venividivicibj
Stylish Dinosaur
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2013
- Messages
- 22,867
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How... uh..large should this be?You cut out a circular piece of filler for the cock hole
STYLE. COMMUNITY. GREAT CLOTHING.
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How... uh..large should this be?You cut out a circular piece of filler for the cock hole
Dryer fixed. 10 bucks and about 2 hours of my time. For 100-200 bucks id probably just pay someone... but i bet id be charged in the 500 range. Had to take the entire dryer apart to make a very simple repair on a part that will always eventually need to be replaced...
if one had the energy, you could cut an access panel into the back for these repairs. Would be done in 20 minutes.
Nah, bruh. This is a job for a nibbler.Good excuse to buy a plasma cutter.
Tin knockers ALL have these things now. They like to use plasma cutters too.
I had a nibbler once... Legs for days, brains for minutes, and an ankle monitor for 9 months. She was quite fun
Plasma cutter sounds like a weapon in Duke Nukem.Ha, I honestly don't know what a plasma cutter is, or what that thing is either.
Do you even lift, bro?We made the mistake of stacking our full size washer and dryer (and designing the cabinet accordingly). When we needed a repair we had to pay $200 just to unstack and restack them.
We are looking to move to a home in part to be closer to our kids‘ school and in part to have a yard for our growing kids to play in. I won’t go into the dramatics about how difficult it is to find a home in the bay area but wanted to note a few things.
First - like many, we are interested in a move in ready home. Given Bay Area housing stock, this frequently means moving into a home that has been renovated to sell. We have noticed a number of those homes seem designed to sell rather than live in. From what we have seen so far, they rarely have a pantry or linen closet which seems like the sort of thing all family homes should feature.
Second - and not unrelated, we looked at a fully rebuilt home this week that had so many good things, but lacked a pantry and linen closet. It also, unfortunately, completely wasted its outdoor space having a detached garage in the back corner. This necessitated a long driveway and enough space to maneuver two cars side by side into the garage. The “lawn” was maybe 4x12 which was ridiculous given the circumstances. It did have a nice deck but for ***** sake I need grass. And they did some thoughtful things like prewiring the main family room for home theater with banana plug terminals, but inexplicably ran phone wire throughout the home instead of CAT6. On the other hand, it had been designed with multiple large and accessible crawl spaces for each floor. It included almost 2,000 sf of enclosed crawl space under the structure for storage. It wasn’t tall enough to stand up in but it was many times more space than I need for all my occasional use storage. It also had a finished space above the garage with nice hardwood floors. Since I have accumulated more things than I should, the storage was quite attractive.
EDIT: oh forgot to mention that it also had a fancy refrigerator (Thermador) that managed to somehow be both massive and yet not larger than our current one. We have a 23 cf fridge and it’s jus not big enough for a family of four. We will get a chest freezer in the garage to help but egads I don’t know what I’m doing wrong that 16cf refrigerated section feels way too small. Maybe they don’t subtract out the ice maker space which is substantial in mine.
We found another place that would have been perfect but for the brand new and very closed kitchen, which is a deal breaker for Mrs. Unf. I think the cost and time to remedy would be prohibitive in addition to wasteful.
We have resigned ourselves to ending up in a home that will fit our needs better than the place we have now. It will be worse in many ways. Our current home was designed to be lived in and has worked out quite well except for the lack of yard space and long term storage. We had hoped to find a “forever” home but not sure that is really possible at this point.