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Plumbing stuff. Ignore. Lol


SDS

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26 minutes ago, 4BillsintheBurgh said:

The wife would love that (or similar)! Can you provide link/manufacturer?


those were la-z-boy.   Bought 5-6 years ago. We are getting them reupholstered. 

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On 8/12/2020 at 11:25 PM, SDS said:

58F332D3-1BBA-4625-969C-BFEDC34AD52A.jpeg

1A4664F6-B6F5-472B-848C-FCF61B1C0AB6.jpeg

that black onyx brick is what we used to boarder everything in our front and back yards.  we even ran curved patterns of it through the more spacious stone areas so we could break up the pattern.  it looks great when sanded in.

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1 hour ago, EmotionallyUnstable said:

Finishing my bathroom reno. Installing new toilet closet flange tmrw through new tile. A little nervous about drilling into the porcelain. Any suggestions 

 

Diamond bit. Go slow. Or hire someone.

 

 

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  • 4 weeks later...
On 8/24/2020 at 9:01 PM, EmotionallyUnstable said:


Worked out well. Went through 2 bits...just the cheap-O 3/16ths kobalt glass and tile bit.

I have always gone the cheap bit/tool route when doing things, figured it hurts less when they break and need to be replaced, but I do notice that getting the good more expensive bits can be worth the extra money just because of how much easier and better they do the job.

 

Also using the correct tools make things go so much better and hassle free. My wife was bugging me to reattach a cable line that was run on the outside fo the house to the 2nd floor when tehy ran cable in our house, when I had a door installed on that wall they unscrewed the clips holding it in place and left it. Since I can be a bit lazy, I just grabbed my regular drill with a masonry bit and started drilling through the stucco/block and it was taking forever. Then I broke down and went to the garage for a corded hammer drill, switched it to the hammer setting and all the holes for the tapcons were drilled in less time then it took to take the drill out of its case.

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Just got done replacing kitchen faucet.   All connections fine...not a single drop of water.  Just looked...very very slow drip out of faucet.   Go F yourself Delta! 😡

 

 

Any chance the drip stops?  I hate to take it out, go to Lowe’s for a replacement, and then start the install all over again.  

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2 hours ago, LabattBlue said:

Just got done replacing kitchen faucet.   All connections fine...not a single drop of water.  Just looked...very very slow drip out of faucet.   Go F yourself Delta! 😡

 

 

Any chance the drip stops?  I hate to take it out, go to Lowe’s for a replacement, and then start the install all over again.  

What type of faucet is it? Could be just a seal or cartridge needing replacement. Usually it only requires turning the water off and unscrewing the handle to replace them.

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3 hours ago, LabattBlue said:

Just got done replacing kitchen faucet.   All connections fine...not a single drop of water.  Just looked...very very slow drip out of faucet.   Go F yourself Delta! 😡

 

 

Any chance the drip stops?  I hate to take it out, go to Lowe’s for a replacement, and then start the install all over again.  

Delta's are guaranteed for life.  I'd  call them.  They'd  send you a whole new one. Not sure why a brand new one would be leaking out the faucet into basin.  Open it full,  then close.  See what happens. 

Edited by ExiledInIllinois
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13 hours ago, apuszczalowski said:

Since I can be a bit lazy, I just grabbed my regular drill with a masonry bit and started drilling through the stucco/block and it was taking forever. Then I broke down and went to the garage for a corded hammer drill, switched it to the hammer setting and all the holes for the tapcons were drilled in less time then it took to take the drill out of its case.

 

Years ago I was installing an external keypad at a customers site, having to drill through brick. My battery powered Dewalt hammer drill was taking f o r e v e r.  So I went and grabbed our corded hammer drill. It was like drilling through butter, with how fast it went. 

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19 hours ago, Just Jack said:

 

Years ago I was installing an external keypad at a customers site, having to drill through brick. My battery powered Dewalt hammer drill was taking f o r e v e r.  So I went and grabbed our corded hammer drill. It was like drilling through butter, with how fast it went. 

I went from Cordless to corded to do it because I don't have a cordless hammer Drill right now, it does seem so much more powerful, I guess in most cases giving up the power for convenience isn't an issue.

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3 hours ago, apuszczalowski said:

I went from Cordless to corded to do it because I don't have a cordless hammer Drill right now, it does seem so much more powerful, I guess in most cases giving up the power for convenience isn't an issue.

I have a cordless hammer drill.  Dewalt.  18v, XRP... Circa early 2000s.  Still packs a punch.  The key is to keep the second battery charged.   It's on my second round  of 2 batteries.   I have a friend who has a friend that sells the stuff, got me two new batteries and traded old in.  Nada a penny out of pocket.

 

Similar:

dewalt-hammer-drills-dcd950b-64_1000.jpg

Brushes (motor) are starting to wear a little, but still a beaut!!!

 

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