Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

  #2   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,821
Default Is there anything going on?

On Fri, 7 Aug 2020 16:24:47 -0500, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet wrote:


Is there anything going on?



Not much here.
Same-old-same-old.
Irish whisky was on sale - so I bought some ..
... half gone now.
It gets better after opening & sampling ..

NHL hockey playoffs .. 'cept it's friggin' August !

Sweet corn is really good this year - ! -
let's remember 2020 for that at least ..

John T.

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default Is there anything going on?

On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


I've been doing lot's of yard work and a bathroom repair for the past
few weeks.

The only woodworking was re-framing the bottom of a wall in the bathroom.
The shower valve leaked inside the wall so the sill and bottom of the studs
got moldy. It's a basement bathroom, on a slab, so I didn't notice the leak
until the sill plate got wet enough to eventually cause the drywall to get
wet. I cut some holes in the wall to see what was going on and found mold.

Turned out to be a bad cartridge that decided to leak in such a way that the
water ran backwards into the wall so I never knew it was leaking. Putting
on the drywall mud now, hoping to prime this weekend.

Yard work included rebuilding a 6' x 40' patio block walkway along the side
of my house, mostly in 90°+ heat, planting some hollies along that walkway
and spreading 1.5 tons of mulch.

But! SWMBO brought home an oak chair from the group home she works in (adults
with disabilities) It needs to be reglued, so I may spend a little time in
the shop this weekend. This is the second chair. All it would have taken, both
times, was for someone to tighten up the corner bolts as soon as the chairs
started wobbling. Instead, they just kept using them until the stretchers
fell out and the threaded inserts are barely holding on. I'll be busting out
the West Systems epoxy, again.
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,804
Default Is there anything going on?

On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 4:24:53 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:


It's been so hot & humid, it's hard to do anything comfortably, however, my nephew & his wife bought an old farm that needs lots of repairs. We refinished their son's bedroom floor, their bedroom floor is on the agenda.

Their son "needed" a TV cabinet for his bedroom, so I built one using salvaged 1X11 quarter sawn long leaf pine.... installed maybe a week ago. Scroll right for 2 more pics.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/

The whole (swimming) pool house was built poorly. The entrance doorway/framing was horribly made. I'm presently making a new door and frame unit out of old salvaged cypress. Screen door will be replaced with newly made one, also.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/

Two other doors on the resident house needs replacing. I have some nice old entry doors that I'll clean up and we'll install.

Today, I collected a nice old rocking chair from a legally blind friend. I'll weave a new seat and backrest using 5/8" wide flat reed.
https://www.franksupply.com/basketry...html#flatreeds

Beyond that, you'll likely find me falling asleep, after lunch, while watching Matt Dillon gun down some bad guys.

Sonny


  #5   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,043
Default Is there anything going on?

On Fri, 7 Aug 2020 16:24:47 -0500, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet wrote:

The new roof is on, now to get the moldy drywall out. 10 years ago
probably do it myself, but feeding the local economy. The hottub is
empty too.


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default Is there anything going on?

On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


The dishwasher is being unreasonable. I banished it to the garage this
afternoon.

After I buy a new one I'm going set it next to the old for a few days just to
**** the old one off. Then I'm going to kick the old one to the curb.
  #9   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/7/2020 5:13 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


I've been doing lot's of yard work and a bathroom repair for the past
few weeks.

The only woodworking was re-framing the bottom of a wall in the bathroom.
The shower valve leaked inside the wall so the sill and bottom of the studs
got moldy. It's a basement bathroom, on a slab, so I didn't notice the leak
until the sill plate got wet enough to eventually cause the drywall to get
wet. I cut some holes in the wall to see what was going on and found mold.

Turned out to be a bad cartridge that decided to leak in such a way that the
water ran backwards into the wall so I never knew it was leaking. Putting
on the drywall mud now, hoping to prime this weekend.


I "had" roofers to a roof repair for me this week. The builder's gutter
guys installed a down spout, from the second story to the garage roof,
wrong. Nailshooter got pictures and diagnosed the issue from 180 miles
away. :!) An new and relocated down spout happens this coming Wednesday.






Yard work included rebuilding a 6' x 40' patio block walkway along the side
of my house, mostly in 90°+ heat, planting some hollies along that walkway
and spreading 1.5 tons of mulch.


So what materials did you use? I'm looking into composite decking to
cover our existing covered concrete patio and extend out into the yard
another 12'. Heat absorption is a concern for me, for the part that
will be exposed to sun light.
Careful with placement of those hollies, we had a few and years later
decided to do something different. Pulling out the old hollies was like
tangling with a porcupine.




But! SWMBO brought home an oak chair from the group home she works in (adults
with disabilities) It needs to be reglued, so I may spend a little time in
the shop this weekend. This is the second chair. All it would have taken, both
times, was for someone to tighten up the corner bolts as soon as the chairs
started wobbling. Instead, they just kept using them until the stretchers
fell out and the threaded inserts are barely holding on. I'll be busting out
the West Systems epoxy, again.


Oh Boy

  #10   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/7/2020 6:05 PM, Sonny wrote:
On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 4:24:53 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:


It's been so hot & humid, it's hard to do anything comfortably, however, my nephew & his wife bought an old farm that needs lots of repairs. We refinished their son's bedroom floor, their bedroom floor is on the agenda.


Hot and humid! Yeah I can relate. We start the mornings at a crisp 80
degrees with 99% humidity. Then it just gets worse. I mow my yard
weekly and my shirt is totally soaked and sticking to my skin. Blue
jeans are soaked too but too heavy to stick well. ;~)




Their son "needed" a TV cabinet for his bedroom, so I built one using salvaged 1X11 quarter sawn long leaf pine.... installed maybe a week ago. Scroll right for 2 more pics.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/


Hey that looks good AND STOUT!. LOL

Similarly I am converting a built in cabinet and shelves into an
entertainment center for a customer. I hate doing on site conversions
but this is a good repeat customer and the hard part is behind me and
they are liking the direction it is going. So there is that.
I am in the middle of building a walnut Electronics garage to sit on top
of the built in cabinet and below the flat screen. Then walnuts doors
for the lower cabinet with fabric grills.





The whole (swimming) pool house was built poorly. The entrance doorway/framing was horribly made. I'm presently making a new door and frame unit out of old salvaged cypress. Screen door will be replaced with newly made one, also.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/


Yeah it is looking a little rough around the edges. ;~)



Two other doors on the resident house needs replacing. I have some nice old entry doors that I'll clean up and we'll install.

Today, I collected a nice old rocking chair from a legally blind friend. I'll weave a new seat and backrest using 5/8" wide flat reed.
https://www.franksupply.com/basketry...html#flatreeds

Beyond that, you'll likely find me falling asleep, after lunch, while watching Matt Dillon gun down some bad guys.

Sonny


Ah yes, Nap time!!



  #11   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/7/2020 8:24 PM, Markem wrote:
On Fri, 7 Aug 2020 16:24:47 -0500, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet wrote:

The new roof is on, now to get the moldy drywall out. 10 years ago
probably do it myself, but feeding the local economy. The hottub is
empty too.


See above comments to Derbydad. A roof repair and I only watched. ;~)
Fortunately it has not been going on toooooo long. S small amount of
mold on the garage ceiling. Just sheet rock with no insulation. The
mold will likely go a way on its own as the heat in the attic will dry
things out. I had another mold spot up there directly under the water
heater vent. That vent partially filled/leaked during Harvey 3 years
ago. Rain blew in. I cannot even see the spot anymore.
  #12   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/7/2020 10:35 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


The dishwasher is being unreasonable. I banished it to the garage this
afternoon.

After I buy a new one I'm going set it next to the old for a few days just to
**** the old one off. Then I'm going to kick the old one to the curb.



LOL, We heard a lot of growling between the old and new. New washer
and dryer at the end of January. Deep discount sales and our old ones
had cranks IIRC. ;~)

Then a new Induction range for the wife. She loves it over the builder
grade gas.
  #14   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default Is there anything going on?

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 2:53:29 AM UTC-4, Puckdropper wrote:
Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet wrote in news:MqidnY7bNIQAW7DCnZ2dnUU7-
:


My kid turns 5 months in 3 days. I've just been figuring out how to make
life work so there's time for her needs, my needs, and my wife's needs.


For the time being, it's their needs and your *wants*.

Your time will eventually come, sort of. ;-)


Both the wife and kid are pretty awesome and definitely worth the effort!


Tru dat!
  #15   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,043
Default Is there anything going on?

On Fri, 7 Aug 2020 20:35:15 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
wrote:

On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


The dishwasher is being unreasonable. I banished it to the garage this
afternoon.

After I buy a new one I'm going set it next to the old for a few days just to
**** the old one off. Then I'm going to kick the old one to the curb.


Bought a Bosch one a few years, tis quiet image actually talking to
someone or watching tv with it running.


  #16   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default Is there anything going on?

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 9:08:47 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
On 8/7/2020 5:13 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


I've been doing lot's of yard work and a bathroom repair for the past
few weeks.

The only woodworking was re-framing the bottom of a wall in the bathroom.
The shower valve leaked inside the wall so the sill and bottom of the studs
got moldy. It's a basement bathroom, on a slab, so I didn't notice the leak
until the sill plate got wet enough to eventually cause the drywall to get
wet. I cut some holes in the wall to see what was going on and found mold.

Turned out to be a bad cartridge that decided to leak in such a way that the
water ran backwards into the wall so I never knew it was leaking. Putting
on the drywall mud now, hoping to prime this weekend.


I "had" roofers to a roof repair for me this week. The builder's gutter
guys installed a down spout, from the second story to the garage roof,
wrong. Nailshooter got pictures and diagnosed the issue from 180 miles
away. :!) An new and relocated down spout happens this coming Wednesday..






Yard work included rebuilding a 6' x 40' patio block walkway along the side
of my house, mostly in 90°+ heat, planting some hollies along that walkway
and spreading 1.5 tons of mulch.


So what materials did you use? I'm looking into composite decking to
cover our existing covered concrete patio and extend out into the yard
another 12'. Heat absorption is a concern for me, for the part that
will be exposed to sun light.
Careful with placement of those hollies, we had a few and years later
decided to do something different. Pulling out the old hollies was like
tangling with a porcupine.


I'm not home to take pictures, so I'll just describe it...

My lot is weird. The front yard is flat, the back yard is flat, but there's
about 7' difference in elevation. It's three steps up into the front door,
but I have a walk-out basement in the rear. Along both sides of the house
is a slope.

My house is really close to my neighbor's on the east side and the property
line comes up the hill between the houses at an angle. I own a wider section
at the bottom, my neighbor owns a wider section on top. We both moved in
within a month of each other and quickly realized why it was mostly dirt
between the 2 houses. Grass just wouldn't grow. Slope, shade, foot traffic.

To make it look better, we split the cost of those 8 x 16 red patio blocks
and built a walkway down the center. We both put hollies next to our
foundations and used these around them, filled in with red landscape rock:

https://bestlumberandhardware.com/si...g-straight.jpg

Over time, I lost a few hollies and the walkway was getting pretty uneven
due to frost heave, gravity, roots, etc. The joints were washing out and
getting weedy. The guy I built it with moved a few years ago and the kid
that bought the house barely mows his lawn, so I knew there was no sense
in asking him to help me rebuild it, even though he owns half of it.

I probably leveled and straightened about 75% of the blocks, cleaned up the
holly area and bought a couple of hollies to replace the ones that had died..
Years ago, I didn't think to put landscape fabric down under the red
landscape rocks, so a lot of them had sunk 4"-5" down into the sandy soil.
It was a lot of digging, leveling sifting of rocks, but I got it done.
  #17   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/8/2020 9:49 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 9:08:47 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
On 8/7/2020 5:13 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Friday, August 7, 2020 at 5:24:53 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:


I've been doing lot's of yard work and a bathroom repair for the past
few weeks.

The only woodworking was re-framing the bottom of a wall in the bathroom.
The shower valve leaked inside the wall so the sill and bottom of the studs
got moldy. It's a basement bathroom, on a slab, so I didn't notice the leak
until the sill plate got wet enough to eventually cause the drywall to get
wet. I cut some holes in the wall to see what was going on and found mold.

Turned out to be a bad cartridge that decided to leak in such a way that the
water ran backwards into the wall so I never knew it was leaking. Putting
on the drywall mud now, hoping to prime this weekend.


I "had" roofers to a roof repair for me this week. The builder's gutter
guys installed a down spout, from the second story to the garage roof,
wrong. Nailshooter got pictures and diagnosed the issue from 180 miles
away. :!) An new and relocated down spout happens this coming Wednesday.






Yard work included rebuilding a 6' x 40' patio block walkway along the side
of my house, mostly in 90°+ heat, planting some hollies along that walkway
and spreading 1.5 tons of mulch.


So what materials did you use? I'm looking into composite decking to
cover our existing covered concrete patio and extend out into the yard
another 12'. Heat absorption is a concern for me, for the part that
will be exposed to sun light.
Careful with placement of those hollies, we had a few and years later
decided to do something different. Pulling out the old hollies was like
tangling with a porcupine.


I'm not home to take pictures, so I'll just describe it...

My lot is weird. The front yard is flat, the back yard is flat, but there's
about 7' difference in elevation. It's three steps up into the front door,
but I have a walk-out basement in the rear. Along both sides of the house
is a slope.

My house is really close to my neighbor's on the east side and the property
line comes up the hill between the houses at an angle. I own a wider section
at the bottom, my neighbor owns a wider section on top. We both moved in
within a month of each other and quickly realized why it was mostly dirt
between the 2 houses. Grass just wouldn't grow. Slope, shade, foot traffic.

To make it look better, we split the cost of those 8 x 16 red patio blocks
and built a walkway down the center. We both put hollies next to our
foundations and used these around them, filled in with red landscape rock:

https://bestlumberandhardware.com/si...g-straight.jpg

Over time, I lost a few hollies and the walkway was getting pretty uneven
due to frost heave, gravity, roots, etc. The joints were washing out and
getting weedy. The guy I built it with moved a few years ago and the kid
that bought the house barely mows his lawn, so I knew there was no sense
in asking him to help me rebuild it, even though he owns half of it.

I probably leveled and straightened about 75% of the blocks, cleaned up the
holly area and bought a couple of hollies to replace the ones that had died.
Years ago, I didn't think to put landscape fabric down under the red
landscape rocks, so a lot of them had sunk 4"-5" down into the sandy soil.
It was a lot of digging, leveling sifting of rocks, but I got it done.


Good Job!
  #18   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,804
Default Is there anything going on?

On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 8:19:07 AM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

Their son "needed" a TV cabinet for his bedroom, so I built one using salvaged 1X11 quarter sawn long leaf pine.... installed maybe a week ago. Scroll right for 2 more pics.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/


Hey that looks good AND STOUT!. LOL


It is pretty robust. Their son is a good kid, 13 yrs old, makes straight A's in school, likes rustic things and the outdoors. The rocks seen in the pic is petrified wood I've had for a long time. His paternal grandfather is retired from the forestry service, so the petrified wood is a gift complementary to Grandpa and to my woodworking interests. Alex likes his decor "rocks". Initially (some 6-8 months ago) I was to build a smaller tall/slim display cabinet for the petrified wood, then the new home presented the TV-display cabinet option.

Similarly I am converting a built in cabinet and shelves into an
entertainment center for a customer. I hate doing on site conversions
but this is a good repeat customer and the hard part is behind me and
they are liking the direction it is going. So there is that.
I am in the middle of building a walnut Electronics garage to sit on top
of the built in cabinet and below the flat screen. Then walnuts doors
for the lower cabinet with fabric grills.


Looking forward to seeing the results.

Sonny
  #19   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default Is there anything going on?

On Sunday, August 9, 2020 at 9:45:45 AM UTC-4, Sonny wrote:
On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 8:19:07 AM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

Their son "needed" a TV cabinet for his bedroom, so I built one using salvaged 1X11 quarter sawn long leaf pine.... installed maybe a week ago. Scroll right for 2 more pics.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/


Hey that looks good AND STOUT!. LOL


It is pretty robust. Their son is a good kid, 13 yrs old, makes straight A's in school, likes rustic things and the outdoors. The rocks seen in the pic is petrified wood I've had for a long time. His paternal grandfather is retired from the forestry service, so the petrified wood is a gift complementary to Grandpa and to my woodworking interests. Alex likes his decor "rocks". Initially (some 6-8 months ago) I was to build a smaller tall/slim display cabinet for the petrified wood, then the new home presented the TV-display cabinet option.

Similarly I am converting a built in cabinet and shelves into an
entertainment center for a customer. I hate doing on site conversions
but this is a good repeat customer and the hard part is behind me and
they are liking the direction it is going. So there is that.
I am in the middle of building a walnut Electronics garage to sit on top
of the built in cabinet and below the flat screen. Then walnuts doors
for the lower cabinet with fabric grills.


Looking forward to seeing the results.

Sonny


OK, so not as complicated as what Leon is doing, but I converted this
$50 consignment shop hutch...

https://i.imgur.com/XOFNEPG.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/IMX6o1a.jpg

....into a kitchen island for my daughter.

https://i.imgur.com/J44gEhl.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/eeIziHg.jpg

The slats from the upper section of the hutch became the back panel of
the island so it looked good from all sides. I upgraded the wood-on-wood
drawer slides to full extension, self close. It was a fun project.

When I delivered it to her in Vermont, I swung through Massachusetts and
picked up my Dad, 82 at the time. The three of us went to Killington and
took the gondola up to the top of the mountain for lunch. The spring time
view was pretty neat.

  #20   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/9/2020 5:19 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Sunday, August 9, 2020 at 9:45:45 AM UTC-4, Sonny wrote:
On Saturday, August 8, 2020 at 8:19:07 AM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

Their son "needed" a TV cabinet for his bedroom, so I built one using salvaged 1X11 quarter sawn long leaf pine.... installed maybe a week ago. Scroll right for 2 more pics.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/438361...posted-public/

Hey that looks good AND STOUT!. LOL


It is pretty robust. Their son is a good kid, 13 yrs old, makes straight A's in school, likes rustic things and the outdoors. The rocks seen in the pic is petrified wood I've had for a long time. His paternal grandfather is retired from the forestry service, so the petrified wood is a gift complementary to Grandpa and to my woodworking interests. Alex likes his decor "rocks". Initially (some 6-8 months ago) I was to build a smaller tall/slim display cabinet for the petrified wood, then the new home presented the TV-display cabinet option.

Similarly I am converting a built in cabinet and shelves into an
entertainment center for a customer. I hate doing on site conversions
but this is a good repeat customer and the hard part is behind me and
they are liking the direction it is going. So there is that.
I am in the middle of building a walnut Electronics garage to sit on top
of the built in cabinet and below the flat screen. Then walnuts doors
for the lower cabinet with fabric grills.


Looking forward to seeing the results.

Sonny


OK, so not as complicated as what Leon is doing, but I converted this
$50 consignment shop hutch...

https://i.imgur.com/XOFNEPG.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/IMX6o1a.jpg

...into a kitchen island for my daughter.

https://i.imgur.com/J44gEhl.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/eeIziHg.jpg

The slats from the upper section of the hutch became the back panel of
the island so it looked good from all sides. I upgraded the wood-on-wood
drawer slides to full extension, self close. It was a fun project.

When I delivered it to her in Vermont, I swung through Massachusetts and
picked up my Dad, 82 at the time. The three of us went to Killington and
took the gondola up to the top of the mountain for lunch. The spring time
view was pretty neat.


Good job! I am starting to like painting wood, not cherry ;~). I have
build pieces for our home and painted them, 8 pieces. Most are in my
wife's quilting studio and one is down stairs. The one down stairs is a
plant stand in the kitchen. I painted it with Antique White milk paint.
I love milk paint.


  #21   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 783
Default Is there anything going on?

"Leon" wrote in message
...

I've been working on my house... currently leveling the ceilings,
insulating, air tightening, and putting up new drywall in the dining room
and living room. Over the past couple decades I redid about half the
interior (gutted) and the entire exterior (tore off everything--roofing,
siding, doors, windows, soffits, fascia making everything look straight,
level and plumb). Only a few more rooms to go and then new trim and flooring
will be done throughout -- I plan on making both. The house is coming along
and hopefully it's all done before I cannot do it any more! I recruit my
sons for help whenever I can get them... I'm starting to wonder though if
I'll need another roof before I finish the interior. ;~)

  #22   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 337
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/7/2020 5:24 PM, Leon wrote:

Somebody told me that something was going on over yonder last week but I
don't believe them.

--
Bodger's Dictum: Artifical intelligence
can never overcome natural stupidity.
  #23   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 311
Default Is there anything going on?


Spent about a week and a half with a friend giving the plywood CNC
router a good workout making "barcade" cabinets. Cut up about three
sheets of MDF into piles of various shaped parts.

cnc project: http://www.delorie.com/photos/cnc/

Also rebuilt a 1993 ZX6 motorcycle, but that's a different topic ;-)
  #24   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/10/2020 11:39 AM, John Grossbohlin wrote:
"Leon"Â* wrote in message
...

I've been working on my house... currently leveling the ceilings,
insulating, air tightening, and putting up new drywall in the dining
room and living room. Over the past couple decades I redid about half
the interior (gutted) and the entire exterior (tore off
everything--roofing, siding, doors, windows, soffits, fascia making
everything look straight, level and plumb). Only a few more rooms to go
and then new trim and flooring will be done throughout -- I plan on
making both. The house is coming along and hopefully it's all done
before I cannot do it any more! I recruit my sons for help whenever I
can get them... I'm starting to wonder though if I'll need another roof
before I finish the interior. ;~)



whew!
  #25   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/10/2020 2:01 PM, John McGaw wrote:
On 8/7/2020 5:24 PM, Leon wrote:

Somebody told me that something was going on over yonder last week but I
don't believe them.


Me eaver.


  #26   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,155
Default Is there anything going on?

On 8/10/2020 2:39 PM, DJ Delorie wrote:

Spent about a week and a half with a friend giving the plywood CNC
router a good workout making "barcade" cabinets. Cut up about three
sheets of MDF into piles of various shaped parts.

cnc project: http://www.delorie.com/photos/cnc/

Also rebuilt a 1993 ZX6 motorcycle, but that's a different topic ;-)


I'm hoping to get my hands back on my Shaper Origin for the current job.
I need to cut out 6 grills to support fabric in cabinet doors.
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Turning 'Til There's No There There charlie b Woodturning 7 September 26th 06 04:32 PM
Is there anything wrong with batteries sold at dollar stores? miamicuse Home Repair 25 February 1st 06 09:19 PM
Is there anything special about Balgrip tile adhesive? Dave UK diy 2 February 8th 05 12:59 PM
Modular home information- is there anything "even handed" out there cire1611 Home Ownership 0 January 24th 05 11:51 AM
Is there anything that keeps molten lead from sticking to metal? NokNokMan Metalworking 14 December 31st 04 09:00 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:37 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"