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Thread: Home Remodel: Do, Don'ts, Advice
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10-15-2021, 02:38 PM #5526one of those sickos
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10-15-2021, 02:42 PM #5527
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10-15-2021, 05:37 PM #5528
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10-15-2021, 06:51 PM #5529Registered User
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are you ok? do you need a hug? is that tie you wear to work make you feel like your getting strangled every day? adele has a new album coming out I'm excited are you?
and can you use the work abtuse and fuck a few more times I'll look up the concomitant sounds like congugal to me
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10-15-2021, 07:03 PM #5530
@Bronic - go to the Habitat restore and get a few ceramic tiles and glue them on the heat side of the post. Even a piece of gypsum sheetrock will do.
Both are heat resistant. Think tiles on a space shuttle.
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10-15-2021, 07:55 PM #5531Registered User
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every quarter? shit man I have to pay the feds every 2 weeks ue and state taxes are every quarter
and yeah you are very right I couldn't figure out how to pay taxes if my life depended on it thats why I have people who do that for me giving the govt 3-4k every two weeks is sickening and they just suck that shit out of my account then four times a year I have to sit down and they explain my finances to me and taxes and I just sit there nodding my head acting like I'm paying attention and trying not to drool running a business is hard work
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10-15-2021, 10:22 PM #5532
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10-16-2021, 05:37 AM #5533
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10-16-2021, 11:46 AM #5534Registered User
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10-16-2021, 11:56 AM #5535
From what I can tell good ortho is really tough carpentry--getting the angles and lengths right on complex fractures and joint replacement is very precise work. OTOH woodworking is a lot tougher than general and vascular surgery--tolerances in wood worker are much tighter and wood isn't flexible and it doesn't heal.
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10-16-2021, 12:11 PM #5536Registered User
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10-16-2021, 02:24 PM #5537Registered User
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Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
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10-16-2021, 05:44 PM #5538
Woodworking is harder than surgery. As I said --tighter tolerances with woodworking, no flexibility and the wood doesn't heal if you make a mistake. Plus no one can see what it looks like on the inside, only the skin stitches. Plus if surgery doesn't work you can always blame the patient. With woodworking you try to make it perfect. With surgery you can't make it perfect; the hard part is knowing how imperfect is ok. There's always some bleeding at the end--how much is too much. The arteries you're sewing to are diseased--how diseased is too much for the surgery to work. The saying is--the opposite of good is better. Time on the operating table matters too--infection rate and other complications go up with time.
As far as cutting themselves--using the guard on the table saw doesn't make you less manly. People at the Truckee Roundhouse for some reason refuse to use the guard. It's a SawStop, but the brake doesn't prevent kickbacks, and people have been hurt. And if you trigger the brake it costs at least $150 for a new brake and blade and no one can use the saw until we get it fixed.
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10-16-2021, 06:05 PM #5539
i have a question not related to the venn diagram of cardiovascular surgery and power tools
(or maybe it is?)
i'm trying to finalize plans for a kitchen remodel, and i'd like to plumb in my espresso machine, if possible. plumbing a machine requires two lines, one for the waste water and one off of the water line.
our kitchen is a funny shape, with an L shaped exterior wall (present in attached picture) and a dishwasher sitting between where the espresso bar is and where the sink is. dishwashers usually have a bunch of dead space, so my question is, can i sneak the water supply and drain line through the back of the dishwasher, around the corner, and into the water hookups?
red and blue are supply and drain lines, sink is visible, sorry for shitty drawing
also thank you for pointing out the absurdity of my self leveling plan. back to the drawing board on that one
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10-16-2021, 06:44 PM #5540one of those sickos
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Yes, there will be plenty of space behind the DW to run those lines.
ride bikes, climb, ski, travel, cook, work to fund former, repeat.
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10-16-2021, 10:04 PM #5541
We ran the water to our fridge behind our DW and there is tons of space still
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10-17-2021, 07:42 AM #5542
I'm guessing a espresso machine just uses a 1/4" supply like a ice maker line. I have to idea what the waste looks like. Overly simplified, water can go uphill because it is pressurized, waste has to gravity unless it is pumped like a dishwasher.
I'd be looking at two things. First is how do the waste and supply trim against the the countertop or wall (how to they connect to the machine). Second there is room behind a dishwasher but there is not that much room. Assuming you will use a 1 1/2 waste to get under the sink, make sure there is enough room to get that sanitary tee in there. You won't have any room on the side of your dishwasher so you need to get in all done in the back. The void on a dishwasher in usually biggest to the top. What is the cabinet design below the espresso machine? You'll probably want to shorten the depth of the draw assuming there is one.
So yeah, the right time to ask the question is now or else you may be fucked.
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10-17-2021, 08:11 AM #5543
Thanks Foggy. Both lines connect under the machine, towards the back of it. Usually how this is done is by a 1" hole in the countertop, with the lines snaking down and out. Both lines look like braided toilet supply lines, if that makes sense.
I may just plumb the water in and leave the drain unplumbed.
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10-17-2021, 08:19 AM #5544
Is the drain just for the spill tray or whatever it is called?
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10-17-2021, 08:20 AM #5545
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10-17-2021, 08:30 AM #5546______
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Draw it up in Trimble Sketch up. Then you will know for sure.
Don’t assume any dimensions if you can.
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10-17-2021, 08:33 AM #5547
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10-17-2021, 08:35 AM #5548
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10-17-2021, 08:54 AM #5549______
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10-17-2021, 10:24 AM #5550
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