience of the building trades imagine that they are competent to do their own construction? When I got around to changing the old kitchen into a bedroom after adding an addition, I found that the proud former owner had used scraps of sheetrock to do the walls. *Pieces as small a 1' square! the price of mud he used probablywould have bought new sheetrock. I don't even want to know how you hand a 1' square piece of drywall on studs with a 16" centre. *yikes. -- Froz... The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Old construction, the walls were the old wood ship lap. This must have been built way back. After some research I found out it had been _two_ shacks shoved together. Harry K |
#55
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On Aug 6, 11:33*pm, Rich wrote:
Leon wrote: "Doug Miller" wrote in message ... I'm just finishing the demolition phase of a minor remodeling project in my basement, removing about 8 feet of wall installed by a previous homeowner. This project teaches a lesson: How NOT to Build a Wall, in Ten Easy Steps 1. Install the studs at random intervals. 2. Don't bother securing the bottom plate to the floor. If you cut a few of the studs just a bit long, and force-fit them, friction will keep the bottom plate in place. 3. Don't bother nailing those studs in place. Friction, remember? 4. Attach remaining studs to plates with six-penny box nails. 5. Use eight at each end because they're so small. 6. It's OK to use untreated lumber for the bottom plate. Water seepage won't harm fir, will it? 7. Use regular sheetrock for the entire wall. Water seepage won't harm that either, will it? 8. The doorpost doesn't need to be attached to the bottom plate. The sheetrock will keep it from moving. 9. Nail the sheetrock every 3 inches along each vertical edge. 10. That gives you enough nails that you don't need to nail it anywhere else. What shocks me and is a common practice is to install interior door jams with no nails in the jam. *Staples in the jam moldings hold it all in place. They don't need no stinkin shims. Thats common practice on most new homes today. The rough openings are very tight and they nail right to it then hold it together with the casement trim. I still do it the old fashion way. *shim shim shim... -- "You can lead them to LINUX but you can't make them THINK" Man. 2010.1 Spring KDE4.4 2.6.33.5-desktop-2mnb It also shocked me the first time I took the casing off a jamb. And our house is usually exceptionally well built, as it was built as part of the carpenter apprenticeship program and the instructor was a real ******* who made the students redo anything that was not perfect. I know this because I talked to a couple of guys who had worked on it as apprentices in 1978. I will not say anything about want one of the subsequent owners did, like removing a couple of 2X10 joists under the decks so he could install a cheap tin overhead garage door. But he did replace each joist with a couple of 2X4s Luigi |
#56
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"aemeijers" wrote in message
... Robert Green wrote: (snip) Let's hope so. I tend to find cluelessness in one area is often a good sign of cluelessness in others. But I think in these cases it's more than that. It's not knowing that you don't know what you're doing. That's a slightly more dangerous sort of ignorance than garden-variety dumb. THAT is a critical ability to have, in life in general, not just home repair, PC repair, or whatever. There is no sin in not knowing how to do something, and I'll go out of my way to help people like that when they ask, or honestly tell them it is outside MY skill set. The ones who try to BS or fake their way through it, not so much. The problem I think is knowing when you're stumped and when proceeding further is going to compound the problem. I often wonder: is it inborn, the way "handiness" seems to be, or can it be taught? Donald Rumsfeld, who *isn't* my favorite guy, did have a good understanding of the problem of "how do we know what we don't know?" when he laid out what we might face in the latest series of wars. He gets a lot of grief about his "don't know" quote, but once again it's journalists looking for a punchline, and not reporting the entire, much more complicated story discussed he http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com...ics-dilemma-1/ Along with the tale of a bozo bank robber: "Apparently, he was under the deeply misguided impression that rubbing one's face with lemon juice rendered it invisible to video cameras." Ironically, I can think of times when my fear of the unknown backfired. I couldn't get one of those concrete .22 cal floor guns to fire. I hit it and hit it, changed to different hammers - was about to return it as defective when a friend came by for a beer and saw me whaling away at it. I showed him what I was trying to do, hit it again a few times more and was about to pack it up when he picked up a small machinist's hammer and hit the sucker for all it was worth and damn if that nail gun didn't BANG! and drive that SOB nail in. "You gotta whack the hell out of it" he says, grinning. Now I know. I ain't proud- for stuff I don't know how to do, I'll seek out someone who does, even when I have to pay for it. And with the passing years, my understanding of the holes in my expertise has become more detailed. You mean cratered, like the moon? (-: That's actually a good thing, because oddly enough, the more you know, the more holes. The overall amount of things you know has actually increased, although sometimes it doesn't seem that way. There's SO much to know in the world that the best anyone can do is stake out a little corner of it and try to know as much as they can about it. It helps to remember that they'll always be someone smarter than you. -- Bobby G. |
#57
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On Aug 6, 10:32*pm, Robatoy wrote:
On Aug 6, 10:19*pm, FrozenNorth wrote: On 8/06/10 9:36 PM, Doug Miller wrote: Why, oh why, do people with no knowledge or experience of the building trades imagine that they are competent to do their own construction? Been there done that. *Previous owner left behind several mason jars full of mixed screws, seemed odd. *Then I started removing stuff that he had built and need eight different bits to take them apart, what a pain in the backside, can't even imagine wanting to build something that way.. Last two or three pieces of his handiwork that I have removed, recip saw, hell with the mess, it is less frustrating. -- Froz... The system will be down for 10 days for preventive maintenance. A house, 3 doors down from mine, had the entire family room wired with those cheapo 18ga extension cords. They were held in place between the block foundation and the 2x3 studs which were concrete nailed in place. No insulation, no vapour barrier. The studs were then covered with hardboard panelling, no drywall. I have built theatre sets (flats) with more integrity. I went to an "A card" carrying electrician's house years ago and he had some bare receptacles nailed to the bottom of window sills (inside) wired with lamp cord!!! WTFrenchToast |
#58
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On Aug 7, 9:47*am, Rich wrote:
I saw today that Home Depot has just come out with a Peel and Stick Ceramic and Glass Tile. Now thats something for the ages. Right Of course, if the little woman is constantly changing her mind about what she wants for a backsplash, peel and stick would be a great labor saver. Cindy Hamilton |
#59
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"J. Clarke" wrote in message
... On 8/7/2010 4:12 PM, JoeSpareBedroom wrote: wrote in message m... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: I have a theory that the internet is behind the pathetic trend toward helplessness. I wonder how many youngsters consider going to the library for a book to help them with a project they've never attempted. Does anyone even notice that there are shelves full of books as you walk into Home Depot or Lowe's? BOOKS? In a LIBRARY? How quaint. Mine has hand puppets, games, wall art, toys, videos, and a few other odds and ends. They do have a spinner rack containing historical romances ("bodice rippers") with a sign: "Leave two, take two". Libraries have abrogated their classical role as repositories of information. Most should be burnt to the ground and the ashes scattered. Not to worry, you won't be burning books! To be even more topical, there are libraries in Berkeley that loans tools (power saws, pressure washers, ladders, post hole diggers, etc.). Buncha goddamn communists, you ask me. If that's how things are where you live, it's because of YOU. Uh, how is what the libraries contain "because of HIM"? In most towns the library has limited shelf space and tosses anything that doesn't move regularly. Are you saying that he should go regularly check out carpentry books that cover material that he has long since mastered just so the library will keep them? What he described is a dysfunctional library. An extreme. Libraries like that are reflections of their patrons' indifference. That's quite different from what you said, which is a moderate and correct view. |
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