North Run Grader
Well-known member
Or alternatively titled, Oh my brain hurts!
A forwarning, no pictures yet, maybe later tonight, if not, Saturday night. So let me start with some back story. We moved in September 2012, did a rent to own till September 2013, then bought the house. Some of the former owners **** was still in the garage till this afternoon when I loaded the truck for the dump from the rafters. Basically it was just storage till this summer although I did replace the transfer case of my truck in it last November.
By most accounts it was likely built in 1978 or 79. The drywall was installed on the walls after October 1989, date on the back of the drywall. I'm pretty sure free beer was involved cause every single drywall screw up was covered. Rumour has it that Imperial Oil supplied the modular houses on my block, and hired the lowest bidder to build all the garages on the street. I bought the house knowing up front that it's a 1978 modular.
Back to the garage. It's 18 x 24 x 8ft tall. Framed for the sheeting, sometimes built left to right, sometimes right to left. It's framed with 2x4's. Look at the wall, measure, install drywall. Not so. Look at the wall, drink beer, decide to stand the 4x8 sheets, drink beer, cut off an edge, start boarding. Oh, the first joint doesn' t fall on the stud? Drink more beer and carry on... Not 1 single drywall joint falls on a stud anywhere in my garage. It's alright cause I'm sure the same guy wired and insulated the garage.
Oh my brain hurts. I think I have a sketch on the other computer of my garage. I'll post it with the current wiring diagram and pictures.
We spent the day stacking everything in the center of the garage and removing the drywall. I don't personally like vertical drywall, I prefer horizontal so it's one easy reach seam around the room. Because they installed the board directly touching the concrete I had a lot of rotten crumbling drywall along the bottom edges. Also because of the inadequate electrical, with issues, I want to start fresh. No sill gasket or pressure treated sill, I now have some bad sills.
It's inadequately ramset nailed to the slab, so if I have to lift the garage a bit to replace some sills, how about lifting it 14" and add a 12" knee wall? 2×4 pressure treated or PWF with 1/2" PWF plywood exterior up an additional 6" to tie the outside. I'm thinking Hilti drill with a long bit through oversize sill plate holes and expanding anchor bolts to the slab. Then bolt the knee wall to the existing wall through the upper sill holes. Then run 16" of concrete board along the bottom after insulation and poly. I'm planning on lower gray walls anyway. So the knee wall will be tied outside, center, and inside. I'm going to call for PWF and concrete board prices in the morning. This would allow an 8' high garage door so I wouldn't have to remove the auxiliary warning lights off the Bobcat in the winter.
The 1 issue I can forsee is the power line to my house crosses over top of the garage. I have to talk to the local power guy, but it brings to mind, how about I have a mast installed on the back wall of the garage where it crosses above, install 200 amp service to the garage, and run power from the new mast back to my existing house mast, relocating the meter to the back of my garage? Thoughts, concerns, ideas?
I'll be back later, season 4 of Longmire is on Netflix
.
Sorry, I'm still getting used to my new touch screen and the ubb code isn't recognizing my paragraph indents.
A spare paragraph break just for beakie.
A forwarning, no pictures yet, maybe later tonight, if not, Saturday night. So let me start with some back story. We moved in September 2012, did a rent to own till September 2013, then bought the house. Some of the former owners **** was still in the garage till this afternoon when I loaded the truck for the dump from the rafters. Basically it was just storage till this summer although I did replace the transfer case of my truck in it last November.
By most accounts it was likely built in 1978 or 79. The drywall was installed on the walls after October 1989, date on the back of the drywall. I'm pretty sure free beer was involved cause every single drywall screw up was covered. Rumour has it that Imperial Oil supplied the modular houses on my block, and hired the lowest bidder to build all the garages on the street. I bought the house knowing up front that it's a 1978 modular.
Back to the garage. It's 18 x 24 x 8ft tall. Framed for the sheeting, sometimes built left to right, sometimes right to left. It's framed with 2x4's. Look at the wall, measure, install drywall. Not so. Look at the wall, drink beer, decide to stand the 4x8 sheets, drink beer, cut off an edge, start boarding. Oh, the first joint doesn' t fall on the stud? Drink more beer and carry on... Not 1 single drywall joint falls on a stud anywhere in my garage. It's alright cause I'm sure the same guy wired and insulated the garage.
Oh my brain hurts. I think I have a sketch on the other computer of my garage. I'll post it with the current wiring diagram and pictures.
We spent the day stacking everything in the center of the garage and removing the drywall. I don't personally like vertical drywall, I prefer horizontal so it's one easy reach seam around the room. Because they installed the board directly touching the concrete I had a lot of rotten crumbling drywall along the bottom edges. Also because of the inadequate electrical, with issues, I want to start fresh. No sill gasket or pressure treated sill, I now have some bad sills.
It's inadequately ramset nailed to the slab, so if I have to lift the garage a bit to replace some sills, how about lifting it 14" and add a 12" knee wall? 2×4 pressure treated or PWF with 1/2" PWF plywood exterior up an additional 6" to tie the outside. I'm thinking Hilti drill with a long bit through oversize sill plate holes and expanding anchor bolts to the slab. Then bolt the knee wall to the existing wall through the upper sill holes. Then run 16" of concrete board along the bottom after insulation and poly. I'm planning on lower gray walls anyway. So the knee wall will be tied outside, center, and inside. I'm going to call for PWF and concrete board prices in the morning. This would allow an 8' high garage door so I wouldn't have to remove the auxiliary warning lights off the Bobcat in the winter.
The 1 issue I can forsee is the power line to my house crosses over top of the garage. I have to talk to the local power guy, but it brings to mind, how about I have a mast installed on the back wall of the garage where it crosses above, install 200 amp service to the garage, and run power from the new mast back to my existing house mast, relocating the meter to the back of my garage? Thoughts, concerns, ideas?
I'll be back later, season 4 of Longmire is on Netflix
Sorry, I'm still getting used to my new touch screen and the ubb code isn't recognizing my paragraph indents.
A spare paragraph break just for beakie.
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