EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
I honestly don't know why the yellow covering has to come off, but if it's on there, the inspector will say something. Same thing with outlet boxes.
Yes they will!I honestly don't know why the yellow covering has to come off, but if it's on there, the inspector will say something. Same thing with outlet boxes.
Not yet. Lots going on. Finishing the basement, put in a new laundry room, going to move my office down there to make room for the new nursery. So all basement storage needs to go on the second floor of the garage.Good to see updates again. Did you ever finish putting a different engine in your skidsteer?
The roof is 25' up and not easily or regularly accessible. Getting a bunch of panels up there isn't bad, but much more is a challenge. I'm going to use the radiant floor heating eventually but at the current electric rates using grid power to heat especially when I'll loose a bulk of it is wasting money.M thoughts are that since you are converting one form of energy into another, you are gong to loose some energy along the way. This needs more study to see if it's a good idea, but why not just lay some black plastic pipe on the roof and pump antifreeze through that into your pex?
Or put a solar collector against the south wall and just use natural convection to move the heat into the building.
Honestly I would budget an amount per month to insulate. Adding insulation is going to give you the most bang for your buck.
And yes I remember raising a family through some pretty lean years. It was tough but with creative ideas we made it.
I will look into the cost of insulating the ceiling, that seems much more doable. The cost of the walls is over $10k plus i'm not ready to do that until i finish electrical and plumbing.Insulating the ceiling gives you the most bang for the buck. Insulating the walls has a very small return. If the walls are wrapped and sealed so wind can't get through them, then you will see a significant difference by just insulating the ceiling.
Over time, you can improve this by insulating the walls, a little at time.
I don't like the step, it was just a matter of backfilling which I never got around to. Then it got overgrown with weeds, discarded boards, blocks, bricks, etc and was a real mess, and I wanted to get it cleaned up. Plus that step down onto plywood that's falling apart is a real hazard.A common mistake that people make is to have a step down from the door. When walking out of a building, the first step should be almost at the same height of the floor. An inch lower is the most you want. That landing prevents falling, which is common when the step is 7 inches lower then the door.
Did you finish your insulation or are you going to buy blocks and do landscaping instead?
I'm no solar-physicist, but I don't think building a pavilion roof over your solar panels is going to give the best energy production.I have a 16x32' slab sitting there, i'm going to build a pavilion over top of it to house the solar panels
i will have gutters, that's what the pipe sticking out of the ground is for. There's 4 of them, one on each corner, that all connect and join at the low back corner that drains into a pit. As is, it the water drains strait off, and goes into the gravel on top of the drain pipes which have holes, and still end up draining to the pit.I'm no solar-physicist, but I don't think building a pavilion roof over your solar panels is going to give the best energy production.
Kidding. Good plan for the step and drainage - give the water a place to go. I forget, do you have or plan to have gutters?