Friday

29 March 2013

I stand corrected, and I humbly apologise. The conversion from 2 inch is not 500 mm but 50 mm. That was a double strike while typing. So the bath outlet is 50 mm.

No plumber in sight yet, so we are playing the waiting game.

I spent time on joining more veranda posts, but none are really finished or painted yet. It is an ongoing task.

I also bought a Bosch dishwasher on Trademe for $10, and had to pick it up in Hamilton. We took the opportunity to visit friends and had an enjoyable day. Yesterday I spent trying to establish what is wrong with it, and how to repair it. It is still an ongoing task. Will report on progress.

Whilst using the tap next to the house, I realised we had a water leak. The tap was about 300 mm from the house, and I just might have hit it with the Ride on lawnmower. So I dug it up and removed rusted out pipe sections and rerouted the pipe to have the tap against the wall. I did not have a standpipe with threads on both ends, and had to dig my pipe threader from deep storage. (I have never used it in NZ, and was considering to sell it as scrap) Pipe threaded and secured to the wall, now it is safe from roaming mowers. Eventually all pipework will have to be replaced with polythene pipes.

It is Good Friday today, which means a very short week.

We are expecting Anneke up from Christchurch for the weekend, so no more work will be done.

Sunday

24 March 2013

I took all of Monday and Tuesday to finish off the jobs on my list for Saturday.

It mostly concerned fitting the brackets for the shower frame, and fitting a waste pipe for the bath. The bath has a 500 mm or 2 inch waste, so I had to reduce it to 1 1/2 inch. Then I cut a hole in the floor for the toilet waste. We also finalised the position for the kitchen sink, and cut a hole for the waste. I had to remove some of the timber stored under the floor for the plumber to get in. All in anticipation of the plumber turning up. Needless to say, he didn't.

I measured the difference in height between the veranda posts, and the height of the rebuilt corner storage area. It turned out to be 180 mm. I repaired three left over posts and cut them to size. Those will still need to have nail holes and cracks filled in. Then I planned the extensions to the other posts, 27 of them. I ended up cutting a block of timber the right size and length, then drilling a hole through it, and joining it to the post with a galvanised iron rod, 8 mm and weatherproof glue. I had one rod easily available, and made the first one, then went to the shop to buy more. Sorry, only 6 mm and 10 mm available. I have a piece of offcut rolltop pool fencing in my scrap bin, so I was forced to  use that. Only problem is that it was welded in a grid, and I had to cut it all loose. Rods are OK now, and I hope to continue extending posts in the coming week, two per day.

Elna also got at the "knotty pine" boards, and painted them all. Looks like a unit now.

One of our friends was in the process of buying a house, and I was asked to do an inspection ( Builder's report). The final inspection was on Thursday, they settled (took transfer) on Friday and we all helped them move over on Saturday. Cutting it a little fine, but everything worked out fine.

Well, that was our week. We are looking forward to a visit from Anneke over Easter.we will surely enjoy that.


17 March 2013

Sorry, I missed a week. It has been a hectic time (for me).

First, back to the bath. I used a lot of sanding discs. Then I decided to try scraping the coating off, and guess what? It came off easily with a wood chisel. The original enamel is still in good condition. There are a few stains, but that has to wait for a later day. Then we turned the bath over. and cleaned the outside. I found a casting date of 1926. I removed the feet. Only one of the bolts broke. Elna painted the outside a light green, and the feet ended up a bronze/ gold colour. Feet back on and we got two tough guys to move the bath in position.

The matter of cleaning off the lacquer on the doors and skirting boards is not resolved yet. The historical people wants us to wipe it with Methylated  Spirits.That is a big job, and does not repair scratches made by kids.We considered stripping it off and applying a new coat of lacquer, but that does not seem right. Our trusted paint stripper is Polystrippa, but it works out that you would need more than two cans on a door, both sides. Now several people have told me about "Coopers" which seems to be very effective in stripping, but also very expensive. I contacted them and they promised to do a house visit sometime in April. In the meantime we tried cleaning a door with Polystrippa, but we could not get one side cleaned with one liter. So that is on hold for now. We might end up stripping and maybe polishing it.

Next job was the shower cubicle. I have bought this frameless shower surround to use in Cambridge, but got wary of the inspector. See, all glass in a bathroom has to be safety glass. I did some internet research and found that the symbol printed on it is actually a Chinese standard. We spent about two days fitting the glass, learning how wide it will be and how the edges meet. Next was to cut all the holes for water and waste pipes in the handbasin bench and the floor. That done, I could call the plumber to arrange for him to send one of the guys over. He promised it could hopefully be in the coming week.

The next door neighbours started building a framework and put a tarp over it. We were expecting a party. My dumpsite is just over the fence from them. I felt obliged to build an corrugated iron fence between us. We had the iron left over from the garage we bought 15 months ago. Elna painted it, and helped me put it up. Now my junk is hidden from their view. It turned out the guy is very sick, and they are getting a constant stream of visitors.

We also moved two large wardrobes from the kitchen to be. When we find the time, we will start planning the new kitchen. The waste pipe for the sink has to be located as well.

I have put the curved iron that I had earmarked for the veranda on Trademe, and got a good price for it. I could also return the 10 liter roof paint for a credit of  $ 200 (Yes, that is the price of paint in NZ)

The whole of North Island was declared a drought zone. We had very dry weather since January, and the farmers are suffering. The forecast was for severe rain today, but we are getting some light rain. When we put the new roof on the little corner storage area, I left a gap between the wall and the roof. Elna insisted that it be closed in, because of the threat of rain. First, I had to decide by how much I will lift the veranda beam. Remember, it was so low it would interfere with the bay window, because I took a shortcut when repairing the posts. I have cut them all to the same length. It now turns out I will have to extend all by 150 mm.

Once that was decided, I could attach the ring beam to the cross wall and fit the last weatherboard. I have a stock of "knotty pine" planks in Rimu and thought it would be easier to fit narrow planks than wide ones. It turned out to be a big job. Each plank needs to be cut at the top at the right angle (which changes as you go), then beveled and cut to length. sometimes it is too long, sometimes too short. I think I walked between the job and the shed more than 100 times, for there are more than 27 planks, and each one took fitting. In the end I think we have a nice job. We have run out of wall paint, and will need another can of paint to finish that one off. At least, the rain cannot get in there any more.


One of the next jobs will now be to extend all thirty of the veranda posts by 150 mm.

We were also given some material that was used in the local museum to make a mock street scene from the 1800's. We picked up what we thought we could use, and I spent most of a day de-nailing it. The remainder  will become firewood. At some stage I will also have to take a load of junk to the dump.

I nearly forgot, I made a load of scrap metal that I have collected over time to the scrap merchants. Made some good money. But I missed some, so I will have to go again. Slowly our section is getting more tidy, but I am not taking pictures of that yet..
3 March 2013

Back to the roof........

I reinforced the mounting of the curved beam that forms the corner of the roof. I have also screwed the  roofing sheets down properly.  That was the easy part.

I moved the scaffold to the eastern side and removed three old roofing sheets. Next I fitted one new sheet to match the grooves of the old roof. I also put the second one up towards the corner, and marked where it had to be cut. I removed the sheet and cut it, and screwed it down on the outside. Next, I removed the first sheet to be able to reach far enough to screw the second sheet down on the curved beam.

Now I have a problem. Once these sheets are fitted, I can never reach the wall or the joint again, the iron is too thin, it just bends away when you look at it. I still had to fit a flashing or ridge over the joint, where the two roofs meet. A normal ridge plate won't work, because of the curvature if the roof. I have some lead sheets  I removed from our Cambridge house. So I cut these to 200 mm wide and fitted it over the joint. Now how do you secure this to the roof? In the end pop rivets did the trick. After several false starts, I managed to get the lead fitted, and managed to install the first sheet again. The third sheet I could reach from the scaffold, so no big deal. You know how it goes: Up the ladder, do a little, down the ladder, move inside, up the other ladder, mark, down the ladder, etc, etc. Then they want me to get more exercise!!!!!!!! Well, honestly, it took me four days of work, but our little corner room /shed has got a proper roof now. Some time in future we might fit a wall and door to it.

We are trying to sell the second hand sheets we have bought now.

Remember the claw foot bath we have bought and want to fit in the bathroom? It has been re enameled at some stage, and that is coming off and has discolored over time. I have tried sanding it off with a small sander I have got, but it didn't work. So it went into the "too hard" basket. The bathroom will be our next project, and I had to do something. Paint stripper does nothing. Saturday afternoon, (while I was resting ) I had another look and decided to try the orbital sander. It seems to work well. So the project for the next week is to sand the bath, smooth it with a finer paper, and put it into position in the new bathroom. That is to say if my priorities doesn't change in the meantime.