All I wanted to do was clean the bathroom. I did the usual from up to down and then it came time to mop the floor.
The sqeezie sponge disintegrated! The local stores did not stock a replacement. So, I wiped the floor with small towel from a bucket. And then wiped it again with clean water. The mats were drying after being soaked in the laundry tub with a bit of laundry detergent. After they were rinsed several times the next day outside (garden hose and I left them out to be rained on), I waited for them to dry.
They wouldn't. Cold humidity is really useless for drying. It took 5 days for them to get half dry and then I just dragged them into the basement and waited. And waited. So they eventually dried and I was ready to put them back in place.
But there was dry grit on the floor, so I decided to vacuum the floor with my stick vacuum. After a pass, there was more dirt on the floor then before. Oh damn. So I dragged the larger cannister vacuum out. That was useless! No pickup at all.
So I checked the both for being filled. The stick bagless container was empty. The cannister bag was empty. That meant problems.
I'm not the world's best fix-it guy. But I can try some things by logic. It took 15 minutes to figure out how to take the cannister suction head apart. I got the screws all loose easily, but nothing wanted to come aprt. Which made no sense. What were the screws for?
It occurred to me to turn the suction head over. Then the top came right off. You wouldn't belief what I found inside! The entire suction head was packed with cat hair. There was almost an entire cat in there. And to be fair given the length, a fair amount of my own hair.
I started by just picking stuff out from the brushes. Then I realized it was far more involved. I got some pliers to pull more out. But if I had it to do over again, I would have brought it to the garage and used the air compressor and blow it all out faster.
On the other hand, I know more about the insides of the suction head, so maybe it was worth it. In any case, when I put it back together, it worked like NEW! Dang the sucker (literally) worked great. So I did the rest of the house.
That's how things go sometimes. You try to do a small thing and it turns into a big thing and you are glad you did it. I did the whole kitchen like that last week. Started with cleaning the M/W and the entire kitchen was clean 3 hours later.
And I did get the bathroom mats set back in place...
Showing posts with label Bathroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bathroom. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Friday, July 7, 2017
Inside House Work
I got the main bathroom redone yesterday. Only too a year. Really!
I had the tub and surrounding tile replaced June 2016. It left raw plaster around it and all I had to do was repaint that. But I decided the repaint the whole thing. And didn't, and didn't and didn't.
I did Monday. Now, when I repaint, I do it right. Remove all the outlet covers and towel bar and TP holder and mirror. Sand the raw plaster around the tub and tilework to utter smoothness and use a tack cloth to remove any plaster dust. Paint the raw plaster with a primer coat. Wash the walls with TSP (Trisodium phosphate), rinse the walls with clean water 3 times, cover all the edges with tape, cover everything with drop cloths, paint the corners with a good brush, paint the walls with a roller. I was only covering "golden bamboo" color paint.
I thought "a day". It took 3. And several hours yesterday after the paint dried for 2 days to re-install the outlet covers, towel bar, TP holder, etc. The mirror was a real pain.
Part of the problem was that all the screws that fitted the attachments were both rusty and clogged with drywall dust I could brush off. I have a large assortment of screws, but of course none matched the type, size, and lengths I needed for new plastic anchors into the drywall.
I went around in circles trying to match what I had to what I needed. No luck. Then DUH! Most of the towel bar attachments were wood. So I just drilled the holes in them a little larger to fit the screws I had. Sometimes the solution to a problem is right there.
So I got the outlet covers on first. They were always slightly crooked, so it was easy to correct that. NOT! I had to adjust the actual switches and outlets a bit to get them straightened out. Careful to not touch anything electrical inside the switches, almost. I reached in too far once and ZZAPP! A wasp sting, but I was wearing rubber-soled shoes so no grounding connection. I got more careful after that.
But I got THAT done. Then it was time for the 3'x3' mirror. The mirror takes 3 hands to attach and I was just 1 hand short. I will tell you that it IS possible to use your thighs as a hand to hold a drill in place with one hand holding a mirror upright and another hand to tighten a new drill bit in, but I WON'T say it is easy.
But it got done...
Last was the shower curtain rod. When the contractor removed it, it came right off after removing 4 screws. Somehow, it became a bit longer while it sat around for a year. I attached one collar. That was a mess itself. I was expecting to just drill into drywall and tap a plastic anchor in the hole to hold a screw. Instead, I hit wood. Wood is good. Except the hole I drilled for the plastic anchor was bigger than the screw (that is normal). So I had to get a larger screw to to match the hole sized for the plastic anchor. Which meant I had to drill a larger hole in the shower curtain collar,
It is ALWAYS something to adjust or resize. It's maddening sometimes. So I got that screw to fit the hole and went to the one on the other side. The drill went right through the drywall. No wood. So THAT one needed a plastic anchor.
OK, so at least I know the pattern for the collar on the other side of the tub. Right? Wrong!
The other side hit no wood. So more plastic anchors. I ALMOST screwed the other collar into the wall, but realized the shower curtain rod had to be in them both first. At guess what? The shower curtain rod didn't want to fit. It seemed a hair too long and threatened to scrape my nice paint job!
I had to play around with the rod a few minuted before I discovered that the wall there is not perfectly straight. Moving the collar and rod to one side gave me just enough clearance to get it to fit against the plastic anchors I had installed.
Screwing them in was easy. NOT! The curtain rod prevented my electric screwdriver from getting a clean fit into the screw slots. ARGGHH!
I finally found a really long screwdriver and got it attached manually.
It was a real pleasure to finally reattach the outer decorative shower curtain itself onto the rod and attach an inner mildew resistant shower curtain.
2 days work took a lot of 4 days. But it is done.
You may think I hate doing this kind of stuff. I don't actually. Sure, the problems drive me mad sometimes, but if I wanted to avoid that, I would just hire people to do it. I do it because I want to know *I* did it.
Mom use to laugh as she told friends about how, when I was even a toddler, I would refuse help with tying shoelaces and getting dressed, saying "Mark Do". And I haven't changed...
Tomorrow, I attack cleaning and repainting the kitchen walls... After the bathroom, "piece of cake", right?
I had the tub and surrounding tile replaced June 2016. It left raw plaster around it and all I had to do was repaint that. But I decided the repaint the whole thing. And didn't, and didn't and didn't.
I did Monday. Now, when I repaint, I do it right. Remove all the outlet covers and towel bar and TP holder and mirror. Sand the raw plaster around the tub and tilework to utter smoothness and use a tack cloth to remove any plaster dust. Paint the raw plaster with a primer coat. Wash the walls with TSP (Trisodium phosphate), rinse the walls with clean water 3 times, cover all the edges with tape, cover everything with drop cloths, paint the corners with a good brush, paint the walls with a roller. I was only covering "golden bamboo" color paint.
I thought "a day". It took 3. And several hours yesterday after the paint dried for 2 days to re-install the outlet covers, towel bar, TP holder, etc. The mirror was a real pain.
Part of the problem was that all the screws that fitted the attachments were both rusty and clogged with drywall dust I could brush off. I have a large assortment of screws, but of course none matched the type, size, and lengths I needed for new plastic anchors into the drywall.
I went around in circles trying to match what I had to what I needed. No luck. Then DUH! Most of the towel bar attachments were wood. So I just drilled the holes in them a little larger to fit the screws I had. Sometimes the solution to a problem is right there.
So I got the outlet covers on first. They were always slightly crooked, so it was easy to correct that. NOT! I had to adjust the actual switches and outlets a bit to get them straightened out. Careful to not touch anything electrical inside the switches, almost. I reached in too far once and ZZAPP! A wasp sting, but I was wearing rubber-soled shoes so no grounding connection. I got more careful after that.
But I got THAT done. Then it was time for the 3'x3' mirror. The mirror takes 3 hands to attach and I was just 1 hand short. I will tell you that it IS possible to use your thighs as a hand to hold a drill in place with one hand holding a mirror upright and another hand to tighten a new drill bit in, but I WON'T say it is easy.
But it got done...
Last was the shower curtain rod. When the contractor removed it, it came right off after removing 4 screws. Somehow, it became a bit longer while it sat around for a year. I attached one collar. That was a mess itself. I was expecting to just drill into drywall and tap a plastic anchor in the hole to hold a screw. Instead, I hit wood. Wood is good. Except the hole I drilled for the plastic anchor was bigger than the screw (that is normal). So I had to get a larger screw to to match the hole sized for the plastic anchor. Which meant I had to drill a larger hole in the shower curtain collar,
It is ALWAYS something to adjust or resize. It's maddening sometimes. So I got that screw to fit the hole and went to the one on the other side. The drill went right through the drywall. No wood. So THAT one needed a plastic anchor.
OK, so at least I know the pattern for the collar on the other side of the tub. Right? Wrong!
The other side hit no wood. So more plastic anchors. I ALMOST screwed the other collar into the wall, but realized the shower curtain rod had to be in them both first. At guess what? The shower curtain rod didn't want to fit. It seemed a hair too long and threatened to scrape my nice paint job!
I had to play around with the rod a few minuted before I discovered that the wall there is not perfectly straight. Moving the collar and rod to one side gave me just enough clearance to get it to fit against the plastic anchors I had installed.
Screwing them in was easy. NOT! The curtain rod prevented my electric screwdriver from getting a clean fit into the screw slots. ARGGHH!
I finally found a really long screwdriver and got it attached manually.
It was a real pleasure to finally reattach the outer decorative shower curtain itself onto the rod and attach an inner mildew resistant shower curtain.
2 days work took a lot of 4 days. But it is done.
You may think I hate doing this kind of stuff. I don't actually. Sure, the problems drive me mad sometimes, but if I wanted to avoid that, I would just hire people to do it. I do it because I want to know *I* did it.
Mom use to laugh as she told friends about how, when I was even a toddler, I would refuse help with tying shoelaces and getting dressed, saying "Mark Do". And I haven't changed...
Tomorrow, I attack cleaning and repainting the kitchen walls... After the bathroom, "piece of cake", right?
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Bathtub Area Replacement 4
Finally, the "after" pictures... It all looks great.
Higher tiles, better showerhead.
I have to repaint though. I can do that part.
They tiled all the way down the sides. Better than it was before.
I'm really tired of that pale gold color anyway. 30 years...
But the new bathtub looks great!
I figure white fixtures work with any color wall paint.
I chose a very very light mossy green to paint the bathroom. It matches the (and I'm almost ashamed to say this as a guy) towels and bathroom mats. Well, I didn't want bright white paint...
Higher tiles, better showerhead.
I have to repaint though. I can do that part.
They tiled all the way down the sides. Better than it was before.
I'm really tired of that pale gold color anyway. 30 years...
But the new bathtub looks great!
I figure white fixtures work with any color wall paint.
I chose a very very light mossy green to paint the bathroom. It matches the (and I'm almost ashamed to say this as a guy) towels and bathroom mats. Well, I didn't want bright white paint...
Monday, May 30, 2016
Bathtub Area Replacement 3
I was expecting to show the finished bathtub area, but I discovered I had pictures between the start of the tiling and the completion. So I'll show those today.
I left off with the start of the tiling...
So then they added the towel bar and completed it. You can see tile spacers and the tape holding the towel bar in place as the adhesive dried. I made a mistake when asked about the placement of the towel bar. I reached up to where I would want to grab the face towel and they drew a line on the wall there. I meant that that was where I wanted the towel to be, not the bar. I should have had them put the towel bar itself 2 rows higher. But I agreed with their marked position, so I have to live with it.
Here is the pipe for the tub faucet and the combination on/off and hot-cold valve.
And the showerhead pipe (It gets covered - or replaced, I'm not sure which they did)... The tiles are 2 rows higher than before and a row further sideways. And they installed bullnose tiles (rounded over edges) along the top and sides. That helps avoid wall wetness.
The tiles were well-placed. There are some tiny imperfections at a corner or two...
But grout hides many slight imperfections. The grout sealant helps too (and waterproofs the grout as well of course).
Next time, I WILL show the finished look!
I left off with the start of the tiling...
So then they added the towel bar and completed it. You can see tile spacers and the tape holding the towel bar in place as the adhesive dried. I made a mistake when asked about the placement of the towel bar. I reached up to where I would want to grab the face towel and they drew a line on the wall there. I meant that that was where I wanted the towel to be, not the bar. I should have had them put the towel bar itself 2 rows higher. But I agreed with their marked position, so I have to live with it.
Here is the pipe for the tub faucet and the combination on/off and hot-cold valve.
And the showerhead pipe (It gets covered - or replaced, I'm not sure which they did)... The tiles are 2 rows higher than before and a row further sideways. And they installed bullnose tiles (rounded over edges) along the top and sides. That helps avoid wall wetness.
The tiles were well-placed. There are some tiny imperfections at a corner or two...
But grout hides many slight imperfections. The grout sealant helps too (and waterproofs the grout as well of course).
Next time, I WILL show the finished look!
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Bathtub Area Replacement 2
Well, we've gone through 2 more 6 hour visits from the remodels. Things are going well. It it easy to think work should go faster, but I hang around enough to see that there is more involved that I thought (or that I thought I was getting in this project).
I'm a relatively good homeowner to work for. I stay out of the way (but reachable). I peek in only when the 2 workers are out of the area doing other stuff elsewhere in the house. The workers are comfortable enough to complain about "SOME" people they have worked around. I've even provided a couple of tools they didn't have with them.
When they complain about having worked too many days in a row or have some unexpected problem, I commiserate appropriately with personal experiences in D-I-Y (without comparing those to their professional experiences. When they want to gripe about something (personal or project-related) I listen well and let them talk.
When they ask where the soap dish or towel rack should go, I ask a couple questions about the options and then give them an answer quickly.
So things are going along well.
Friday was demolition and tub replacement/new plumbing day. The existing tub was the cheapest the builder would provide (surprise, surprise), the tile backer board was the cheapest available, some of the wall studs were misaligned, and the tiles didn't extend as far as the should have. And the edge tiles were just regular tiles, not the rounded-over tiles (again, no surprise).
One thing remodelers are notorious for is exposing the studs and subfloor and finding "rot and mold", increasing the work (and cost) of the project. These guys said that all looked fine. I felt a LOT better about them after that, because I was prepared to fight about it. I don't know tiling, but I do know wood.
Monday was the installation of new concrete backer boards for the new tiles, and starting new tiles. They did 80% of that. There was an issue about the in-tub towel holder. The manager said he hadn't installed one of those in 10 years ("no one wants them"). But I did, and pointed out that he was supposed to replace what was there. So he found one. He had to drive 30 miles to a supplier, but he did.
The tiler was extending the tiles to an edge of the wall, and discovered the wall was bowed inwards slightly. Not a functional problem, but something that could be noticed. So he said he could remove and replace the metal corner former (the technical term escapes me). I asked him to find out the cost. I was expecting several hundred dollars, it was $75. Cool...
And they may have regretted the estimate. The corner form has ~100 holes for nailing in the form, and (according to the tile guy) "some crazed lunatic used every single one".
Today, they finished the tile. That last 20% was a lot of detailed tile-cutting work as they installed the towel bar and the couple rows of tiles above it, bullnose (rounded) tiles along the edges, and even down the outside edges of the tub down to the floor.
Tomorrow is the grouting between the tiles. Thursday is the application of a grout sealer, inspection, and final payment. I can hardly wait. The cats will be thrilled, too.
I'm a relatively good homeowner to work for. I stay out of the way (but reachable). I peek in only when the 2 workers are out of the area doing other stuff elsewhere in the house. The workers are comfortable enough to complain about "SOME" people they have worked around. I've even provided a couple of tools they didn't have with them.
When they complain about having worked too many days in a row or have some unexpected problem, I commiserate appropriately with personal experiences in D-I-Y (without comparing those to their professional experiences. When they want to gripe about something (personal or project-related) I listen well and let them talk.
When they ask where the soap dish or towel rack should go, I ask a couple questions about the options and then give them an answer quickly.
So things are going along well.
Friday was demolition and tub replacement/new plumbing day. The existing tub was the cheapest the builder would provide (surprise, surprise), the tile backer board was the cheapest available, some of the wall studs were misaligned, and the tiles didn't extend as far as the should have. And the edge tiles were just regular tiles, not the rounded-over tiles (again, no surprise).
One thing remodelers are notorious for is exposing the studs and subfloor and finding "rot and mold", increasing the work (and cost) of the project. These guys said that all looked fine. I felt a LOT better about them after that, because I was prepared to fight about it. I don't know tiling, but I do know wood.
Monday was the installation of new concrete backer boards for the new tiles, and starting new tiles. They did 80% of that. There was an issue about the in-tub towel holder. The manager said he hadn't installed one of those in 10 years ("no one wants them"). But I did, and pointed out that he was supposed to replace what was there. So he found one. He had to drive 30 miles to a supplier, but he did.
The tiler was extending the tiles to an edge of the wall, and discovered the wall was bowed inwards slightly. Not a functional problem, but something that could be noticed. So he said he could remove and replace the metal corner former (the technical term escapes me). I asked him to find out the cost. I was expecting several hundred dollars, it was $75. Cool...
And they may have regretted the estimate. The corner form has ~100 holes for nailing in the form, and (according to the tile guy) "some crazed lunatic used every single one".
Today, they finished the tile. That last 20% was a lot of detailed tile-cutting work as they installed the towel bar and the couple rows of tiles above it, bullnose (rounded) tiles along the edges, and even down the outside edges of the tub down to the floor.
Tomorrow is the grouting between the tiles. Thursday is the application of a grout sealer, inspection, and final payment. I can hardly wait. The cats will be thrilled, too.
Friday, May 20, 2016
Bathtub Area Replacement
First, getting up at 7 am to be ready for the demolition crew was a novel experience. Second, getting the cats stashed away into a safe room was only a partial success. Third, no renovation work ever goes smoothly.
I managed to get up on time, fed the cats, and went to get them into the bedroom. I called them and Marley and Iza came right in. Ayla was not so cooperative, sensing that "something" was up. I know better than to chase a cat, I just follow slowly. But she was ducking from room to room and upstairs/downstairs until she was upstairs and I wasn't sure where she was. I figured she was either in the Mews Room or the Computer Room, so I just closed both doors. It turned out she had to be hiding in the Living room somewhere. I swear that cat could hide in a coffee mug! But since she stayed in hiding and didn't try to run out through the frequently opened front door, all was fine.
The bathtub area demolition was impressive. I took a LOT of pictures for possible insurance reasons, but I will only inflict a few of them on you.
The before shot shows the mess. When the tiles began to come loose, I duct-taped plastic around the front and side, not realizing how bad it was getting behind the plastic. And under that situation, tub-cleaning seems to have fallen off my schedule.
So, they went in and just started pounding the tiles and backer board into pieces. Well, the plastic was more waterproof than the tiles were!
Bathroom renovators are notorious for finding "more repairs needed" when the backer boards are removed. These guys said everything looked mold-free and no rot. I looked at it and agreed. I don't know tiles, but I know about wood. So they vacuumed all the dust and debris.
And started to replace the backer board. It is a special concrete and laminate product that basically can't rot. So was the original stuff, but after 30 years, the modern product is better.
Next, they installed the new tub and covered the inside with padding and plastic. And it was a good thing they did! Because after that, they constructed and installed the new pipes. I wasn't thrilled to see them using a plastic pipe, but they assured me that it is better than copper pipe. "Not one failure in 10 years and it sheds mineral deposits that can collect in copper pipe with hard water".
Well, I have soft water, but if the cemented plastic holds better than soldered copper, OK... BTW, the first day I moved in here 30 years ago, I tasted the water and decided it was the best municipal water I had ever tasted!
So then we had a few "adventures". The first was a pipe cap blowout. You see that copper pipe sticking out over the tub? There is a temporary pipe cap. The Senior Repairman said they are called "shark valves" because once on, they never come loose until you want them to come loose".
So guess what came loose? Right! The shark valve... The assistant went running to the door shouting at Senior guy that "the water is on". Well, yeah, it had been turned back on, but I realized he suddenly didn't WANT it to be on, so I ran into the basement (bad knee and all) and crawled into the access where the whole-house shut off valve was and closed it.
That apparently saved about 50 gallons of water pouring out the open tub into the basement. And I stuck a bucket under the leak.
They were very apologetic. Those caps "never fail". Well, until they do, of course. At least I got some credit for fast-action! The assistant is not the brightest bulb in a room of lamps, he meant "water is flowing and it shouldn't". I had noticed the senior guy mad jokes about the assistant (his BIL) and I had joined in slightly, but I stopped after that.
But, no harm was done. The plastic in the tub caught most of it and my bucket caught the rest. The senior guy was really pissed off, but I joked "that was fun, let's do it again".
After they vacuumed up the water and replaced the plastic lining with a dry one (and made sure I saw they were using a brand new pipe "shark valve" cap), they proceeded with the job with the water turned back on.
Then the second little "adventure"...The last backer board to be installed was the one that fits over the tub faucet and shower valve. That takes very precise cut-outs. And senior guy cut it wrong! Oh wow, did the assistant have a relieved turn with that. I had noticed the the senior guy just wrote the cutting dimensions randomly on a piece of paper. Well, I suppose when you have been doing something for 38 years (as he said he had), you know where your numbers are.
Oops, he got the left and right measurements reversed.. No problem for me, it's a fixed price contract (and the senior guy did mention that it comes out of company expenses.
I mentioned to him that when I put wood paneling in the basement, I had been careful to use a huge piece of cardboard from a bookcase box to make sure I cut it right. Ans then traced that onto the wood paneling so that I COULDN'T get in wrong. And got it wrong ANYWAY because I put the cardboard on the wrong side of the panel.
True story, but it did lighten up the situation... The last thing I want are angry embarrassed workers doing work in my house. I've done enough house work myself to know that when you get mad, you don't do your best work!
So senior guy cut out another concrete backer board panel and it fit like a glove.
They return on Monday to install the bathtub fixtures and do the tile installation.
Ayla, Iza, and Marley recovered quickly. Food helped, attention helped, deck time helped. quietness helped. But I bet I will have to get sneakier about getting them shut into the bedroom Monday morning. At least the final work is quieter...
I managed to get up on time, fed the cats, and went to get them into the bedroom. I called them and Marley and Iza came right in. Ayla was not so cooperative, sensing that "something" was up. I know better than to chase a cat, I just follow slowly. But she was ducking from room to room and upstairs/downstairs until she was upstairs and I wasn't sure where she was. I figured she was either in the Mews Room or the Computer Room, so I just closed both doors. It turned out she had to be hiding in the Living room somewhere. I swear that cat could hide in a coffee mug! But since she stayed in hiding and didn't try to run out through the frequently opened front door, all was fine.
The bathtub area demolition was impressive. I took a LOT of pictures for possible insurance reasons, but I will only inflict a few of them on you.
The before shot shows the mess. When the tiles began to come loose, I duct-taped plastic around the front and side, not realizing how bad it was getting behind the plastic. And under that situation, tub-cleaning seems to have fallen off my schedule.
So, they went in and just started pounding the tiles and backer board into pieces. Well, the plastic was more waterproof than the tiles were!
Bathroom renovators are notorious for finding "more repairs needed" when the backer boards are removed. These guys said everything looked mold-free and no rot. I looked at it and agreed. I don't know tiles, but I know about wood. So they vacuumed all the dust and debris.
And started to replace the backer board. It is a special concrete and laminate product that basically can't rot. So was the original stuff, but after 30 years, the modern product is better.
Next, they installed the new tub and covered the inside with padding and plastic. And it was a good thing they did! Because after that, they constructed and installed the new pipes. I wasn't thrilled to see them using a plastic pipe, but they assured me that it is better than copper pipe. "Not one failure in 10 years and it sheds mineral deposits that can collect in copper pipe with hard water".
Well, I have soft water, but if the cemented plastic holds better than soldered copper, OK... BTW, the first day I moved in here 30 years ago, I tasted the water and decided it was the best municipal water I had ever tasted!
So then we had a few "adventures". The first was a pipe cap blowout. You see that copper pipe sticking out over the tub? There is a temporary pipe cap. The Senior Repairman said they are called "shark valves" because once on, they never come loose until you want them to come loose".
So guess what came loose? Right! The shark valve... The assistant went running to the door shouting at Senior guy that "the water is on". Well, yeah, it had been turned back on, but I realized he suddenly didn't WANT it to be on, so I ran into the basement (bad knee and all) and crawled into the access where the whole-house shut off valve was and closed it.
That apparently saved about 50 gallons of water pouring out the open tub into the basement. And I stuck a bucket under the leak.
They were very apologetic. Those caps "never fail". Well, until they do, of course. At least I got some credit for fast-action! The assistant is not the brightest bulb in a room of lamps, he meant "water is flowing and it shouldn't". I had noticed the senior guy mad jokes about the assistant (his BIL) and I had joined in slightly, but I stopped after that.
But, no harm was done. The plastic in the tub caught most of it and my bucket caught the rest. The senior guy was really pissed off, but I joked "that was fun, let's do it again".
After they vacuumed up the water and replaced the plastic lining with a dry one (and made sure I saw they were using a brand new pipe "shark valve" cap), they proceeded with the job with the water turned back on.
Then the second little "adventure"...The last backer board to be installed was the one that fits over the tub faucet and shower valve. That takes very precise cut-outs. And senior guy cut it wrong! Oh wow, did the assistant have a relieved turn with that. I had noticed the the senior guy just wrote the cutting dimensions randomly on a piece of paper. Well, I suppose when you have been doing something for 38 years (as he said he had), you know where your numbers are.
Oops, he got the left and right measurements reversed.. No problem for me, it's a fixed price contract (and the senior guy did mention that it comes out of company expenses.
I mentioned to him that when I put wood paneling in the basement, I had been careful to use a huge piece of cardboard from a bookcase box to make sure I cut it right. Ans then traced that onto the wood paneling so that I COULDN'T get in wrong. And got it wrong ANYWAY because I put the cardboard on the wrong side of the panel.
True story, but it did lighten up the situation... The last thing I want are angry embarrassed workers doing work in my house. I've done enough house work myself to know that when you get mad, you don't do your best work!
So senior guy cut out another concrete backer board panel and it fit like a glove.
They return on Monday to install the bathtub fixtures and do the tile installation.
Ayla, Iza, and Marley recovered quickly. Food helped, attention helped, deck time helped. quietness helped. But I bet I will have to get sneakier about getting them shut into the bedroom Monday morning. At least the final work is quieter...
Monday, May 9, 2016
Statuses
Well, the good news is that my Heat Pump is scheduled to be fixed tomorrow morning. The repair company called me this morning. They got their supplier to provide the part for free, they are doing the labor for free, I will pay for the replacement coolant ($200).
I accepted. They could have given me a bunch of technical runaround "proving" none of it was their fault, but they didn't. And I get the 1st appointment of the day, so I won't have to sit around waiting in a 4-hour window.
It will be good to having the heat pump working properly again (possibly for the 1st time ever). My electric company sends me monthly reports showing that my Winter electrical usage is 3x the average of my neighbors (Summer is close). And I have been extraordinarily fortunate that the outside temperature has been unusually moderate (highs of 70 and lows of 55 for almost 2 weeks while the system was completely off). I'm a real warm-bodied person and don't sleep well above 70.
I'm patiently waiting for the bathtub tile replacement. The entire tile surround and backerboard will be replaced, as well as the faucet and temperature valve, the showerhead, soap dish, towelrack, and the tub itself. I guess for a cheaply built "starter house", 30 years was long enough before some repairs were needed.
I was encouraged when the remodeler said not to use the tub before the replacement work (2 weeks hence) so that they could better tell if any moisture on the studs behind the walls was just dampness from the leaks or actual damaged.
I know that its routine for bathroom remodelers to go for increases to the work required claiming unseen stud damage or mold. That the remodeler seems to be trying to make sure any such signs of moisture are real is probably why they have an "A" rating on Angie's List.
The aggravation is that they say the work will take 10 days. I have a showerstall in a half bath to use, but I don't like it much. And I'm not thrilled about having to be available for workers here 4 or 5 days (it takes 10 days, but they won't be here every day - some things need time to "set"). But after a year of increasingly worsening tiles problems it will be worth it.
My knee (twisted on April 5th) is still not normal again, but I can walk straight-forward almost as usual. I still feel it on stairs and getting into bed. I've missed the whole Spring on yardwork, though and the weeds are taking over. I'll be busy when I can dig again!
I accepted. They could have given me a bunch of technical runaround "proving" none of it was their fault, but they didn't. And I get the 1st appointment of the day, so I won't have to sit around waiting in a 4-hour window.
It will be good to having the heat pump working properly again (possibly for the 1st time ever). My electric company sends me monthly reports showing that my Winter electrical usage is 3x the average of my neighbors (Summer is close). And I have been extraordinarily fortunate that the outside temperature has been unusually moderate (highs of 70 and lows of 55 for almost 2 weeks while the system was completely off). I'm a real warm-bodied person and don't sleep well above 70.
I'm patiently waiting for the bathtub tile replacement. The entire tile surround and backerboard will be replaced, as well as the faucet and temperature valve, the showerhead, soap dish, towelrack, and the tub itself. I guess for a cheaply built "starter house", 30 years was long enough before some repairs were needed.
I was encouraged when the remodeler said not to use the tub before the replacement work (2 weeks hence) so that they could better tell if any moisture on the studs behind the walls was just dampness from the leaks or actual damaged.
I know that its routine for bathroom remodelers to go for increases to the work required claiming unseen stud damage or mold. That the remodeler seems to be trying to make sure any such signs of moisture are real is probably why they have an "A" rating on Angie's List.
The aggravation is that they say the work will take 10 days. I have a showerstall in a half bath to use, but I don't like it much. And I'm not thrilled about having to be available for workers here 4 or 5 days (it takes 10 days, but they won't be here every day - some things need time to "set"). But after a year of increasingly worsening tiles problems it will be worth it.
My knee (twisted on April 5th) is still not normal again, but I can walk straight-forward almost as usual. I still feel it on stairs and getting into bed. I've missed the whole Spring on yardwork, though and the weeds are taking over. I'll be busy when I can dig again!
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Bathtub Tile Repair
I mentioned recently that my bathroom tub tiles were loose and needed repair. And since I am a reasonably talented D-I-Yr, I was asked why I couldn't do it myself.
Well, I've never done any tile work, and this sure isn't the place to start...
Here is the humiliating proof...
I am quite sure that the tile backing is utterly rotted. It may need studs replaced. And I know for sure I don't want to mess with grout...
This is one thing I don't feel remotely competent to fix.
Well, I've never done any tile work, and this sure isn't the place to start...
Here is the humiliating proof...
I am quite sure that the tile backing is utterly rotted. It may need studs replaced. And I know for sure I don't want to mess with grout...
This is one thing I don't feel remotely competent to fix.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
Let There Be Light!
No offence intended but my bathroom is interior and light has always been an issue. It came to a head when I bought a new sagegreen bath towel and it looked dead gray on the towel rack. So I also bought a bright blue towel that matched the fancy marine fish shower curtain and it looked PURPLE!
OK, I decided to get some daylight in there. No, not a skylight, just "daylight" bulbs. I figured there were regular incandescent daylight bulbs, but I couldn't find any. I had to get compact fluorescent bulbs.
WHAT a difference! The color of both towels sprung to life. Now, I don't want to suggest that the color of my towels defines my life. But it WAS annoying that they looked so different than in daylight and I never saw a problem I didn't want to fix.
And don't get me wrong about the towels either. I'm both genetically and by upbringing used to going "cheap", but my escape is that I go by value rather than price. The $13 towels at Walmart and Target are as good as the $30 ones at Bed, Bath&Beyond. Soft, absorbent, oversize and 100% top cotton. I'm glad to see the true colors of the new towels.
But, OMG, I'm going to need to clean the bathroom a lot more often!!! And forgive me if I won't explain why...
But the towel color with regular incandescent and "daylight fluorescent"?
Big difference, huh?
OK, I decided to get some daylight in there. No, not a skylight, just "daylight" bulbs. I figured there were regular incandescent daylight bulbs, but I couldn't find any. I had to get compact fluorescent bulbs.
WHAT a difference! The color of both towels sprung to life. Now, I don't want to suggest that the color of my towels defines my life. But it WAS annoying that they looked so different than in daylight and I never saw a problem I didn't want to fix.
And don't get me wrong about the towels either. I'm both genetically and by upbringing used to going "cheap", but my escape is that I go by value rather than price. The $13 towels at Walmart and Target are as good as the $30 ones at Bed, Bath&Beyond. Soft, absorbent, oversize and 100% top cotton. I'm glad to see the true colors of the new towels.
But, OMG, I'm going to need to clean the bathroom a lot more often!!! And forgive me if I won't explain why...
But the towel color with regular incandescent and "daylight fluorescent"?
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