What is your skrongest DIY home maintenance/improvement skill set?



What is your skrongest DIY home maintenance/improvement skill set? 23 votes
Comments
-
OtherI’ve done all of them except Tile and Baze’s specialty.
This stuff is why REAL God made the trades.
I’d rather spend my tim shitposting.
-
Irrigation (sprinklers)
I spent more money last year on remodeling than you went into student loan debt for academis including the Beko (Bosch couldn't come through) dishwasher.BennyBeaver said:I’ve done all of them except Tile and Baze’s specialty.
This stuff is why REAL God made the trades.
I’d rather spend my tim shitposting.
But money doesn't grow on trees, and sometimes a man's gotta do some things around the house to make ends meet. Also, sometimes it's hard to find trades people who are worth a shit and don't want to charge through the Moon.
When I moved to the High Desert I had to become an sprinkler whisperer out of necessity. The irrigation guysm are always backed up and I can't be relying upon them every time a head breaks or needs adjustment. The only thing I can't do is the fall system block out.
Electrical scares the shit out of me though and I suck at plumbing. -
OtherUsing my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
-
OtherI done flooring in two houses, landscaping in three, built add-ons to a barn, shop, and a general wood storage shed - that holds 8 cords of wood.
Good choice in Plumbling - I have friends that are electricians so they do that. Concrete work I have done small jobs and save the big ones for the folks that know what they are doing.
I did all the design work and submitted the plans for a major remodel and also a 20 x 15 deck complete with iron gate and lattice work. almost forgot in a previous marriage another remodel design for an addition and decking
Edit: Fencing
Now you know why I bought a trailer and travel. -
Other
I told you Miele.YellowSnow said:
I spent more money last year on remodeling than you went into student loan debt for academis including the Beko (Bosch couldn't come through) dishwasher.BennyBeaver said:I’ve done all of them except Tile and Baze’s specialty.
This stuff is why REAL God made the trades.
I’d rather spend my tim shitposting.
But money doesn't grow on trees, and sometimes a man's gotta do some things around the house to make ends meet. Also, sometimes it's hard to find trades people who are worth a shit and don't want to charge through the Moon.
When I moved to the High Desert I had to become an sprinkler whisperer out of necessity. The irrigation guysm are always backed up and I can't be relying upon them every time a head breaks or needs adjustment. The only thing I can't do is the fall system block out.
Electrical scares the shit out of me though and I suck at plumbing. -
OtherDecks
It was a hobby as a home owner. Built three of them. Ended up adding value too -
Painting / Staining
No one here can properly lay pipe?
SAD! -
Irrigation (sprinklers)
I lay some good pipe outdoors.Doog_de_Jour said:
No one here can properly lay pipe?
SAD! -
-
OtherI'm hearing that this place is a stain(ing) on humanity
-
OtherDemo!
-
Painting / StainingHave done quite a bit of landscaping as well over the years, but oncoming knee and hip replacements has put that on ice…plumbing and electrical stuff has always been, and will continue to be no-man’s land for me.
-
Painting / StainingHave painted the entire interior of our house, including trim which sucked. Built one of the big Costco gazebos out back which included grading the area it went to put down a 20'x16' patio, pouring piers, etc. Have rebuilt a couple sections of fence. Currently in the middle of a kitchen remodel with counters and backsplash the remaining items to complete over the next couple weekends. Have done tile and bathroom remodels in the past. I will do minor electrical like replacing outlets, but not any actual wiring stuff. Plumbing is easy as long as I don't have to go inside a wall or under the floor. Overhauled all of the landscaping when we moved in 4 years ago. There's always something new going on with that as the seasons change.
-
Irrigation (sprinklers)
I've never built a deck. But I did refinish both are front back ones last summer. I sanded them down entirely and then applied a nice stain. It's amazing how well 20 year old cedar holds up in dry climate. Fuck your Trex @CFetters_Nacho_Lover !!RaceBannon said:Decks
It was a hobby as a home owner. Built three of them. Ended up adding value too -
Irrigation (sprinklers)
I'm only pour because Mrs. Snow has exceedingly expensive tastes in restaurants, travel, etc.PurpleThrobber said:Using my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
But I think no matter how much wealth a man has, you still gotta do some manly DIY stuff now and then, so you don't go soft. The most cuckish of my male neighbors are also the ones who are also completely incompetents when it comes to anything DIY.
You don't wanna we be like @creepycoug getting soft, supple hands and having to rely upon some Messicans every time your grass needs a mow. -
-
Painting / Staining
This. Teach your kids some life skills, too.YellowSnow said:
I'm only pour because Mrs. Snow has exceedingly expensive tastes in restaurants, travel, etc.PurpleThrobber said:Using my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
But I think no matter how much wealth a man has, you still gotta do some manly DIY stuff now and then, so you don't go soft. The most cuckish of my male neighbors are also the ones who are also completely incompetents when it comes to anything DIY.
You don't wanna we be like @creepycoug getting soft, supple hands and having to rely upon some Messicans every time your grass needs a mow.
Dealership offers free oil changes for my purchase and I say fuck that and do it myself. -
Irrigation (sprinklers)
I've done my own breaks once (under heavy, expert supervision) and my own oil once. It was cool to learn the process and it's not rocket science, but ultimately it's not my cup of tea. Plus we put so few miles on our cars these days both working from home (EMFA Elon) that there just aren't that many opportunities to save money on DIY oil changes.BleachedAnusDawg said:
This. Teach your kids some life skills, too.YellowSnow said:
I'm only pour because Mrs. Snow has exceedingly expensive tastes in restaurants, travel, etc.PurpleThrobber said:Using my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
But I think no matter how much wealth a man has, you still gotta do some manly DIY stuff now and then, so you don't go soft. The most cuckish of my male neighbors are also the ones who are also completely incompetents when it comes to anything DIY.
You don't wanna we be like @creepycoug getting soft, supple hands and having to rely upon some Messicans every time your grass needs a mow.
Dealership offers free oil changes for my purchase and I say fuck that and do it myself.
Alas, the extent of my car maintenance DIY consists of cabin/engine air filters, wiper blades, and light bulbs. I suck. Lulz. -
OtherYes.
-
Irrigation (sprinklers)I'm generally low skill, low cost labor on home diy projects. I did change the shocks on my washer a couple of weeks ago. Purrs like a kitten again.
But I just spent five years running a little farm with 15 irrigated acres. I dug up and repaired a lot of 3" pipe and a lot of valves. We were in a coop with one large and several small cherry orchards and there was plenty of pressure to fix your own problems and fuckups quickly. -
Other
Those 12 acres and 3/4 mile of road at the GNR Compound don’t maintain themselves.YellowSnow said:
I'm only pour because Mrs. Snow has exceedingly expensive tastes in restaurants, travel, etc.PurpleThrobber said:Using my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
But I think no matter how much wealth a man has, you still gotta do some manly DIY stuff now and then, so you don't go soft. The most cuckish of my male neighbors are also the ones who are also completely incompetents when it comes to anything DIY.
You don't wanna we be like @creepycoug getting soft, supple hands and having to rely upon some Messicans every time your grass needs a mow.
-
Irrigation (sprinklers)
You should get a heated drivewayPurpleThrobber said:
Those 12 acres and 3/4 mile of road at the GNR Compound don’t maintain themselves.YellowSnow said:
I'm only pour because Mrs. Snow has exceedingly expensive tastes in restaurants, travel, etc.PurpleThrobber said:Using my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
But I think no matter how much wealth a man has, you still gotta do some manly DIY stuff now and then, so you don't go soft. The most cuckish of my male neighbors are also the ones who are also completely incompetents when it comes to anything DIY.
You don't wanna we be like @creepycoug getting soft, supple hands and having to rely upon some Messicans every time your grass needs a mow. -
LandscapingYellowSnow said:
I've never built a deck. But I did refinish both are front back ones last summer. I sanded them down entirely and then applied a nice stain. It's amazing how well 20 year old cedar holds up in dry climate. Fuck your Trex @CFetters_Nacho_Lover !!RaceBannon said:Decks
It was a hobby as a home owner. Built three of them. Ended up adding value too
My back yard has fake grass and fake wood and I like it! -
Other
I, too, have laid a lot of 3" pipe.chuck said:I'm generally low skill, low cost labor on home diy projects. I did change the shocks on my washer a couple of weeks ago. Purrs like a kitten again.
But I just spent five years running a little farm with 15 irrigated acres. I dug up and repaired a lot of 3" pipe and a lot of valves. We were in a coop with one large and several small cherry orchards and there was plenty of pressure to fix your own problems and fuckups quickly. -
LandscapingI can demo the shit outta anything, just don’t expect me to put it back together.
I joke with Mrs Nacho that I might start a fence board replacement company. Someone else can do the posts, I’ll do the boards. -
Irrigation (sprinklers)
I can do the hell out of posts. I'll join.CFetters_Nacho_Lover said:I can demo the shit outta anything, just don’t expect me to put it back together.
I joke with Mrs Nacho that I might start a fence board replacement company. Someone else can do the posts, I’ll do the boards. -
Other
I am the ultimate poor, I guess.PurpleThrobber said:Using my cell phone to call a plumber, landscaper, carpenter, electrician who won't fuck things up.
The Throbber doesn't sound poor.
Shop burned down, and I wanted a bigger and better replacement than I could afford, so I built it myself in my "spare time." Took five years, but I did nearly everything. Only subs I hired were tree removal (coolest fucking crew), foundation/slab (but he fucked up and I had to fix both), roof (but they fucked up, so I had to fix it), and mud/tape (but they fucked up, so I had to fix it). The things I did:
Pirated and learned Chief Architect and did all of the plans/permitting myself (saved $10K)
Excavation (major help from a buddy who's an ace excavator operator, but I can do as well)
Footing drain install
Slap prep/compacting, installed insulation and tubing for in-floor radiant heat
Trenching, conduit, and meter base installation for below-ground 320A (2x200) service (still haven't pulled wire from shop to house to replace the house's overhead service)
Below and above-slab plumbing
Diamond-grinding the whole foundation level
All framing/truss installation
Window/doors/siding/trim install
Wall and attic insulation
Drywall hanging
100% of the electrical, from breaker panel install to conduit bending/hanging, lights, 3-phase sub-panel, etc.
Diamond-ground and epoxy/polyurea the floor
Bathroom
Interior trim
Paint inside and out (ran one of those college painting franchises for three years way back when)
Forms, rebar, poured, and finished the 20' x 100' x 6" driveway (hired help for the pour and finishing)
With the exception of not having a kitchen, it's basically a house, and I was able to built it and totally hardscape my back acre for about $100K, including about $5K in tools that I get to keep, so well worth it.
Shortly after that, I was prodded by the Mrs. to replace the carpet in the master bedroom. Pulled the carpet up and found a horror show. Kept peeling the nightmare onion, and 18 months later had tore out and replaced the whole master suite floor structure and reframed it, tore two exterior walls out and reframed them, put the load-bearing bathroom wall that some dumbfuck in the '40s tore out back where it needs to be, built an entirely new bathroom (including making the concrete vanity top), rewired everything, and did all of the drywall work (was smart enough to not sub out the mud/tape/texture this time). Never buy a 100 year old house... On the bright side, the master bedroom is in an addition that was built in the 1940s. May of 1946, if I had to guess. That's the date on all of the newspaper we found between the two layers of floor, acting as a draft stop. I have some cool pictures of some of the scraps that didn't get destroyed in the demo.
I also tore out and replaced a ton of the house's plumbing while the family was out of town after Christmas a couple of years ago, installed the on-demand water heater, roofed a few houses back in the day, added a bathroom and bedroom downstairs, replaced the back porch. Odds and ends. I guess I'm poor enough to be very familiar with pretty much the entire list outside of rich-people-projects like irrigation and heater vent engineering.
Next summer, I get to start on tearing the house's exterior walls down to the studs, fixing the framing, replacing all of the windows, and residing. The other half of the driveway needs replaced, then it's finally done. Sort of. -
General CarpentryBought an old 3 story Victorian when the wife wanted to move back to Saint Louis. Over 8 years I renovated every room at least once, except the kitchen. Did most of the work myself (besides electrical and plumbing) for a couple of reasons:
1. Befitting her hotness, the ex-wife had expensive tastes. Hiring out, especially unique, true craftsman old world shit, was astronomical costs. Classic masonry/Tuck pointing a chimney worked out to around $250 an hour, plaster work almost that high, high end molding/cabinetry was over $100 an hour (nothing was standard, all custom before building codes). And that was 10 plus years ago.
Hell, even windows had to be custom and to properly fit the period needed to be lake cooled. Otherwise the lack of wave in the pane made it stand out like a genital wart.
2. The house was a gem and except for a 10 year period, either someone truly rich or a craftsman owned it. I could tell immediately when I started something who last worked on it. For the most part the craftsmanship was amazing. Hard to not meet the standard of the house and still feel like a man.
3. Just the overall volume. If I didn’t spend 12 hours a weekend and hired it out at normal prices I would have gone bankrupt. Labor wise I probably sunk at least a quarter million into that house.
And yes, this was an issue in the divorce. Man works all weekend and watches the kids as well and can’t remember the last time he saw pussy will lead to a divorce. -
Other"can’t remember the last time he saw pussy will lead to a divorce."
New board motto.
-
General CarpentryThese kind of starter questions sometimes lead to the most interesting threads