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The Home Improvement Thread. Successes and Failures

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How the heck can you do seven loads of laundry with it draining on floor and not notice it?
 
Also, I will never have a washer drain hose that doesn't go into a basin. Every house I've lived in has that and it was important enough that both my mom and dad commented on it on separate walkthroughs.
 
1. I'm guessing your homeowner's insurance doesn't cover this.
2. I used to live a few miles from this guy.
3. To give an idea of what those houses go for.

Edit: I found the actual property. Ufda.

I would imagine that the fire would not be considered a sudden/accidental loss and would not be covered. I would also imagine that one of several different exclusions may apply to preclude coverage, including potentially the Household Exclusion or the Intentional Acts Exclusion...depending on how such clauses are written.

But yes, based on the limited facts that have gone public, I would doubt their homeowner's policy would cover the damage.
 
Around Plumber #3 I would have snapped.

You should flowchart this sometime as an amazing example of nested project management.
 
Cleared out my wife's office and painted it a shade of purple. I was very skeptical in the "I want it purple" phase through the color chipping phase, to the sample phase, to the purchasing phase.

now that we're done, I've got to say, I... don't hate it. It's kinda calming. And nice.
 
Does anyone have an opinion on drilling into stucco? I'm trying to mount a security camera (it's wireless, so just the mounting, no wiring or anything) and the best angles would be into the stucco. Reading stuff online makes drilling into stucco seem risky so I'm trying to figure out how much I want to get into other possible solutions.
 
I wouldn't. Like, ever. Not from experience but knowing that stucco is expensive as fuck to repair if you do it wrong. Worse yet, if you do it wrong and don't know, it's it-might-as-well-be-the-foundation expensive.

I would exhaust all other options first.


Ive never owned stucco and I'm not sure I ever want to. So perhaps my fear is mostly out of lack of experience with it.
 
Cleared out my wife's office and painted it a shade of purple. I was very skeptical in the "I want it purple" phase through the color chipping phase, to the sample phase, to the purchasing phase.

now that we're done, I've got to say, I... don't hate it. It's kinda calming. And nice.

A full wall never looks like you think it will. Usually it's neither better nor worse but different. Sometimes it's significantly better. Sometimes...

But I have rarely had a full-on disaster, especially given the mediation of an accent wall.
 
So finally taking the time to fix the dishwasher. I bought a new inner door. The first one they sent me was bent on the corner and wouldn't install properly. So I called them up and they sent a new one. It took over a month to get here and was one of like three in the entire midwest. a couple weeks later, I finally have the time to fix it so I open the box* and this one is bent on the corner too. %%*{!!!!!!!!!.

Rather than try to fight for another door, I decided to just carefully bend the thing flat again as best I could. Installed fine but it became obvious this part was never going to ship safely unless I drove to the fab shop and took it off the line myself. Other areas were slightly bent and ... whatever. If it leaks I'll call them again.

anyways, the are where you take out the detergent dispenser is the most difficult and frustrating. I finally started to get the thin, but very rigid tabs aligned and suddenly the whole thing came out. Sharp pain and I'm bleeding everywhere. Deep cut on my finger about an inch long. Bad enough that we used butterfly bandages to close it. The alcohol cleanup step gave me a peek into what the parker probe goes through on its fly bys.

Alas, I got it all back together and I'm fucking done for the rest of the day.


* I was dumb and assumed that because it was a different (but still authorized, since all of this was done through Bosch) supplier and the box looked fine, that it wouldn't be an issue. I also knew I didn't have the time to install the new door and it was "safer" in the box so I wouldn't ding it up or have to find a place to put it due to its awkward shape. I handled it like it was a fabrege egg.
 
Does anyone have an opinion on drilling into stucco? I'm trying to mount a security camera (it's wireless, so just the mounting, no wiring or anything) and the best angles would be into the stucco. Reading stuff online makes drilling into stucco seem risky so I'm trying to figure out how much I want to get into other possible solutions.

Wont be a problem if you treat it like concrete — hammer drill with masonry bit. Unless it’s old loose stucco, you’ll be good.
 
I need a new dishwasher - any recommendations? Something shorted out, appliance repair guy couldn't fix it. Said the cost to fully repair it would probably be more than the cost to get a new one. Also, as the dishwasher and garbage disposal are on the same circuit breaker, it knocked out my garbage disposal. Which caused water to back up in the sink cuz there was garbage in it that couldn't be incinerated. That water then backed up into the dishwasher. Anyway, appliance repair guy flipped the circuit breaker so now the disposal is fine but running the dishwasher is out. I'll be shopping for a new one tomorrow. I've heard KitchenAid is a good one. What do you guys recommend?

I'm now toying with a full kitchen remodel because all my appliances are cream colored and my OCD may kick in with one stainless steel appliance that doesn't match anything else in the kitchen. That could take months, though so I need to at least get the dishwasher. I'm also debating about replacing all the appliances now and think about a remodel later - get a new fridge, stove and dishwasher at the same time. I moved into this condo 16 1/2 years ago and this is the first thing that has really died on me. Everything else I've replaced has been more of a proactive thing than reactive, thinking I've been pretty lucky in that regards. I haven't touched the kitchen so maybe it's time to refresh. Plus if I ever make the decision to sell, an upgraded kitchen is a selling point.
 
I need a new dishwasher - any recommendations? Something shorted out, appliance repair guy couldn't fix it. Said the cost to fully repair it would probably be more than the cost to get a new one. Also, as the dishwasher and garbage disposal are on the same circuit breaker, it knocked out my garbage disposal. Which caused water to back up in the sink cuz there was garbage in it that couldn't be incinerated. That water then backed up into the dishwasher. Anyway, appliance repair guy flipped the circuit breaker so now the disposal is fine but running the dishwasher is out. I'll be shopping for a new one tomorrow. I've heard KitchenAid is a good one. What do you guys recommend?

I'm now toying with a full kitchen remodel because all my appliances are cream colored and my OCD may kick in with one stainless steel appliance that doesn't match anything else in the kitchen. That could take months, though so I need to at least get the dishwasher. I'm also debating about replacing all the appliances now and think about a remodel later - get a new fridge, stove and dishwasher at the same time. I moved into this condo 16 1/2 years ago and this is the first thing that has really died on me. Everything else I've replaced has been more of a proactive thing than reactive, thinking I've been pretty lucky in that regards. I haven't touched the kitchen so maybe it's time to refresh. Plus if I ever make the decision to sell, an upgraded kitchen is a selling point.

My wife got a hell of a deal on a GE dishwasher through Lowes. And they took away the old one and installed the new one. We've been pretty happy with it. We also didn't realize how noisy the old one was until we started using the new one.
 
Love our bosch. They're going to be hard to get right now though. Only tips I have are when you have a couple models in mind, bring your most used size of plate and bowl to the store and put them in to make sure they fit. Literally the best advice. They were NOT going to fit nicely in one of the models I was looking at and I'm extremely glad I did that. Consumer Reports has a really good rundown on what to look for as well including a breakdown of differences between US and european styles.

@DGF, Are Boschs hard to get repaired? Parts are available direct from Bosch to consumers and I can't imagine them being that difficult to find a repair person if necessary given the number of Bosch owners. Personal experience I assume?


Oh, and one thing about appliance suites. Different manufacturers have different qualities for a given appliance. Bosch is great at dishwashers but sucks at a lot of everything else. https://www.consumerreports.org/appl...le-appliances/
If you don't mind mixing and matching, you'll get better appliances if you go with different manufacturers. I know it might seem weird but that's how my brain works. I'd rather have the best of every offering than a matching set. YMMV and greatly so. Just something to consider.
 
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That's helpful - thanks.

ETA - Interesting to see KitchenAid's dishwasher only rated as good. Out of the 15+ people I've talked to, the majority have recommended KitchenAid and love it.
 
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I think most people love their new dishwasher because the technology has jumped so much in the last 15-20 years. So when they upgrade, it's a massive upgrade and they love.

true for all brands including bosch.
 
Only tips I have are when you have a couple models in mind, bring your most used size of plate and bowl to the store and put them in to make sure they fit. Literally the best advice. They were NOT going to fit nicely in one of the models I was looking at and I'm extremely glad I did that.
Most modern dishwashers have adjustable upper racks to allow for taller items in the bottom.
 
Most modern dishwashers have adjustable upper racks to allow for taller items in the bottom.

I'm a dummy and didn't realize this until six months after moving into this house with a newer one. Complained like curmudgeon for that time any time we used large plates. Sister in law who had recently shopped for a new one was over for dinner one night was helping load the dishwasher and grabbed the sides of the top rack and moved it up. My brain didn't really comprehend what happened for a second, it was like magic.

The washer in question is a kitchen aid, by the way. We love it. Always heard great things about Bosch though. Make nice windshield wipers, too. :^)
 
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