So I've got this empty concrete pad on the side of my house.
It used to have a rotted out 12x24' shed on it, but I demolished that last fall and figured I could do something better... 🧵
So I've got this empty concrete pad on the side of my house.
It used to have a rotted out 12x24' shed on it, but I demolished that last fall and figured I could do something better... 🧵
Day one was grinding down the high spots with a diamond cup wheel. $75 for the cup wheel and corded angle grinder.
Day two is opening up the cracks with a diamond cut disc and filling them with crack sealer. $40 for the diamond discs and crack filler.
One shed, some assembly required.
I guess I'm freaking committed now.
My dad volunteered to come down and help me restack all of the lumber inside of the fence and all in its own piles so I can get to all of it.
Only took the two of us about 2 hours to shuttle everything back there.
The inaugural mistake! I meant to leave that stud out so I'd have room to nail the header in.
So I guess we've moved to the "improvising" stage of this project.
The second panel went together much faster.
The site supervisor is sleeping in my office.
At that point we were ready to start putting rafters in the air, so why not?
The palm nailer was amazing for driving the hanger nails 11 feet up on an extension ladder. Easily the best $30 I've ever spent at Harbor Freight. Anyone who has an air compressor should pick one up; they're just so handy for driving nails in awkward tight spaces.
@kwf Here's another unexpected benefit: I needed to drive nails overhead, up into old, dried treated lumber. I couldn't manage to do it swinging a hammer. I put an impact socket into the Bosch, put it over the nail heads in hammer-but-don't-twist mode, and drove those nails in about 2 seconds flat.
I don't use it much, but when I need it, it sure comes in clutch.
“Buying a ladder” becomes a puzzle when you have a small SUV.
@kwf Same here !
I'm putting up alu rails for solar panels on my roof and after a day everything just hurts.
Oh well, 205 meters of rail down, 3 meters to go.
And then the solar panels themselves, 88 in total, 21 kilogram each.
Keep going at an easy pace and remember how much joy it'll all give you in the end ! 🙂