To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Between 485 & 705 SQ/FT Bob Heine's Auto Emporium

Workspaces between 485 and 705 squarefeet.
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Wise move avoiding the sun.
Uncle Willie, Flamingos turn pink from eating shrimp. I turn pink thinking about going out into the Florida sun. Years ago I made women cry when they saw me shirtless at the beach. I made men tear up with laughter the same way. I'm not albino but that is my skin tone.
Nice work!! Did you enclose the pool or buy home with that already there? Do you or Lianne (sp?) use pool often?
Drives, the previous (original) owner had the enclosure included in the build. House was built in 1988, four years before Hurricane Andrew, which drastically changed South Florida's building codes. I can repair this one myself but if it has to be replaced the cost is astronomical, with engineered trusses and structural bracing. So far, in 2021, I have used the pool four times and Liane has used it once (involving a bath to neutralize whatever slimy dead thing the dog rolled in).
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

don long

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 31, 2012
Messages
8,856
Location
southern california
I have one and I hate it. There is always something going wrong ant it starts turning green. I haven't found a reliable pool service in the 14 years I've lived here. Using it to test for a leaky tire is a good idea. My golf carts are always finding nails around here.
Glad to hear that you are healing well.
 

xtremek

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 13, 2012
Messages
11,603
Location
St. Johns, Mi
WE use ours fairly frequently. Wife and I use it for rapid cool downs after doing work outside. She's in it almost daily.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Don’t forget tire repair use!! If we ever get a pool it will have to be enclosed to protect us from getting wet (rain).
Cheers!!
Drives, there's also the important job of rinsing the last bit of soap off the pet. I take the dog in the pool after her bath to be sure she's rinsed clean. It also helps eliminate the crusty sweat from me after too much time working outside. At one point I did consider replacing the roof screens with clear panels but the idea of the entire structure flying away in a hurricane ended that dream.
That pool sounds like a great investment.
Uncle Willie, as a 10-year-old kid my only criteria for a trailer park when we traveled out west was a pool. If it had one I was happy and if it didn't I was a brat with an attitude. Now I view the pool as another thorn in my side but then I remember it's a perfect excuse to staycation. We end up paying the same amount to have wi-fi, a pool and TV at our disposal but no standing in line to board a plane or ship.
Try selling a house in Florida (or AZ, TX, SoCal or LV) without one...
Scott, our house would look silly with just a little patio and a huge sloping back yard.
I have one and I hate it. There is always something going wrong ant it starts turning green. I haven't found a reliable pool service in the 14 years I've lived here. Using it to test for a leaky tire is a good idea. My golf carts are always finding nails around here.
Glad to hear that you are healing well.
Don, I feel for you. When we were away from home, living in Australia, we had to have pool service. They beat the **** out of everything and the day we returned it looked like a guacamole festival. I would pay to have someone take care of it like I do the lawn but every pool service seems to be run by someone who believes they deserve a better career.
That drag wagon sure is a tastey piece of gear. Nice work on the pool pump fixxer upper too.
Hewey, I grew up in the golden age of hot rodding. A teenage friend working in a grocery store part time for minimum wage bought a brand new 1963 Chevrolet Super Sport with the 283 small block. Another friend working full time at the same grocery store bought the same car with the 409ci 425hp and 4-speed. You had to know someone at a Ford dealership but in 1966 a Shelby Cobra 427 sold for $7,500 (same year we bought our first house for $14,500). When I was earning twice the minimum wage (2 x $1.50 = $3.00 an hour) in 1968 we were able to buy a brand new 1968 Pontiac GTO in spite of being burdened with monthly mortgage payments of $110.00!

Thanks for stopping by and the kind words.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
WE use ours fairly frequently. Wife and I use it for rapid cool downs after doing work outside. She's in it almost daily.
Kirk, for some reason Liane doesn't like water colder than body temperature (only ice she tolerates is in a container). I love using the pool to cool down after working outside but I know my saline sweat is going to disturb the delicate chemical balance of the water. I only go in after the soaked clothing line reaches my knees.
 

Grizz1963

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2010
Messages
12,054
Location
Rochester, KENT. UK
Always something to fix, replace, move about or instal.

But we would die in our steps if we did not have these things to do ehh Bob.

Outside lights look lovely.

LED really seems to be the way of the future.
 

driftpin

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 22, 2016
Messages
11,304
Location
Miami-Dade/Broward Co. Florida
Bob, a good job in replacing the pool pump. Won't Liane assist you in lifting things? I replaced our Hayward 'smart-pump' before COVID, this time, instead of just buying one from Pinch-a-Penny (pool supplies, if people don't know) at a cost well-above $1K, I bought it online for about $400 less. It was a same-size/model (but 'updated,' whatever they do, probably jack-up the chassis and slip-in a higher pricetag) so the swap-out went easily, I also like and use unions. Some people don't like 'em, I buy quality fittings, ensure all surfaces are clean, and they don't cause me issues.

The Hayward has what I believe to be a ceramic bearing/seal, the old 'smart-pump' had that eventually leak, and it messed-up the motor. The strainer basket was OK, but in taking it apart, one of the brass inserts in the strainer basket parted-company with the PVC, so it all went to recycling/trash. I suppose that if I kept a better eye on the ceramic bearing/seal, I could replace it once I saw it begin to fail. However, to see that, you need to separate the motor from the pump. Maybe just deciding to replace it in say, 5 years, would be a part of preventative maintenance. I asked at Pinch-a-Penny about the replacement cost, parts/labor, and it was about 1/4 the cost of the pump/motor purchased online. That seemed excessive. Oh well, it's working fine, I think it's about 1-1/2 years old now, I'll keep an eye on it and see if I spot any issues develop.

We also this year purchased a new pool robot, I bought a replacement Hayward Navigator, which I think does OK. We tried a Great White, but the vibration from it could be heard/felt throughout the entire house. It was like being a block-away from someone running a 100-lb pneumatic jackhammer, if you had the Great White in the pool. No thanks!

The old Hayward Navigator pool cleaning robot, I'd replaced various parts in it, and when the body developed a long crack, I decided to replace it. I think it lasted about 10 years. I suspect I spent about 1/2 the cost of a new one during that time on replacement parts, but things like the 'wings' and the rubber, silicone or whatever they are, 'feet,' are wear items. The paired bearings on levers which articulate the moving side 'pods' to walk the robot across the pool seem to last maybe a year and a half.

The pool I believe to be ~17,000 gallons, I buy the pool chlorine 60 gal. at a time, and the pool needs more attention/chemicals in the rainy season. Our local grandkids love the pool, and the 3 y.o. has become a decent swimmer, to our relief. Dusk sends any mosquitos into a feeding frenzy, so be out by then.

We have some of the SS can lights on the front and the side of our home, I like 'em, and the silicone ribbed ('for your pleasure!' oh, wait...) gaskets do keep rain and bugs out, the roof soffit keeps them dry. I use 'daylight' wavelength bulbs, and with illumination from the top and bottom, it's an attractive architectural appearance. At the pool deck, we have nautical-look SS lamps, the kind with wire cages, the glass looks like a football missing the pointed ends. They get the same bulbs.

The pool is great for relief from working in the yard.

That was a fortunate find on the proper screw thread for the grease fitting on your valving for the sprinklers. We have two Ace Hardware stores within two miles, so a run to the hardware store isn't too-bad, and Big Orange is < 3 miles.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Always something to fix, replace, move about or instal.

But we would die in our steps if we did not have these things to do ehh Bob.

Outside lights look lovely.

LED really seems to be the way of the future.
Rian, you are absolutely right. Being able to handle the projects when they present themselves is what keeps me going. Many of my friends are fading fast because everything that needs to be fixed, replaced or installed involves nothing more than lifting the telephone. I am learning to control my frustration over not being able to do all the fixing, replacing, moving or installing as quickly as I once did.

I am, as you say, chuffed with the lights.

When LEDs first came on the market I jumped in and suffered extreme disappointment when they died within months. Now they last for years and I have yet to burn my fingers removing a bulb I just turned off (is there a name for that 'how hot can it be' mental defect?). The other day I had to replace a 4 watt LED in the living room. We have huge eight- to ten-foot overhangs front and rear so the great room is always pretty dark. I have two 4-watt LEDs in uplight cans turned on 24/7 so getting three or four years out of them is great. Only weird thing is their death rattle. Instead of blowing out and going dark, the LED just started flashing on and off, making me think there was lightning with no thunder outside.
Bob, a good job in replacing the pool pump. Won't Liane assist you in lifting things? I replaced our Hayward 'smart-pump' before COVID, this time, instead of just buying one from Pinch-a-Penny (pool supplies, if people don't know) at a cost well-above $1K, I bought it online for about $400 less. It was a same-size/model (but 'updated,' whatever they do, probably jack-up the chassis and slip-in a higher pricetag) so the swap-out went easily, I also like and use unions. Some people don't like 'em, I buy quality fittings, ensure all surfaces are clean, and they don't cause me issues.

The Hayward has what I believe to be a ceramic bearing/seal, the old 'smart-pump' had that eventually leak, and it messed-up the motor. The strainer basket was OK, but in taking it apart, one of the brass inserts in the strainer basket parted-company with the PVC, so it all went to recycling/trash. I suppose that if I kept a better eye on the ceramic bearing/seal, I could replace it once I saw it begin to fail. However, to see that, you need to separate the motor from the pump. Maybe just deciding to replace it in say, 5 years, would be a part of preventative maintenance. I asked at Pinch-a-Penny about the replacement cost, parts/labor, and it was about 1/4 the cost of the pump/motor purchased online. That seemed excessive. Oh well, it's working fine, I think it's about 1-1/2 years old now, I'll keep an eye on it and see if I spot any issues develop.

We also this year purchased a new pool robot, I bought a replacement Hayward Navigator, which I think does OK. We tried a Great White, but the vibration from it could be heard/felt throughout the entire house. It was like being a block-away from someone running a 100-lb pneumatic jackhammer, if you had the Great White in the pool. No thanks!

The old Hayward Navigator pool cleaning robot, I'd replaced various parts in it, and when the body developed a long crack, I decided to replace it. I think it lasted about 10 years. I suspect I spent about 1/2 the cost of a new one during that time on replacement parts, but things like the 'wings' and the rubber, silicone or whatever they are, 'feet,' are wear items. The paired bearings on levers which articulate the moving side 'pods' to walk the robot across the pool seem to last maybe a year and a half.

The pool I believe to be ~17,000 gallons, I buy the pool chlorine 60 gal. at a time, and the pool needs more attention/chemicals in the rainy season. Our local grandkids love the pool, and the 3 y.o. has become a decent swimmer, to our relief. Dusk sends any mosquitos into a feeding frenzy, so be out by then.

We have some of the SS can lights on the front and the side of our home, I like 'em, and the silicone ribbed ('for your pleasure!' oh, wait...) gaskets do keep rain and bugs out, the roof soffit keeps them dry. I use 'daylight' wavelength bulbs, and with illumination from the top and bottom, it's an attractive architectural appearance. At the pool deck, we have nautical-look SS lamps, the kind with wire cages, the glass looks like a football missing the pointed ends. They get the same bulbs.

The pool is great for relief from working in the yard.

That was a fortunate find on the proper screw thread for the grease fitting on your valving for the sprinklers. We have two Ace Hardware stores within two miles, so a run to the hardware store isn't too-bad, and Big Orange is < 3 miles.
Philip, good move buying the new pump online. I blew the extra money because I wanted to do a visual compare to avoid a PVC clusterfook. I have replaced the motor on the Sta-Rite pump once in 25 years (PO replaced the motor weeks before we bought the house -- when the pump was 8 years old). I use unions to install things that I know will need to be replaced. I have them on the water heater, whole house filter, sprinkler system and pool filter. Biggest problem with unions is getting them lined up with as little strain on them as possible. You can tighten them until they stop leaking but a misaligned union eventually leaks or fails completely.

We started with the original Kreepy Krauly robot and upgraded to their Great White ten years later. I found the Great White to be noisier than the original but was able to quiet it down by adjusting the flow from the skimmer. The suction setting is extremely touchy on the Great White and a very small change makes the difference between jack hammer and pitter patter. A couple of years ago there were enough worn out parts on the Great White to justify a new robot. My buddy at Pinch A Penney suggested the Dorado, Pentair's copy of the Great White. They have identical mechanicals but the Dorado, for some reason, is quieter than the Great White. When this one dies I may give the Hayward Navigator Pro a try.

I've been happy with the modern stainless lights I installed three years ago. The two fixtures on the front of the garage are far below the soffits so they get rained on all the time. I expect the newest ones to perform equally well.
 

sawduststeve

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 7, 2016
Messages
2,139
Location
Havering-Atte-Bower,London/Essex boarders, England
Hi Bob
I’m so so glad to see you well enough to be up and put doing stuff, long maybe it continue. 👏🏻👏🏻🙏
Gotta keep the pool clear, you never know when you might have foreigners turn up for a swim, although I’m with Mr T at the moment and we’re having staycations.
Take care my friend.
steve
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Hi Bob
I’m so so glad to see you well enough to be up and put doing stuff, long maybe it continue. 👏🏻👏🏻🙏
Gotta keep the pool clear, you never know when you might have foreigners turn up for a swim, although I’m with Mr T at the moment and we’re having staycations.
Take care my friend.
steve
Steve, I am feeling better every day and soon will be as well as I was before the surgery. Still old but one less thing trying to kill me. Be assured you and yours are family, not foreigners. I expect your daughter is now a young woman who prefers to be seen with people who don't have great grandchildren. I really hope you are doing well and your wife is staying safe. I feel like I'm on a permanent staycation. :thumbup:
 

sawduststeve

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 7, 2016
Messages
2,139
Location
Havering-Atte-Bower,London/Essex boarders, England
Kind words Bob, thanks.
We’re ok here, the little one starts senior school in September, the big one survived the pandemic as a senior nurse at the Royal London Hospital and I’ve been so busy my head was spinning. 😳
I wouldn’t leave Florida if I lived there either 😎
We’re off to Bude in Cornwall next week , to see friends, it’s just like Florida🤣🤣🤣
Take care
Steve
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Kind words Bob, thanks.
We’re ok here, the little one starts senior school in September, the big one survived the pandemic as a senior nurse at the Royal London Hospital and I’ve been so busy my head was spinning. 😳
I wouldn’t leave Florida if I lived there either 😎
We’re off to Bude in Cornwall next week , to see friends, it’s just like Florida🤣🤣🤣
Take care
Steve
Steve, your little one has grown up in a flash but I know it has seemed longer from your side. Not sure how she caught it but our nurse daughter-in-law came down with the Delta variant at the end of July. Probably from someone at our great-granddaughter's birthday party because the little girl, her year older brother and their parents also came down with the variant. All three adults were fully vaccinated. It's not 'back to normal' by any stretch so be sure your "big one" continues to survive and thrive.
So, does that make any noticeable difference in the length of the list?
Kirk, the items at the top of the list are pretty clear (Cancer, COVID, Heart Attack, Stroke, Train Surfing...) but the lower entries are pretty fuzzy. Ran out of paper before I got to the end of the list. So, no, I don't think the length of the list has changed.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Ticking off the little projects on the never-ending list. Liane bought a pair of lamps for the bedroom at a thrift store. The store marked them as "tested good" and they indeed turned on and off. One of the three-way switches only worked as an on-off switch and the other required more force to rotate than either of our arthritic hands enjoyed. Spent a half hour removing the old sockets, tinning the ends of the lamp cord and installing the new sockets. The 3-way LED table lamps can now be operated by old people.

Did I mention how great a Milwaukee M12 soldering iron works? So much faster heating than even my newish Weller soldering gun. Has a red light to remind you it's still hot so don't put it back in the drawer with the shrink tubing yet.
 

gearhead1960

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Mar 21, 2019
Messages
1,862
Location
Manassas, VA, a small blot in history
Did I mention how great a Milwaukee M12 soldering iron works? So much faster heating than even my newish Weller soldering gun. Has a red light to remind you it's still hot so don't put it back in the drawer with the shrink tubing yet.
Damn you Bob! You just made me put this on my want list. I didn't know they made a soldering iron. My old one hasn't worked well lately and now I might have to buy a replacement.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
That is oddly specific. Did you fail to notice the red light? :)
Mick, it's like the incandescent bulbs I tried to remove before they cooled. I asked myself "why is that red light still on after I turned the soldering iron off?" Touched the tip and voila and deja vu all over again.
Damn you Bob! You just made me put this on my want list. I didn't know they made a soldering iron. My old one hasn't worked well lately and now I might have to buy a replacement.
Mark, I apologize in advance for sucking you into my pit. I have tried many different soldering tools and thought the little gas-powered one was the be-all, end-all. Except I never know how much lighter gas is left. Also how easily they blow out before the catalyst glows and how hard the glow is to see in bright sunlight. Everything wrong with my other soldering tools is made right by this M12 iron.
 

wreckdiver1321

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 12, 2021
Messages
1,039
Location
Billings, MT
Bob, I've spent the last few days reading through your thread. Some great stories, pictures, and even some great learning experiences for my future projects. Thanks for taking the time to share it all with us, even us younger guys are getting a lot out of it. :ROFLMAO:

Great thread, keep it up! You've got a new reader.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Bob, I've spent the last few days reading through your thread. Some great stories, pictures, and even some great learning experiences for my future projects. Thanks for taking the time to share it all with us, even us younger guys are getting a lot out of it. :ROFLMAO:

Great thread, keep it up! You've got a new reader.
Tom, you are most welcome and too kind. My life has been blessed in so many ways and it seems to strike a chord with people of all ages, who might not realize how amazing their own lives are. On this site the common strain is the garage and everything about it. In my thread the common strain is the hijack with me being the primary hijacker.

Welcome to the Emporium
Bob, my brother and I both had the Alpha variant back in mid January. Could have been worse. 😳 Three weeks start to finish. All jabbed up now.
Be careful.
steve.
Steve, I think you and your brother were fortunate to have a finish to it. Our daughter-in-law came down with the Delta variant and more than a month has passed with her having no sense of taste or smell. Family is making sure she doesn't eat something that's spoiled. Liane and I are living like we were at the beginning of this mess. Jabbed up but still wearing masks when we go out and turning around if the destination is too crowded or has too many maskless people. Maybe we're being too cautious but we live in a state with 21 million people that has 21 thousand new cases each day. The odds are we won't get infected but when 441,000 people become carriers in the three weeks it took you to catch and recover from the mild form of the disease, why take the chance?
 

Toolfool

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 22, 2011
Messages
4,982
Location
Tallahassee, FL
The odds are we won't get infected but when 441,000 people become carriers in the three weeks it took you to catch and recover from the mild form of the disease, why take the chance?
I agree, Bob. Lately, I'm in a minority wearing a mask in stores. It doesn't bother me. I know that if infected, I'd be in a world of hurt (age, heart issues, asthma, diabetes). My wife has been back to work for months now. I recently asked if she wears her mask at work. She replied, "No, I'm vaccinated." That kicked off a heated discussion.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
John, no precautions are needed if you are OK with loss of smell, loss of taste, shortness of breath, and fatigue. Those are the four most common symptoms that people reported 8 months after a mild case of COVID-19, according to a new study. It's too late for more than 41,000 Floridians to take precautions.
 

xtremek

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 13, 2012
Messages
11,603
Location
St. Johns, Mi
We're all vaccinated. With Delta, Delta Plus, and now Lambda, Robin and I are doing the same thing you are, Bob. I like to listen to experts, people who have PhDs or MDs. Luckily I have one that lives with me, my wife. And she has 5 years working with dangerous viruses and vaccines.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
We're all vaccinated. With Delta, Delta Plus, and now Lambda, Robin and I are doing the same thing you are, Bob. I like to listen to experts, people who have PhDs or MDs. Luckily I have one that lives with me, my wife. And she has 5 years working with dangerous viruses and vaccines.
Kirk, I take advice from experts so I don't ask my doctor for welding tips. Same logic for medical advice so I don't go to Miller or Lincoln dot com for medical advice. I didn't ask anyone about giving up mask wearing or social distancing, I just kept doing it because, well, because I live in Florida (America's petri dish). Based on our nurse daughter-in-law contracting a pretty serious case of Delta COVID when she was vaccinated in December/January, we are going to get a booster shot eight months from our last vaccination (April) in December. I expect there will be an Omega or ΩΩ variant by then.
 

Grizz1963

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 7, 2010
Messages
12,054
Location
Rochester, KENT. UK
I have sprung an umbilical hernia recently, maybe 6-10 weeks ago.

my cough/asthma has for some reason gotten worse and my coughing is violent and hurts my spine…..

Spoke to my asthma nurse specialist last week, and she reckons it could be that I had a second round of covid, despite the vaccines and that this chest thing is a result.

like you Bob, there are too many specialists online and everywhere else who never saw the inside of a medical school.

And having trained as a multi qualified nurse possibly gives me the benefit of some knowledge, I still try to be sensible, hard for a guy like me.

I honestly do not mind being dead, it is the dying that can be painful and unpleasant.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
I have sprung an umbilical hernia recently, maybe 6-10 weeks ago.

my cough/asthma has for some reason gotten worse and my coughing is violent and hurts my spine…..

Spoke to my asthma nurse specialist last week, and she reckons it could be that I had a second round of covid, despite the vaccines and that this chest thing is a result.

like you Bob, there are too many specialists online and everywhere else who never saw the inside of a medical school.

And having trained as a multi qualified nurse possibly gives me the benefit of some knowledge, I still try to be sensible, hard for a guy like me.

I honestly do not mind being dead, it is the dying that can be painful and unpleasant.
Rian, I had an inguinal hernia when I was in my late 40s and had it repaired when I turned 50. They put mesh over the hole and it hurt like hell for more than a week. Our nurse daughter-in-law had a case of Covid in early August and like you was fully vaccinated. I feel like I'm living in a real life Groundhog Day.

We aged into Medicare more than a decade ago and it looks like our new advisors are ex-football players and former child stars. I smile, pay my dues and carry on. At least we live in walking distance of some of Florida's best medical facilities and doctors.

I was not fond of the dead thing but not afraid of round two but you are right about the route. I hope it's in the very short and very fast lane.
I’m tired from reading about chores. Guess my headlight fix was all bad.
I take all my advise from “the” doctor, Dr. F.
Stewart, thanks for stopping by! I'm slowly creeping up on some of the chores I've ignored. They're easier to kill if you don't rush in and scare them. Dr. F is my go to guy as well. He is "the" doctor until he tells me I can get money back on my Medicare.
 

lakelandcat

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 25, 2017
Messages
7,327
I have one and I hate it. There is always something going wrong ant it starts turning green. I haven't found a reliable pool service in the 14 years I've lived here. Using it to test for a leaky tire is a good idea. My golf carts are always finding nails around here.
Glad to hear that you are healing well.
Took care of Apt. pools in Dallas for years. Had to get a lic. and take a test. Failed the first time and ask the girl giving the test if she ever took it and she said she couldn't pass it. I passed the second time. My point is the two biggest things that would turn a pool green the quickest were bluejeans and dogs. Both of those would **** the Cl. out of the pool and turn it green overnight. I would have to come in and shock the pool first thing in the morning and by noon it was clear. Pools are a pain and require constant care if they are used daily. Heat also will effect the Ph. Everything from daily skimmer cleaning to backflushing the sand filter.
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Took care of Apt. pools in Dallas for years. Had to get a lic. and take a test. Failed the first time and ask the girl giving the test if she ever took it and she said she couldn't pass it. I passed the second time. My point is the two biggest things that would turn a pool green the quickest were bluejeans and dogs. Both of those would **** the Cl. out of the pool and turn it green overnight. I would have to come in and shock the pool first thing in the morning and by noon it was clear. Pools are a pain and require constant care if they are used daily. Heat also will effect the Ph. Everything from daily skimmer cleaning to backflushing the sand filter.
Mike, I would hate to do pool maintenance for a living. Never dealt with a sand filter but I recall friends using very bad words to describe the backflushing process. Our first pool in New York was above-ground 24-foot setup with a diatomaceous earth filter. Our yard was surrounded by trees and we were in sight of an oil-fired Central Hudson electric plant. Keeping that pool clean enough for human use was a ton of work. Never did get the diatomaceous earth filter to work as advertised. Maybe it wasn't designed to deal with black oil sludge falling from the sky.
:puke:
First Pool.jpg
First Florida home had a home-made filter, consisting of four 4" Schedule 40 PVC pipes connected with a 1.5" x-pipes that connected to the poop and filter. Each 4" pipe had a stack of three 3"x12" filters for a total of 12 cartridges. Unscrew the caps from the 4" pipes, remove the filter stacks and hose them off. Once a year I replaced the cartridges. Family used the pool very little so chlorine tablets in a dispenser kept it crystal clear. Corvette club and Train parties stressed the chlorine so every party was followed with shock treatment and re-balancing the Ph. Converted our spa in a box to in-ground as an extension of the patio and screen enclosure. With solar panels on the shed roof it was cheap to heat but required more careful monitoring than the pool. I did discover the benefit of a water-driven pool sweep!
First Florida Pool.jpg
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Back to work on the Shop/Shed. When I was replacing the siding there were two racks on the back wall. They were bent sheet metal tubing and held some pipe, wood and the extension ladder. I moved it all to the fence next to the shop.
Workshop 110.jpg
Now that the siding is up, I need to paint it and put up a better storage rack. Found a relatively (under $100) rack that looked like it would do the job.
Workshop 112.jpg
The racks came with plastic anchors and what look like #8 screws. The directions suggested 3" screws if installing on studs but that meant about a half inch of screw in the stud after passing through the 5/8" siding. I upgraded from #10 3" screws to 1/4" 4" SPAX washer head screws. I think the steel tubing will give up before those screws do.
Workshop 113.jpg
Not wanting to tackle painting the whole building and remembering I had some leftover paint from doing the house a few years ago, I scrounged around and found a gallon can and a quart can (remains of the last 5-gallon bucket) of the right paint. Painted the area behind where the rack was going and I think I have enough left to finish the back wall. Managed to get a whole bunch of stuff hung on the new racks. Added some schedule 40 3/4" PVC to the upper shelves so the round stuff doesn't fall off.
Workshop 114.jpg
There's more room and I have more lumber scraps that will have a new home. By the time I got this far I gave up, leaving the big 40-foot extension ladder move for another day. It was in the low 90s for this work but I waited until noon to start because this is the east side of the building and shade makes a big difference.
Workshop 115.jpg
 

Mr.zippy

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 27, 2020
Messages
2,221
Location
Wyoming
A man that shows you the backside of his shed, has no secrets left In life…….. Nice project Bob!
 
OP
B

Bob Heine

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 24, 2009
Messages
10,708
Location
Boca Raton, Florida
Although we lived in a much higher priced neighborhood in Australia, the bunker across the street from us in Boca Raton is finally finished. We thought the New York City folks who bought the empty lot and built this thing would move in but it turns out they built it on spec. Only room they don't show in the ad is the garage. From what I've seen it's a 20'x22' two-car. I was very shocked at the asking price but even more shocked that it is already under contract. "Movin' on Up!"
For Sale.jpg
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom