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#1
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
From reading this newsgroup and talking to people, it seems that electrical is the most feared. But there is good reason for that, since electricity can kill. I always tell people that if they are afraid of it, dont touch it, or get an education about it first. Plumbing seems to come in second. Although plumbing is unlikely to kill anyone, it can do a lot of property damage if a pipe breaks and there is no way to shut off the flow. The bigger problem with plumbing is that the jobs regularly turn into "a can of worms". Old pipes tend to break or leak, and replacing one bad pipe often turns into replacing a lot more, ripping open walls and so on. Plumbing requires skills, proper tools, and a supply of parts on hand, or it can become a nightmare. I'll include auto repair in this topic, and this is often a fear. Again, there are dangers involved, for example, when working under a car it must be jacked and supported properly or you can be killed. and then there is always the busted knuckles, cuts, bruises and other accidents, not to mention that one wrong move can do a lot of damage to the car. Other machines in the home, such as furnaces fall into this same category. The other fear is anything involving heights, such as roofing. Some people are just not comfortable with ladders and heights in general. I have to admit that this is my own fear. I will work on anything electrical or do plumbing and auto repairs without fear, but I dont do well with heights. What fears do you have regarding home repair and including auto and even small engine and other machines around the home, repairs? I think everyone has at least some fears regarding home repair.... |
#2
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#3
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tue, 1 Dec 2015 15:14:54 -0700, Tony Hwang wrote:
What fears do you have regarding home repair and including auto and even small engine and other machines around the home, repairs? I think everyone has at least some fears regarding home repair.... I am lefty, always afraid of wood working. Any thing else is fine. Yea, power tools can be a fear for many, especially power saws. I'm glad I took all the woodworking classes available when I was in high school. I learned both skills and safety. In 45+ years of doing construction since HS, I did manage to take the flesh off the tip of a thumb once, on a table saw. That was the first and last time, and was many years ago. I also ran a pole barn metal screw into my hand once, and that hurt like hell. Since then, if I'm driving screws into metal, I spend the time making a pilot hole first. (usually just hit the screw with a hammer, then power drive it in). Probably my most accidents over the years were stepping on f##king nails. I learned to NEVER leave boards with nails laying around. I remove the nails or bend them over. But just a few years ago, I was helping someone demolish a shed, and he left a naily board on the ground with a piece of drywall on top. I stepped there and that damn spike came thru the drywall and right into my foot. I came close to punching that guy after ripping that nail out of my foot. I had clearly told him to remove nails, or stack boards with nails in a pile. (I did not punch him, but I did not help him finish the job either, since I spent the following week staying off my painful foot and watching tv). |
#4
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#5
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tue, 1 Dec 2015 17:40:20 -0800, "Bob F" wrote:
Probably my most accidents over the years were stepping on f##king nails. I learned to NEVER leave boards with nails laying around. I remove the nails or bend them over. But just a few years ago, I was helping someone demolish a shed, and he left a naily board on the ground with a piece of drywall on top. I stepped there and that damn spike came thru the drywall and right into my foot. I came close to punching that guy after ripping that nail out of my foot. I had clearly told him to remove nails, or stack boards with nails in a pile. (I did not punch him, but I did not help him finish the job either, since I spent the following week staying off my painful foot and watching tv). A friend parked his car where someone had dumped a pile of used lumber. The friend was working his way around it in the dark and stepped on the end of a board. The other end swung up, and a nail in it stuck firmly into his forehead. Fortunately, the ER was only 1/4 mile away. Just thinking about this is painful !!!!!!! *OUCH* *OUCH* *OUCH* *OUCH* |
#6
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#7
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:22:09 PM UTC-6, Terry Coombs wrote:
I don't do automatic trannies... H-O-M-E repair! |
#8
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
bob_villain wrote:
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:22:09 PM UTC-6, Terry Coombs wrote: I don't do automatic trannies... H-O-M-E repair! The OP included cars and small motors . Suck it up . -- Snag |
#9
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 9:07:25 PM UTC-6, Terry Coombs wrote:
bob_villain wrote: On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:22:09 PM UTC-6, Terry Coombs wrote: I don't do automatic trannies... H-O-M-E repair! The OP included cars and small motors . Suck it up . -- Snag Right...but you were bragging. It's trannies you're afraid of (I'm not talking about Mormon). |
#10
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/01/2015 03:26 PM, bob_villain wrote:
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:22:09 PM UTC-6, Terry Coombs wrote: I don't do automatic trannies... H-O-M-E repair! What? You don't live in an RV? |
#11
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/01/2015 03:22 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
I don't do automatic trannies . Just finished changing the oil in the Harley , looks like I need to pull the jugs and replace the base gaskets . Not that it's losing a lot of oil , but that mist attracts dirt which rubs off onto the inside of the left leg of my jeans . Hasn't been too long ago I did a near-complete rebuild on the Kohler motor in my tractor - including welding a patch into the hole the connecting rod made in the crankcase when it grenaded . I did a Torqueflite rebuild when I was a kid. I was stupider then. I had all the right tools, a couple of ice picks for the snap rings and so forth. There's an overrunning clutch in the rear of the tranny that you can assemble backwards. Don't ask me how I know. Is it the base gaskets that are blowing vapor? Mine's getting a little loose and that theory about the blow by from the heads being fed into the air cleaner wasn't cutting it. I put one of those breather kits on so now the mist makes sure the underside of the frame doesn't rust. I have know people that just put a maxipad in the air cleaner cover but that seemed a little primitive. |
#12
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/1/2015 5:22 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? What fears do you have regarding home repair and including auto and even small engine and other machines around the home, repairs? I think everyone has at least some fears regarding home repair.... I don't do automatic trannies. Might be considered home repair for those who live in a RV or motor home. I also don't do much with AT, except check fluid. And also replace leaky cooling lines as needed. -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#13
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:08:43 PM UTC-6, wrote:
What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Not afraid, but the biggest PIA is plumbing! |
#14
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 2:28:49 PM UTC-8, bob_villain wrote:
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:08:43 PM UTC-6, wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Not afraid, but the biggest PIA is plumbing! Agreed! Fix one leak, but make two more and adding a few ounces of traveling rust to the system |
#15
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#16
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
Tony Hwang Wed,
02 Dec 2015 02:53:42 GMT in alt.home.repair, wrote: wrote: On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 2:28:49 PM UTC-8, bob_villain wrote: On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:08:43 PM UTC-6, wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Not afraid, but the biggest PIA is plumbing! Agreed! Fix one leak, but make two more and adding a few ounces of traveling rust to the system Learning process, LOL! Doesn't that describe life in general? rofl -- Error: Creative signature file missing |
#17
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 2:28:49 PM UTC-8, bob_villain wrote:
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:08:43 PM UTC-6, wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Not afraid, but the biggest PIA is plumbing! Agreed! Fix one leak, but make two more and adding a few ounces of traveling rust to the system |
#18
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/01/2015 03:28 PM, bob_villain wrote:
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:08:43 PM UTC-6, wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Not afraid, but the biggest PIA is plumbing! +1. I've been putting off replacing the spud gasket on the toilet. Simple job, empty the tank, take out the two screws, lift it off, put the new gasket on, and bolt it back together, right? I can think of about 35 ways that can go wrong. |
#19
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/1/2015 11:23 PM, rbowman wrote:
+1. I've been putting off replacing the spud gasket on the toilet. Simple job, empty the tank, take out the two screws, lift it off, put the new gasket on, and bolt it back together, right? I can think of about 35 ways that can go wrong. No, there are *36* -- you will discover the 36th when you finally undertake the job! And, having discovered it, you will slap yourself up-side the head at how OBVIOUS it was! |
#20
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/2/2015 1:23 AM, rbowman wrote:
+1. I've been putting off replacing the spud gasket on the toilet. Simple job, empty the tank, take out the two screws, lift it off, put the new gasket on, and bolt it back together, right? I can think of about 35 ways that can go wrong. My parents used to joke about the "ten minute job" which turns into three days and calling a pro. Sounds like your gasket job, I'd say. -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#21
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#23
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#24
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/1/2015 7:13 PM, Bob(but not THAT Bob) wrote:
wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Fear of a plumbing or electrical inspector showing up I'll admit, I don't much enjoy roofing. -- .. Christopher A. Young learn more about Jesus .. www.lds.org .. .. |
#25
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tue, 1 Dec 2015 19:39:26 -0500, Stormin Mormon
wrote: On 12/1/2015 7:13 PM, Bob(but not THAT Bob) wrote: wrote: What home repairs are you most Afraid of? Fear of a plumbing or electrical inspector showing up I'll admit, I don't much enjoy roofing. No fear of it unless it is a steep pitch, but my knees don't let me on the roof any more. No fear of electrical, no fear of plumbing - but I'll do electrical over plumbing any day of the week. No fear of gas fitting either. What gives me the most trepidation is final finishing of woodworking. Getting the colour and finish I want is more of an art than a science. |
#26
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#27
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#28
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#29
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#30
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#31
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#32
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/02/2015 08:01 AM, Tony Hwang wrote:
My BIL was a Kiwi in the air force. He is extremely afraid of height.... That's different. I used to fly and there was only a few times I was bothered. One was coming out of the little airport on the north side of Ft. Wayne where you flew past a couple of radio antennas. It wasn't being in the plane but my brain imagining me clinging to the side of an 800' antenna. I don't know how they put those things up and I don't want to know. |
#33
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
rbowman wrote:
On 12/02/2015 08:01 AM, Tony Hwang wrote: My BIL was a Kiwi in the air force. He is extremely afraid of height.... That's different. I used to fly and there was only a few times I was bothered. One was coming out of the little airport on the north side of Ft. Wayne where you flew past a couple of radio antennas. It wasn't being in the plane but my brain imagining me clinging to the side of an 800' antenna. I don't know how they put those things up and I don't want to know. There are some Youtube showing how they erect those skinny towers. I'm OK with height. Being a HAM I climb tower and do work on antennas. I used to climb poles wearing cogs. Speaking of flying in the Rockies choppers usually fly up and down thru valleys. Sudden wind is common and some times they sway side to side. Feels like we can almost touch the sheer rock faces. Only experienced chopper pilots can fly in the mountain. |
#34
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/2/2015 9:01 AM, Tony Hwang wrote:
My BIL was a Kiwi in the air force. He is extremely afraid of height.... I'm afraid of heights mostly because I don't have good balance when on a ladder. -- Maggie |
#35
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Wed, 2 Dec 2015 13:32:23 -0600, Muggles wrote:
On 12/2/2015 9:01 AM, Tony Hwang wrote: My BIL was a Kiwi in the air force. He is extremely afraid of height.... I'm afraid of heights mostly because I don't have good balance when on a ladder. My dad would climb any ladder. Before his knees went, he'd climb any pole with stirrups and a belt. As a young guy he worked building an arena, running along the ridge pole carrying lumber - but get him into a tree??????/ Nope!! Seems he'd stepped on one too many dead branches that dissappeared under his feet. |
#36
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
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#37
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On Tuesday, December 1, 2015 at 4:08:43 PM UTC-6, wrote:
What home repairs are you most Afraid of? From reading this newsgroup and talking to people, it seems that electrical is the most feared. But there is good reason for that, since electricity can kill. I always tell people that if they are afraid of it, dont touch it, or get an education about it first. Plumbing seems to come in second. Although plumbing is unlikely to kill anyone, it can do a lot of property damage if a pipe breaks and there is no way to shut off the flow. The bigger problem with plumbing is that the jobs regularly turn into "a can of worms". Old pipes tend to break or leak, and replacing one bad pipe often turns into replacing a lot more, ripping open walls and so on. Plumbing requires skills, proper tools, and a supply of parts on hand, or it can become a nightmare. I'll include auto repair in this topic, and this is often a fear. Again, there are dangers involved, for example, when working under a car it must be jacked and supported properly or you can be killed. and then there is always the busted knuckles, cuts, bruises and other accidents, not to mention that one wrong move can do a lot of damage to the car. Other machines in the home, such as furnaces fall into this same category. The other fear is anything involving heights, such as roofing. Some people are just not comfortable with ladders and heights in general. I have to admit that this is my own fear. I will work on anything electrical or do plumbing and auto repairs without fear, but I dont do well with heights. What fears do you have regarding home repair and including auto and even small engine and other machines around the home, repairs? I think everyone has at least some fears regarding home repair.... The first thing to learn about utilities is like what you would teach someone about guns. Know how to make them safe. With utilities, show them how to turn them off and how to make them safe. I have locks I used to lock out valves and electrical disconnects to make things safe to work on. Of course knowing how to remove an electric utility meter when doing major repairs to the main breaker panel or replacing the main breaker is a good thing to learn. Because it's possible for someone to flip a breaker on while you're on the other side of a building working on that circuit, turn off the breaker, remove the wire from it and put a wire nut on it. When I was doing major repairs to the gas lines or anything connected to the gas service in a home or business, I'd put a lock on the shutoff valve because I've actually had someone fooling around the meter who turned the damn thing on. It's a lot of fun to be replacing water lines and have someone turn the water on at the meter. When working on utilities, trust no one, lock it out. The best piece of advice I can give to anyone about working on an electrical power circuit is to get into the habit of treating it like it is energized even when you know it's turned off. When you have gained enough experience with wiring electrical power circuits, you can hold the wires in your mouth. Seriously, a shirt pocket sized non-contact AC voltage tester is something you should have with your electrical tools. Many of them are dual range and will also detect low voltage AC like what's on a doorbell circuit. The flat plastic insulated tip will fit into the slot of an electrical outlet and can also be touched to an electrical outlet or switch to indicate if it's energized. The tip can also be touched to the insulation of a wire and it will light up and beep if the wire is connected to a power source. The detectors are inexpensive and available everywhere electrical tools are sold. ʘ€¿Ê˜ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Moad9c1wTwk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9rSEkqI-h0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e28kYPi6Bpo http://www.amazon.com/Klein-Tools-NC.../dp/B004FXJOQO http://www.homedepot.com/b/Electrica...vZboffZ1z1180x [8~{} Uncle Electrical Monster |
#38
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/2/2015 3:25 AM, Uncle Monster wrote:
The first thing to learn about utilities is like what you would teach someone about guns. Know how to make them safe. With utilities, show them how to turn them off and how to make them safe. I have locks I used to lock out valves and electrical disconnects to make things safe to work on. CY: Lockout is a good idea. I can think of two moments when someone "almost" turned on the power while I was working. Of course knowing how to remove an electric utility meter when doing major repairs to the main breaker panel or replacing the main breaker is a good thing to learn. CY: Someone mentioned pulling a meter, and then got a shock. Passing utility guy found the meter on the ground, and helpfully put it back. Because it's possible for someone to flip a breaker on while you're on the other side of a building working on that circuit, turn off the breaker, remove the wire from it and put a wire nut on it. CY: Good one. I'd not thought of that. Or, you can leave the breaker on (wire removed and nutted) so the perp does not have a turned off breaker to alert him. When I was doing major repairs to the gas lines or anything connected to the gas service in a home or business, I'd put a lock on the shutoff valve because I've actually had someone fooling around the meter who turned the damn thing on. CY: I did padlock my own meter one time, long time ago. It can be done. It's a lot of fun to be replacing water lines and have someone turn the water on at the meter. CY: No longer a profit maker, the job was a wash? When working on utilities, trust no one, lock it out. The best piece of advice I can give to anyone about working on an electrical power circuit is to get into the habit of treating it like it is energized even when you know it's turned off. CY: I've found that to be wisdom. When you have gained enough experience with wiring electrical power circuits, you can hold the wires in your mouth. Seriously, a shirt pocket sized non-contact AC voltage tester is something you should have with your electrical tools. Many of them are dual range and will also detect low voltage AC like what's on a doorbell circuit. The flat plastic insulated tip will fit into the slot of an electrical outlet and can also be touched to an electrical outlet or switch to indicate if it's energized. The tip can also be touched to the insulation of a wire and it will light up and beep if the wire is connected to a power source. The detectors are inexpensive and available everywhere electrical tools are sold. ʘ€¿Ê˜ CY: Including Walmart, and Harbor Freight. Good idea to test the tester on a known live wire, make sure it works before testing your work. If you have a dead battery, the beeper will give you a false cold reading, and you could be working on hot conductors. |
#39
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
On 12/2/2015 9:41 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
On 12/2/2015 3:25 AM, Uncle Monster wrote: The first thing to learn about utilities is like what you would teach someone about guns. Know how to make them safe. With utilities, show them how to turn them off and how to make them safe. I have locks I used to lock out valves and electrical disconnects to make things safe to work on. CY: Lockout is a good idea. I can think of two moments when someone "almost" turned on the power while I was working. In my first house back in 1966 I did some electrical work and an electrician where I worked took the time to show me how to do the hookup in the panel and a lot of simple basics. About a year later, pre=OSHA days, he was in the plant early working by himself. They found him dead on the unit he was working on with test leads hooked up and live. |
#40
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What home repairs are you most Afraid of?
Anything involving a ladder.
-- Pete Cresswell |
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