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Everything posted by Onoff
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Just collected circa 50kg of crushed glass blasting medium: Had a wander whilst waiting for it to be bagged up. Fascinating (to me anyway): Oak? Something from Narnia: Something from Narnia in front of some really big pipes: And I thought my sliding gate was big: Bet they've lost count of how many of these done over the years:
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No. Just be told. Buy Makita. This isn't an "Oregon" sort of place. ?
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Just lop off 5mm slivers with your chopsaw from 3x2 offcuts. No need to buy anything. Back the screws out of the perimeter 3x2, lift and pack. Fill the gaps between packs with silicon. Moisture won't get in there.
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That looks the dogs b@llocks imho. ?
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The majority of my gear is LXT. Can't beat it imo. However I wanted a 36V chainsaw for occasional use but didn't want to pay Makita prices. I bought an Einhell chainsaw for half the price and 3D printed adapters to use Makita batteries. Works like a dream. A couple of videos. If I were you I'd abandon Erbauer if you're going to do lots of stuff over many years and go with a make. If for nothing else the ability to get spares. Use the Erbauer as your second drill. Tbh there might even be a Makita battery to Erbauer tool adapter out there already. I'll have a look in a bit.
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Late to reading this. @Russell griffiths.....totally random thought.....how about a floating PV array on the lake?
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1) I've used a lump of steel bar about 2" x 1/2" and a club hammer to beat the pir down in 1/2" strips. or 2) Cut 3" wide strips of 6mm ply. Pin to top of 3x2. 1mm won't make a difference. or 3) You could.....just lop off 5mm slivers of 3x2 on the chop saw and use them. (A bit flimsier instead of ripping with the grain on a table saw). Unscrew, the low, 3×2 timber. Insert the packs perpendicular to and under the 3x2. Once in place fine. or 4) Buy 5mm plastic packs. Unscrew, the low, 3×2 timber. Insert the packs perpendicular to and under the 3x2. https://www.screwfix.com/p/broadfix-plastic-shims-large-101-x-5-x-43mm-200-pack/95031 If you can stretch to it you won't look back from buying an assorted shim kit like this. Invaluable for "shed" building etc. Would be enough in this assortment and then some. https://www.toolstation.com/broadfix-u-shims-kit/p52385 With 3) & 4) place the packs about every 200mm making sure corners are well supported. Fill any gaps later with silicone or whatever's going.
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It's fine. It's 500mu thick which is 0.5mm thick. & so is this: https://www.screwfix.com/p/capital-valley-plastics-ltd-damp-proof-course-black-30m-x-150mm/78665#product_additional_details_container
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DPM - damp proof membrane, big (blue in my case) sheet that went under your concrete. DPC - damp proof course. Comes in roll 6" wide or more. Likely a thicker gauge than dpm. This is the stuff I meant. You can get a plastic, embossed type or a thicker rubber type. It should bend OK. If you're capping over it with timber you could equally use strips of the thinner DPM under your slab. Ffs you could use rubble bags cut up! Tbh though a dpc is a dpm. "Course" just meaning it is incorporated in a wall. Traditionally this was slate, pitch etc. No the suggestion isn't a big sheet over the whole lot!
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Fibaro switch wiring lack of knowledge!
Onoff replied to Pocster's topic in Networks, AV, Security & Automation
Is it the bell end that's the main problem? -
As ever, without a sketch its hard to visualise but you could cover the OSB edge AND the vertical side of the 3x2 frame with a sacrificial strip of softwood treated against the elements. Or a strip of aluminium, upvc cladding etc. Is it / will it be possible to remove the board cladding the bottom of the cabin? Thinking to maybe staple on a wrap of DPC (damp proof course, available in rolls very cheaply), so it sits up under the bottom board and comes down over the OSB edge and 3×2. Your "sacrificial" strip of treated softwood goes over that. Not shown, the strip of sacrificial softwood. Shown (dashed), the DPC up behind the bottom board coming down over the OSB edge. (Excuse sketches, hungover). Maybe you could get the DPC up in the groove of the bottom board. I don't know if you're intending putting OSB over the whole deck? I would be doing so but just where the cabin sits. I'd also leave a gap where the walkway is so it doesn't butt tight up to the cabin or it'll be a Mecca for rot! That bottom cladding board, on the walkway side will suffer from rain hitting the deck and splashing up at least 6". I'd treat it with black bitumen paint or similar periodically. Has this cabin got a floor with it? How are you going to stop the pir dropping or will it just sit on the base frame you've already built? As ever, many ways to skin this (next door's) cat!
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DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME! Wanting to blast the mower gearbox (other thread) I'd run out of blast medium. Someone mentioned soda crystal for blasting aluminium on another forum and that I should look up "pop bottle soda blaster". Appetite wetted I went digging for parts. After an ill fated attempt using copper tap connectors I found some heavy wall chromed steel tube. Noted that on the cheap blow gun I have the end screws out and a standard compressor fitting screws in: The compressor fitting is a pretty tight fit: I CAD'd up a 2 piece detail to encompass the pipe/compressor fitting gun: The lid of the bottle gets screwed down through the top half into the lower half and sandwiches the pipe assembly: The nearly finished article: Will it work, who knows? Think the barrel calibre might be a bit big and I'll use grit like there's no tomorrow. Also a barrel blockage could see the barrel coming off at speed!
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I've painted OSB3 with No Nonsense wood treatment a few times now. Pretty sure it affects whatever "glue" holds the OSB together and makes it more susceptible to blowing at the edges. https://www.screwfix.com/p/no-nonsense-wood-treatment-dark-brown-5ltr/23266
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ABS printing is proving as unsuccessful as it has been up until now! I'm wondering if the extract fan position is wrong and too high up, as in taking heat away from the print area? On the test cubes above X is the face you see as you open the door. It's pretty good imo. Y is the real screw up face. It looks like the layers have been affected by "drag" whilst being put down. I'm betting that's the front to back air flow caused by the fan. Z should be "flatter" but it's not. The laying down of material is obviously helped by gravity but there appears to have been some slight "lifting". Again, betting caused by the fan. One chap I've read has a similar 120mm fan to this but lower down in one of the corners, not sure if it's on the back or side of the enclosure..We're limited with the enclosure sat on a desk as it is at the mo. Can't vent left or right or low down to the rear.I might quickly knock up a ply "chimney" to go on the back wall of the case. The idea being that "damaging" heat from around the electronics and psu will be drawn in at the base through the "fireplace". Above the bed will stay nice and warm. Excuse the dog rough sketch this morning! Hopefully it'll drag in any smell too.Mind you, no discernible smell last night whatsoever, fan on & using Steadytech ABS Pro.
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Semi permanent ladder setup for a stairwell.
Onoff replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
I just searched "staircase" on Gumtree putting in "Lincolnshire" as the area. Came up with things like this: Loft ladder for £40 in Huntington: https://www.gumtree.com/p/for-sale/pine-stairs-loft-ladder-staircase-used/1373504498? & Free metal staircase: https://www.gumtree.com/p/for-sale/fire-escape-staircase/1373281482? Htf Worcester is Lincolnshire, but if you have transport and a couple of mates freebies like this can be great. I find with Gumtree that "stair case" and "staircase" brings up different results. Always worth a look though. -
@H F reviewed his a while back:
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Gumtree?
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How about a bfo stainless "washer" with an outside diameter of what you want to cover the bodge? Starrett one? Polishing to mirror finish would be a git. Or a chrome plated brass tap base ring e.g: https://www.bathroomspareparts.co.uk/tap-shrouds--base-rings-2192-c.asp
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As I've run out of blast medium here I asked and was quoted locally, £50 to soda blast his piddly little gearbox. FFS! So I approached the shot blasting and painting outfit that the first company I worked for in 1983 used to used to paint our machines. Chap down there will do me a 25kg bag of crushed glass shot shotblast media for £20. I'm going to take 2. Should have thought of them first! Off topic I know but back in 2016 I had them shot blast, zinc flame spray and 2 pack paint the astronomy pier I designed and built for my brother:
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Fixing screw hole in top of shower waste pipe :(
Onoff replied to andyscotland's topic in Waste & Sewerage
A near miss was enough for me: -
Another doth hold that crown Sire! (No it's not me!)
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Your definition and mine of expensive is different! ?
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I'd like a NAS, keep looking out for a s'hand Synology one. Missed out big time when my son's mate's uni was selling them off. £20 per TB in a NAS ffs and pulled HDDS at £10/TB . "Oh, did you want one?" said dozy lad when they were all gone!
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Semi permanent ladder setup for a stairwell.
Onoff replied to epsilonGreedy's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
If you want to get a bit more technical doesn't take long to knock up a jig to route slots into your stringers; -
PVC cable sheaths incorporate a "placticiser" to make them "plastic", aka flexible, bendy. As I understand it it's a leaching of of this placticiser that reacts badly with eps. Rigid pvc pipe lacks the plasticizer. Ergo you're OK. Put another way, you can place pvc cables in pvc trunking, within eps as the trunking is unplacticised.
