Maxcustody
Well-known member
WOW, what a great looking unique house. Looking forward to seeing the progress and changes.
Wisdom I wish I had a few days ago. The advise is well received!I feel your pain as I just refinished our kitchen maple floors. Doing it again, I'd 100% rent three sanders, even for a small floor:
1. Floor Drum sander
2. Floor Finishing sander (pad or orbital)
3. Edge sander.
I was quoted $150 a day or similar for all three and will do this 100% for the rest of the main floor this summer. It took about 8 hours using a random orbital floor sander, (large rotating head with three counter rotating 6" heads), that likely would have been 1-2 with the correct tools.
What's the final finish going to be?








Thanks Denwood! Yup, the cat approves. It's his new hangout now. As for the Bolt, it's a 2022 model. And just went in Friday to have the latest software patch loaded. Now I can get back to charging 100% instead of keeping it on hilltop reserve. It's a great car. Totally under rated. Reminds me of my old VW GTI. It's a hatchback, front wheel drive and is a hoot to drive. What's not to like!i spied a Bolt in your first post. Still driving it? We picked up an EV last year and are loving it.
Lucky on the floors upstairs wreckdriver1321! It's always nice when you get a nice surprise like that.Vey cool to see the updates @Klokwerk! That floor came up a treat. Lucky for you, you had hardwood under that horrible laminate. Our kitchen doesn't, so we get to do tile in there. However, my office and one of the bedrooms has wood underneath, so with any luck we'll be able to have a nicely refinished floor once we decide to make that happen.
Awesome to see you using your 911 like that. Those are my favorite classic car people - the ones who actually drive them. A $75k plus restored beauty is nice to look at, but give me something 2/3s the price in "good" condition and let me actually drive it!
Can't wait to see more.




I was thinking that too but maybe something that will set up like RTV or a gasket maker but can also be removed. Grease would run out due to heat and gravity and make a mess.I wonder if it would help to put a thin layer of grease between the VIN tag and the body before you rivet it back on?
True. I think either of those would work well.I was thinking that too but maybe something that will set up like RTV or a gasket maker but can also be removed. Grease would run out due to heat and gravity and make a mess.

| Quote: |
| According to one embodiment, a composition containing sulfonic acids, petroleum, overbased calcium salts in an amount of 10 to 30% by weight; fatty acids, tall-oil, polymers with isophthalic acid, pentaerythritol and tall-oil in an amount of 10 to 20% by weight; paraffin waxes and hydrocarbon waxes in an amount of less than 10%; base oil, distillates (petroleum), solvent- refined heavy paraffinic materials in an amount of 40 to 60% by weight, each percentage being based on the total weight of the wax component, may be used. This material is available as the commercial product Noxudol 700 from Auson AB, Kungsbacka, Sweden. This material is of waxy appearance and includes a liquid paraffin component. |









After getting most of it in I had that same thought! But I did my best to test the harness to make sure that the wires themselves were okay and that I've got good connections from end to end of each circuit.You're a brave man to wrap up the harness before the engine is in and running! With my luck I'd have to take it apart at least twice more to fix SOMETHING that got missed or better yet, failed AFTER I put it back together...
Great to see progress!