Yeah that’s exactly what we decided to do: put them in the boards
There are also pretty cheap gutter clips you can get so you put holes in nothing and you can reuse them every year.
Amazon product ASIN B0BG2DFHMC
Yeah that’s exactly what we decided to do: put them in the boards
and then rust from those spots.
No. You poors can't afford copper, but they do exist. As do steel/galv steel/etc.Aren't gutters aluminum these days?
Aren't gutters aluminum these days?
That's not true aluminum is immune to water, that's why aluminum boats can't sink.Certainly some are. They still deteriorate with water contact under the paint.
I was about to say - I started to do a small project like that and the wood prices are fucking outrageous enough that I said fuck it. I may revisit the idea later, but I'll seriously contemplate using an actual professional to do it so Im not just wasting money on idiotic mistakes. Are you planning on doing pull out drawer's for the lower shelves? Or are those just going to be a "Use in case of apocalypse" kind of shelves? lolSo got done with the pantry finally. Getting the kids to work is like heading cats. All that needs to happen is some painting or urethane.
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Shit cost about $400 of mats and the bifold door. Fucking crazy wood prices.
looks nice, don't forget to add some strip lighting before you finishSo got done with the pantry finally. Getting the kids to work is like heading cats. All that needs to happen is some painting or urethane.
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Shit cost about $400 of mats and the bifold door. Fucking crazy wood prices.
The kids did most of it, I just supervised. There are a few fuckups up close, but meh, its a closet.looks nice, don't forget to add some strip lighting before you finish
I used these this year and it's the way to go IMHO. Easy to snap up, quick deployment leads to happy me....There are also pretty cheap gutter clips you can get so you put holes in nothing and you can reuse them every year.
Amazon product ASIN B0BG2DFHMC
I used these this year and it's the way to go IMHO. Easy to snap up, quick deployment leads to happy me....
And now my house looks like someone pulled a clown car into the front yard and set off an IED under it.
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Just installed one of these. I can't believe I never thought of doing this sooner. Instead of pumping warm air from the dryer outside into nowhere, redirect it inside during the winter months.
Amazon.com
Definitely something I thought about. However, I'm in a semi-desert mountainous area with relatively low humidity most of the time so more moisture in the air certainly won't hurt. I'm going to be keeping a close eye on it but I'm not expecting too much of an issue but we'll see how it goes. Now, if you're in the eastern half of the country or the pacific NW and have much higher relative humidity, I can see how it might turn into a problem.My concern would be all the humidity.
When I was a kid I knew a family who routed the dryer air inside. I don't what their set up was but I just remember the room with the output was terrible, condensation on windows, etc. This is foothills of the Sierras, north of Sacramento a little more than an hour.Definitely something I thought about. However, I'm in a semi-desert mountainous area with relatively low humidity most of the time so more moisture in the air certainly won't hurt. I'm going to be keeping a close eye on it but I'm not expecting too much of an issue but we'll see how it goes. Now, if you're in the eastern half of the country or the pacific NW and have much higher relative humidity, I can see how it might turn into a problem.
a few months ago old man neighbor said "hey i don't think my dryer vent isnt working, can you take a look?" so he turned on his dryer and we both look at his vent and no air came out. then i went inside and i wanted to see the backside and we moved it and i was like wth, theres the regular connection to the wall, then theres a "y" fitting and it goes to the floor.Just installed one of these. I can't believe I never thought of doing this sooner. Instead of pumping warm air from the dryer outside into nowhere, redirect it inside during the winter months.
Amazon.com
Clearly it was to provide the best chance of filling up with dryer lint and creating a fire hazard.a few months ago old man neighbor said "hey i don't think my dryer vent isnt working, can you take a look?" so he turned on his dryer and we both look at his vent and no air came out. then i went inside and i wanted to see the backside and we moved it and i was like wth, theres the regular connection to the wall, then theres a "y" fitting and it goes to the floor.
i'm like "i think your vent is routed down your crawl space, for some odd reason", and since no one is gonna crawl down there, we just left it.
then 2weeks ago since he said he was selling, i offered to be nice and said i'd power wash his siding for him since it looked kinda mossy, while hooking up the water, i smelled fabric softener and found his vent, it was buried behind a bush and on the opposite side of the house from where the dryer is.
no idea why