This is my favorite door of the lot. It was on the old bathroom downstairs, likely not in its original opening, since it was planed down 1 inch on the hinge side. It's unfinished on one side, I think someone had previously stripped this door, but only put polyurethane on one side. It has some nice wear marks that you would have to pay for at Resoration Hardware! :) I definitely want to reuse this door, just have to find the place for it.
We ordered silestone quartz countertops through home depot before thanksgiving. They subcontracted the job to Stone Systems in Mundelin, IL. There were many people involved with the complete job: Home depot kitchen and bath sales, HD special services desk, SS templater, SS fabrication, SS scheduler, SS installers, and finally SS sales.
Our 2nd floor tenants here mentioned the ceiling in the kitchen was showing some water damage again after the last big snowstorm. I figured I had already patched that area above the kitchen with lots of tar last year, but apparently to no avail. I've know since I bought the building that the roof needed to be completely replaced, since much of it was rippled and many of the joints with the parapet walls were tearing. I made the mistake of hiring some fly by night contractors to put a layer of paint-able rubber membrane on over 5 years ago, and I thought that would hold it for awhile, but the membrane already had started coming off in the same year. At that same time, I did get some estimates for a 'modified bitumen roof' for about $10K. Once of the estimators took a sample of my existing roof, and said there were 7 layers of roof, and what looked to be the original gravel roof! So, obviously, this roof needed to be completely torn off. I contacted a numbe...
After watching a number of youtube videos, I discovered there's a commonly worn out cover under the windshield cowl. The rubber piece covering this hole (called the fan access) was completely damaged and sunk into the hole. Water was just pouring in from windshield, then under the hood, then into this hole right into the passenger side behind the glove box. access hole under windshield cowl replacement cover with silicone seal installed cover, hopefully no more leaks here A terrible side effect of having water pour into the access hole is damaged HVAC fan and its resistor. The 'resistor' enables the fan to have different speeds. So, it looked like in the end, the water started leaking in, damaging the resistor and the fan would only run on high setting (no resistor). Then after time, more water would cause the DC motor to fail (rusted brushes, bearings, etc.). The last symptom was a soaking wet passenger floor carpet. ...
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