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#1
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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? |
#2
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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? I guess if he thought it merely "looked" good enough, someone would buy it. |
#3
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"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. 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? Because Home Depot & Lowe's gave them the idea they were competent. |
#4
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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. |
#5
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"FrozenNorth" wrote in message
... 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... Someday, maybe I'll post pictures of some of the electrical outlets in my house. Some are just crooked. In several places, the box itself sticks out 1/4" on one side, so the plates don't fit flush. I asked the previous owner about that when I moved in. He said the boxes stuck out "because of the lath". Huh? I installed new boxes in plaster/lath walls in my previous house. There's no reason for them to look like they're trying to escape the wall. |
#6
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![]() "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. Well, look at the bright side. The obvious lack of fasteners must have made the demolition job easier. 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? My last house was full of surprises like this. They obviously thought it was OK. Anything goes. No sense of pride. Total garbage work. I broke up some concrete in the back yard to expand the garage. Instead of rebar in the concrete, I found parts of an old refrigerator and bread trays from a bakery. Whatever was laying around got used. |
#7
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On Aug 6, 11:07*pm, "Lee Michaels" 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. Well, look at the bright side. The obvious lack of fasteners must have made the demolition job easier. 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? My last house was full of surprises like this. *They obviously thought it was OK. *Anything goes. No sense of pride. Total garbage work. I broke up some concrete in the back yard to expand the garage. Instead of rebar in the concrete, I found parts of an old refrigerator and bread trays from a bakery. *Whatever was laying around got used. Three magic demolition items: GRÄNSFORS 20# Sledge Sawzall or Nobel's Finestkind. ( A bit harder to control) |
#8
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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. |
#9
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"JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message
news ![]() stuff snipped Why, oh why, do people with no knowledge or experience of the building trades imagine that they are competent to do their own construction? Because Home Depot & Lowe's gave them the idea they were competent. It's not just building. It's lots of thing. I laugh when I see Lowe's or HD run ads that make some seriously complicated improvements look like any Harriet Homeowner (remember Hechingers?) could do them with a hammer and a screwdriver. Way back when I did a lot of PC tech support for neighbors and friends I saw some pretty savage things people had done trying to do their own upgrades. Someone I know had read an article about easy it was to install your own hard disk. This was the age of the ATA66 and 100 hard disk cable standard. While Western Digital's big fold out instructions did make it look easy, it really only covered about 80% of what you might find "under the hood." IOW, it covered only the most basic installations. By the time I got to the machine, I could find no earthly reason why it would even boot up, but it did. After about 5 minutes. (She had put up with that for five months before calling me!!) She had two *slaves* on one channel, with the right DIP settings, and a master and a slave (CD as master!) on the other channel, with the wrong DIP setting. Drive operations between channels worked, drive operations on the same channel did not. I should have known right then to walk away. SHE was getting mad at ME for Western Digital not "being honest with her" about how easy it was. I told her they were also forgetting to teach her all about cable types, termination, DIP switch settings, Berg clips, Molex connectors, hard drive capacity limitations, boot sectors, basic electrical theory, why using WD's magic partitioning software was NOT a good idea, how her drive letters would change because of how MicroSoft lays logical volumes, the difference between physical drives and logical drives, the concept of Master and Slave drives (NO RACE COMPLAINTS, PLEASE! g), how important it was to back up ALL her drives before working on even a new one, how to check her work, etc. 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! 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). The most obvious giveaway of an amateur wall builder, IMHO, is studs NOT placed on 16" centers, even though most measuring types have specific marks for 16" centers. Next is lack of vertical plumbness. Third is that cluster f_ck of nails that Doug describes in list item 5 that are placed to assure the lowest strength joint possible. I will have to admit, the first walls I put up at age 16 had their flaws, but they WERE on 16" centers! -- Bobby G. |
#10
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Yeah, well, you should see the sheetrock taping job a presumably
professional builder did in my closet. It's diagonal, not at a right angle to fit against where the wall and ceiling meet. The first time I used tape it wasn't perfect but it was a hundred times better. So it's not only amateurs... |
#11
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![]() "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 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.... 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. 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. 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. |
#12
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"Lee Michaels" wrote in message
... I broke up some concrete in the back yard to expand the garage. Instead of rebar in the concrete, I found parts of an old refrigerator and bread trays from a bakery. Whatever was laying around got used. That one is a keeper, I just told SWMBO about that and she got a hoot out of it. That's up there with the folks who tried to get more paint out of spray cans by heating them in the oven. |
#13
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Shaun Eli wrote:
Yeah, well, you should see the sheetrock taping job a presumably professional builder did in my closet. It's diagonal, not at a right angle to fit against where the wall and ceiling meet. The first time I used tape it wasn't perfect but it was a hundred times better. So it's not only amateurs... Roger that. Here in Tucson, I've found that it almost always requires 2 tries for people to get anything right. When I do things myself, I may sometimes have to re-do something, but I'm not claiming to be a professional at that particular task. -- There is never a situation where having more rounds is a disadvantage Rob Leatham |
#14
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![]() "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. |
#15
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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 |
#16
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On 08/07/2010 12:33 AM, DGDevin wrote:
"Lee Michaels" wrote in message ... I broke up some concrete in the back yard to expand the garage. Instead of rebar in the concrete, I found parts of an old refrigerator and bread trays from a bakery. Whatever was laying around got used. That one is a keeper, I just told SWMBO about that and she got a hoot out of it. That's up there with the folks who tried to get more paint out of spray cans by heating them in the oven. FWIW I have found warming them to make them spray better (in cool weather) I usually sit them in a pot of hot water though nate -- replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply. http://members.cox.net/njnagel |
#17
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"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. |
#18
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In article ,
DGDevin wrote: ...snipped... ................................................. .......... 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. Some of them can write very entertaining usenet posts. -- When the game is over, the pawn and the king are returned to the same box. Larry Wasserman - Baltimore Maryland - lwasserm(a)sdf. lonestar.org |
#19
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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. 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. -- aem sends... |
#20
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JoeSpareBedroom 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. 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? Because Home Depot & Lowe's gave them the idea they were competent. 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 -- "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 |
#21
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Lee Michaels 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. Well, look at the bright side. The obvious lack of fasteners must have made the demolition job easier. 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? My last house was full of surprises like this. They obviously thought it was OK. Anything goes. No sense of pride. Total garbage work. I broke up some concrete in the back yard to expand the garage. Instead of rebar in the concrete, I found parts of an old refrigerator and bread trays from a bakery. Whatever was laying around got used. So YOU bought my parents old house! Try digging around here and there, soon enough you will hit an I beam or a car engine. |
#22
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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? I've seen people in the building trades do amazingly bad things, and they apparently knew they were doing it. Your wall builder is just an idiot. It doesn't take a whole lot of effort to learn the correct way to build a wall, simple house wiring, basic plumbing and so on. What I really detest is someone, like my kid, saying "I can't do that, I don't know how or I never did that" My answer is always one of two things, WTF, do you think I was born knowing how, or, damn, I never did it either, I guess we're screwed... I guess if you are born into a family that pays someone else to do everything, do nothing but go to school all your life, have no friends in the trades or that actually work with their hands, your on your own, and a little initiative can get you in trouble. -- Jack News Flash: Government Motors (GM) fines their top competitor $16 Mil. http://jbstein.com |
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In article ,
Tony wrote: So YOU bought my parents old house! Try digging around here and there, soon enough you will hit an I beam or a car engine. Which brings up the REAL question.. will he find your parents??? -- I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator and name it after the IRS. Robert Bakker, paleontologist |
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"Jack Stein" wrote in message
... 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? I've seen people in the building trades do amazingly bad things, and they apparently knew they were doing it. Your wall builder is just an idiot. It doesn't take a whole lot of effort to learn the correct way to build a wall, simple house wiring, basic plumbing and so on. What I really detest is someone, like my kid, saying "I can't do that, I don't know how or I never did that" My answer is always one of two things, WTF, do you think I was born knowing how, or, damn, I never did it either, I guess we're screwed... 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? Reading a book shouldn't necessarily be that much different from viewing the same information on a web page, but for some reason, I think it is. Maybe all the animated ads are too much of a distraction from the important content. I don't know.... |
#25
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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. 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. Amen, Brudda! It's right along with the day I realized my father _was_ pretty damned smart because he knew not only when to ask for help (rather than simply forging ahead) but the questions to ask an expert so he could do it the next time. Now, he knew how to do many things, and did with a level of craftmanship I have yet to attain (he really was the DeVinci of Clan Ranger), but that was the lesson he stressed each time and was finally able to pass on. Know your limits; do it right the first time. (A job half-done is twice done.) Go ahead and pass me some of that ammo... I hear the Hordes a-comin' over the burm. The Ranger |
#26
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On 8/7/2010 10:42 AM, JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"Jack wrote in message ... 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? I've seen people in the building trades do amazingly bad things, and they apparently knew they were doing it. Your wall builder is just an idiot. It doesn't take a whole lot of effort to learn the correct way to build a wall, simple house wiring, basic plumbing and so on. What I really detest is someone, like my kid, saying "I can't do that, I don't know how or I never did that" My answer is always one of two things, WTF, do you think I was born knowing how, or, damn, I never did it either, I guess we're screwed... 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? Reading a book shouldn't necessarily be that much different from viewing the same information on a web page, but for some reason, I think it is. Maybe all the animated ads are too much of a distraction from the important content. I don't know.... If you've got a good library then it's a good resource. But it doesn't take much effort to exhaust most libraries. Searching my local library's catalog on "table saw" gets "Collected Poems of Constantine Cavafy", "Weeds, Season 4", "Under Town", "Boone: A Biography", and "Verses [of Ogden Nash] from 1929 On". "Carpentry" found a bunch of childrens' books, a few on trim and finish carpentry, and four that might be decent--they've been out of print so long that Amazon doesn't even have a picture of them so I can't tell for sure. Their holdings on that topic are so meager that I'm tempted to cart some of the books that I'm done with down and donate them. |
#27
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"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 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. |
#28
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J. Clarke wrote in message
... [snip] If you've got a good library then it's a good resource. But it doesn't take much effort to exhaust most libraries. Searching my local library's catalog on "table saw" gets "Collected Poems of Constantine Cavafy", "Weeds, Season 4", "Under Town", "Boone: A Biography", and "Verses [of Ogden Nash] from 1929 On". "Carpentry" found a bunch of childrens' books, a few on trim and finish carpentry, and four that might be decent--they've been out of print so long that Amazon doesn't even have a picture of them so I can't tell for sure. Their holdings on that topic are so meager that I'm tempted to cart some of the books that I'm done with down and donate them. We have several public libraries close enough that my daughter-units can bike easily enough to most of them. I've donated books to each over the years and it's not that they don't have an over-supply from willing patrons. It's the resources to bind them for shelving and use, catalog them, and then put them out so they get used. Tangential thought: I watched one mom put a book back because it was "old and a hard-back" (I asked because I knew the book was a good read.) It didn't have a cover sexy enough to hold her daughter's attention. Gahdferbid the story do that... If your local library has volunteer hours, find out what you can do to assist them in getting their back-logged books out on the shelves. If it's like our system, you'll have to go through _some_ training but once you're in you can make a difference. The Ranger |
#29
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![]() "Robert Green" wrote in message ... 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. Oh geez don’t get me started on Dell. I bought their top-of-the-line XPS model less than three years ago, when the motherboard recently expired I learned a replacement from Dell was double the cost of anyone else's motherboard. So I got a local shop to build me a new machine that stomps all over the old Dell in performance and isn't full of grossly overpriced proprietary hardware. 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. Perhaps part of the problem is that industry is encouraging cluelessness with plug-n-play products that come with one-page instruction manuals and warning labels that there are no user-repairable parts inside. Schools have largely abandoned industrial arts classes--that doesn't help either. So we end up with gazillions of people who have never had to use a screwdriver in their lives because they've never been asked to, hanging a picture on the wall would be a triumph of tool use for them. Of course there are opportunities there; our local family-owned hardware store runs classes for women who want to learn basic home maintenance skills, so they get $60 a head from the students and pick up loyal customers at the same time--that's smart business. |
#30
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![]() "aemeijers" wrote in message ... 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. 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. |
#31
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"Robert Green" wrote
I will have to admit, the first walls I put up at age 16 had their flaws, but they WERE on 16" centers! Grin, first one I did had to match an older house. 12.75 inch. It was a replacement due to termite damage of a semi-structural wall along a stairwell (with closet underneath). Original followed the steps and we wanted to match to the undamaged other wall wood of the closet. The stairs were actually falling down on that damaged side so had to use metal supports (the sort where you twist to rise until hit it right). Major pain in the ass with leveling everything. Mom also insisted it be cedar to match the other side and we had to have that special ordered because they hadnt crossbarred shorter lenghts on the original wall and we needed over 10 foot 3x6 pieces for the stretches at the top end. We were in a small town and had to order from Charlottesville VA (about 1 hour drive away). I still chuckle about the guy driving up and asking Mom for her husband. She saw the wood and told him, 'oh, thats for Carol. CAARROOLL! Your wood is here!'. I'd slept in late and came trotting out in my PJ's with a level in one hand and a muffin half eaten in the other. He didnt stop laughing until I showed him exactly why I had rejected 2 of the pieces. He gave Mom his card after I took him inside and showed the specs I needed for some of the floor beams and 10x2 oak flooring replacements in the far bedroom. Lets not embarass anyone with my age then. Just say, young enough to come trotting out in my PJ's (girly snicker) and old enough to grab a level. |
#32
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On Aug 6, 9:36*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? Apparently the "force fit and let friction take over" practice is not unique. I just removed a bi-fold door in an old house apartment that my moved into. The bi-fold doors were shorter than the original door opening - by a foot - so they install a new "header". They screwed the header (an unpainted pine board) into the jamb on the dumb end of the bi-fold and forced the pivoting end into the opening. I guess if you're going to do a job half-way, you might as well do that half wrong. |
#33
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![]() "J. Clarke" wrote in message ... "Carpentry" found a bunch of childrens' books, a few on trim and finish carpentry, and four that might be decent--they've been out of print so long that Amazon doesn't even have a picture of them so I can't tell for sure. Their holdings on that topic are so meager that I'm tempted to cart some of the books that I'm done with down and donate them. My wife and I have done that. They accept donated books for two reasons: either they sell them to raise money (if they don't need/want them on the shelves) or in some cases they'll put them in a library binding and circulate them if it's a title they'd like to have (but currently cannot afford to buy). We've had a lot of use out of our local public library so we don't mind giving them books we no longer have room for. And it doesn't matter how many bookcases I build, they're always instantly full as soon as they're in place. |
#34
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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. snip 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 we were building a house in Texas the builder came every afternoon to check on the framers. He had a big red marker and would look down a wall then would put big X's on the studs that stood out. The framers would take these out and replace them with straighter ones. We moved to Georgia and had planned on building again. We visited one builder at a job site and noticed that about 1 out of 3 studs were out of alignment. When I pointed it out to the builder he said, "the sheetrock will straighten them all out." Then we visited a finished house he had built. The walls looked like snake tracks. The sheetrock had not helped straighten them. We marked him off our list. -- Gerald Ross Cochran, GA Wisdom consists of the anticipation of consequences. -Norman Cousins |
#35
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"Robert Green" wrote
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 Same here. BTW, if you want to see what BBSes became: telnet://shenks.synchro.net (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.) The problem is they teach everything but problem solving. Saw that just last week. Ship had slow response to the desktop for application the person was involved in. Server groom didnt fix it. It's obvious why. They kept assuming software but didnt ask questions. The application was blindingly fast when run direct in ADP. 1- is it slow everywhere or only some computers? 2- do those same slow computers also have internet web access slow downs? 3- Does it happen only in port? 1a- check switch, specifically fiber degrade to servers. Signal loss do to that last hurricane evasion damaging end points 2a- almost sure to be signal loss. This time, in and out of switch needs a TDR 3a- Last ship complain? Check peier and pier cable 3b- No other ships at same pier with issue, check pier connection on ship and fiber swap in radio 3c- No others with same issue, first time for a long time using port or starboard connector, check connector. Instead, they groomed the servers and switches for software and were mistified at the slow-down. The answer BTW was 3C, first use in 2 years of port connector and the caps corroded with salt. Pier connection and cable were fine. I was groaning and laughing at the same time. |
#36
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"DGDevin" wrote
"Lee Michaels" wrote in message I broke up some concrete in the back yard to expand the garage. Instead of rebar in the concrete, I found parts of an old refrigerator and bread trays from a bakery. Whatever was laying around got used. That one is a keeper, I just told SWMBO about that and she got a hoot out of it. That's up there with the folks who tried to get more paint out of spray cans by heating them in the oven. When our brick cookout subsumbed, we dinally took it out. Piece de la resistance? A broken lawnmover in the base. I guess gravel was too expensive that year (grin). |
#37
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Rich wrote in
: Leon wrote: 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... They'll hold together ok for a year or so... just until the warranty's over. Even if the guy doesn't do the repairs, it saved time on the install, right? Puckdropper -- Never teach your apprentice everything you know. |
#38
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#39
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Rich wrote:
Because Home Depot & Lowe's gave them the idea they were competent. 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 Pretty dumb idea. You could use peel-and-stick floor tiles and get the same effect. Cheaper, too. |
#40
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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. |
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