Electrician question - Screw-in breakers?

   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers? #11  
This is kind of weird. Fuses are safer and more reliable than breakers. The originals could be defeated by sticking a penny in the socket, but inserts and fusestats prevent that.
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers?
  • Thread Starter
#12  
To be honest, I can’t blame an insurer for not wanting to touch that.
:D .
That's pretty much what I said as a teen after Dad inherited, and I had to work for him making the upgrades that I now know were non-spec - to put it politely. I learned so much carpentry that a decade later after college I joined the Carpenter's Union, then went on to buy and renovate rentals.

Now a generation later all that old half-assed work is my problem.

Perimeter foundation: One of the projects we did late 1950's was replace the rotted mudsill foundation - redwood 4x8's on native ground - with piers and posts. Short posts on the uphill side, to 3.5 ft tall on the other side. I now know the piers should have been set in wet concrete instead of just ramming the earth where each would be set. That halted rot, but I'm afraid the little farmhouse will leap off its posts in a big earthquake. It's not bolted down to anything which is the minimum earthquake spec. No frost heave in this mild climate.

I've been careful to never have any but 15 amp fuses on-site. Quick-blow would be preferable but just to answer an insurance questionnaire honestly I can't run glass fuses any more. Hopefully those push-button screw in breakers then answering 'no fuses anywhere' will meet that requirement.

I think this little house, originally 500 sq ft before several add-ons, came from the Sears catalog pre-cut. That was common 100 years ago when a jobsite didn't have electricity, and it looks similar to other pre-cut plans. I can't determine if the electricity was built in or added later. The knob & tube stuff visible in the basement looks like it was installed by a farmer, not an electrician. Come to think of it indoor plumbing was the first remodel. One wall in the bathroom has outdoor lap siding under the later plywood.

Ok, the next step is get some screw in breakers like shown above. There are lots of other non-code issues too, such as a mature Redwood tree pushing against the side of the guest cabin/bunkhouse. The insurance agent wanted it cut down. No way. Grandma and I planted that when I was little! I'm determined to just live with all the oddities here and leave it to my kids to resolve stuff after I'm gone. This isn't our primary home, we have a nice place over in the Central Valley, so leaving stuff here 'good enough' is all I want to do.
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers? #13  
And just think you had to have power in most places before you could have indoor plumbing (to power the well pump).
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers? #14  
I think this little house, originally 500 sq ft before several add-ons, came from the Sears catalog pre-cut.
Sorry to post this, The History of Sears Kit Homes - The Craftsman Blog but your comment led me down a rabbit hole again. I've read about the Sears mail order homes before, but always am ready to read about old times.

I still find it sadly ironic that they got their start doing mail orders, yet couldn't keep up with online sales which were their ultimate demise. Even 40 years ago Sears was a great place to do business. When I was starting out I worked a decent paying job in summer, and in winter was working for minimum wage at an apple orchard. My Sears card allowed me to pay for things like unexpected auto repairs in the winter months, and pay them off the next summer.
I suppose that my Discover card is a continuance of Sears Financial, yet it isn't the same.
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers?
  • Thread Starter
#15  
And just think you had to have power in most places before you could have indoor plumbing (to power the well pump).
Nah.
p1020761rwindmill-climb-2007-jpg.533086
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers? #16  
Can you build or assemble a new house and convert the old one to a storage shed by removing the plumbing in the bathroom and kitchen?

Bruce
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers? #17  
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers?
  • Thread Starter
#18  
Can you build or assemble a new house and convert the old one to a storage shed by removing the plumbing in the bathroom and kitchen?

Bruce
We've thought seriously about buying a factory-built home to replace the guest cabin, and possibly one to replace this house. Particularly as I get older and eventually won't be able to do major projects alone - as the disintegration of these buildings accelerates.

But there's no urgent need to replace either so I just continue to patch things back together year after year, same as Dad and Grandpa before me. The most recent project was typical, replace all the faucet washers indoors and garden too, after I heard the pump start in the middle of the night. Everything I took apart was badly worn.

The whole place is like that. On the other hand the site is gorgeous and all the neighbor places have recently sold to another generation of rich San Franciscans - none of whom have the million $ view that we do. We love it here. Grandparents did the right thing buying this as their retirement place 70 years ago. Back then, the apple crop covered their cost of living. But even then it was primitive compared to the nice home they left to Dad's sister. For example I remember the heater ran on kerosene dripping into a pool of flame. They wouldn't let me get near it. Now I'm the third generation of 'Grandpa Apple'.
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers?
  • Thread Starter
#19  
That is why I said most places and a few places had springs on high ground that could feed up into the house.
This windmill ran a plunger-style pump, same mechanism as a hand-pumped well, to fill a thousand gallon redwood tank in the upper floor of that water tower.

The well beneath it now has water some 30~50 ft down but I think limited quantity. The modern (1950's) well that replaced it is down a couple hundred ft.
 
   / Electrician question - Screw-in breakers? #20  
The Aeromotor windmills are still made in the USA in San Angelo Texas, visited there last March.

Nice video and how they are manufactured and how they work.
 

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