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ever get overwhelmed?

ovilla

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 18, 2005
Messages
2,342
Location
Plainfield, IL
Perfect timing for this thread.

I normally just try to keep all of my to do's in check and bounce around from one to another as needed so I don't get overwhelmed (plus it keeps things fresh). My biggest PITA has been this awesome hot tub that I picked up from a neighbor about 5 years ago. It was a new tub that I picked up for like 1/10th of the new price, since he was moving out and couldn't take it with him. Awesome deal even though I spent about another $600 in copper wire, a 50 amp circuit breaker box and tons of rock to build a safe foundation for it.

Anyway, the thing was awesome until one really extremely cold Chicago winter when it froze up on me. I'm talking about having lifted the spa cover and being met with 10 inches of solid ice which I had to drill through in order to save the spa shell. Unfortunately, I didn't even think about all of the plumbing underneath.

Fast forward a whole year. Yes, that's how overwhelmed I had gotten with my new paperweight. Yes, I had called a hot tub guy and after finding out that they charge almost $300 just to come out (which includes 1 hour of "free" labor) I said hell no, I'll tackle it myslef. Keep in mind that I've never worked on these things. I have dropped engines and know enough about electricity and plumbing and actually built a working bathroom last winter. So, I basically had to walk away from this project for a whole year before I could even let myself tackle it. The worst part was seeing the damn thing every time I was in the back yard and then also having friends (and the wife) ask numerous times when I was going to fix it. It was a VERY sore subject in the household too.

So, what finally broke the camels back and forced me to fix it? My wife hurt her back and the doc told her that sitting in a tub would help her situation. That's all it took. After about two weeks of doing almost daily internet research and talking to various hot tub techs (for free), I was able to order all parts I needed to fix two frozen pumps and replace the heater, flo switch and numerous cracked pipes. I only ended up having to fill it up and drain it twice to address leaks and am grateful that I did not give up on this project. It was very overwhelming at first but must say that it's extremely rewarding to have worked my way through it (as I'm sure many of you have also realized with other projects).

In the end, I just learned that some times you really do need to just walk away from things for a bit (maybe even a year) and then come back to deal with them.
 
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e-tek

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 19, 2007
Messages
10,690
Location
Saskatoon, SK
Hey Ovilla - that's my newest nightmare!! I have a 5 YO hot tub and this summer the pump started getting real loud....it still works fine (almost 2 months now). I'd HATE to have it quit in the middle of a SK winter - it'd be a block of ice in hours!! Should I just replace/rebuild the pump now, or risk it and hope it keeps working?? I'm sure I know the answer...If it went in the winter it'd be a hell of a time fixing it at minus 30!! Ya just hate to throw 300bucks at a pump that works fine but is "just" noisy....
 
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v7guy

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 7, 2009
Messages
557
Location
Hudson valley, NY
I've been getting to that point lately, just bought a house 2 months ago, thought everything was fine until I went to replace the back door and the whole frame crumbled, taking crumbling sheathing with it. While fixing that I found mold in the insulation, removed all drywall on the exterior walls and found water damage everywhere, multiple windows that had rotting frames... It's been a mess. It gets frustrating working 12 hr days 6-7 days a week and then getting home to work on the house more.
It's almost done now, just primed the sheetrock after re-wiring, new windows insulation blah blah blah

Like was said earlier, the more you can do the more there is to do. You have to weigh the cost/ benefit of paying for something vs doing it yourself.

I think as a group of people that tend to be inclined to DIY it's pretty common. Keep at it though, when you sit back and get to enjoy what you built with your own hands the feeling is fantastic!
 
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