Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Roofing & House Wrap

So James and his buddy, Josh, finished up the final touches on the roof Monday evening. It looks fabulous from my perspective. I guess the real test will be next time it rains. Shouldn't have too long to wait around here... The next step is house wrap(Tyvek). That's where you come in... :-) We would like to invite any and all of you who would like to swing a hammer stapler to come help us put on the vapor barrier on the weekend of September 5 & 6 and also the following weekend of September 12 & 13. Please drop us a line if you can make it!

Front porch roof.
End of garage. Long roof in left of picture is over front porch.

North end of house. Window is in master bath.


The backside party zone. woo-hoo!



End of the Rainbow

I KNEW this was what I'd find at the end of the rainbow! Look! Both ends!!





Tom & Titan, then & now

Oh my goodness, came across this picture from May 30, 2009 of Tom and Titan...
And this one from this morning, August 26, 2009. What a difference 3 months makes!

Backpacking with Dad

So I suppose I should let Tom and/or Amanda recount their tales of adventure from Amanda's first overnight backpacking trip but I was taking pix off the camera and had to share! They can fill you in on the details when they have time. I did hear that Titan was a very good boy though...Amanda & Titan. I think I would kill to have legs that long...
Tom & Amanda on the trail!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

BREAK

The weather is pleasant, and I made a promise to Amanda that I have to keep before school starts. So Sandi and Hailey are going shopping, and Amanda and I are going on a short back pack trip in the North Cascades. Just one night, and no plumbing along the trail. I'll get back on it after the weekend, I promise!

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Roofer

James the Roofer came out today, a bit frustrated that he couldn't work on it today but I had to chat with him about the work. So we went over it and he will correct the few issues. He says he'll be done by Saturday. Cool.

No more progress on plumbing. Killed weeds instead.

I'm in the market for a surface planer, if you know of anyone getting rid of one.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Update: Plumbers Are People Too

But first, the roof....

Being the "GC", you have to stay on top of the subs. This week we're driving both the plumbing contractor and the roofing installer. James has been great, though we've met a number of his buddies and co-workers. By and large a diverse set of guys, and now I noticed a diverse set of values and/or experience. One guy is off the job and James will be out tomorrow to look at the minor problems I've noticed. I'm glad I got up on the roof today. I found some underlayment cut short and some crooked cuts. But to James' credit, he responded quickly and takes full responsibility. That's a good thing.

As for the plumber, he's pretty much an ass so we leave him alone in the crawl space.

A small sampling of some in-wall stuff, this is the laundry area. The system of drains and vents actually requires a bit of math, although you plumbers out there may or may not have completed 2nd grade. Probably, because foresight and critical thinking are just as important as adding fixture units and matching to a pipe-size chart (yes, I have a book "How to Plumb a House". If you want it when I'm done, it's yours). I did have the pleasure of realizing I had missed a shower drain, after I had transversed the area with a 3" pipe in tight conditions. Oh well, ABS plastic is pretty easy to work with. Iron would be harder, more expensive and quieter but we make our "sacrafices". So we're pretty much done with the 1st and 2nd floors and roof vents, and now I'm under the house on the mainline.

Now is when I am absolutely appreciative of the crawl space we didn't fully plan for. Nipple height when I stand in the access hole, and a minor stoop to move about. I do much or most of the work from my knees, but it's currently dirt so it's not too bad.

This is looking "uphill" from near the garage towards the master bath which is the furthest plumbing in the system. We need to maintain about 1/4" of fall per foot, and as you may recall from earlier discussion the elevation of the house was based entirely on the plumbing and septic tank elevation. We don't have to pump the poop.

The pipes sticking down on the right are just marking right now for the kitchen sink.

So I am working in zones, as that is how it falls from above. First, I put in a string and layed a route with hangars. Then the 4" main goes in rough, anticipating fittings as appropriate to collect from above. And even though most vents happen from the fixture on up, there are a couple below so I have to plan that in the layout as well. The peninsula and island sinks both have no wall above, so it is routed down and laterally to another wall. Vents, even though they are primarily for air, need also to maintain the 1/4" rise in their travels to the roof. This allows rain or overflow and clogs to still route down to the drain regardless of which direction they go.

Here's the end of the line, still unfinished. This section serves three toilets, a bathtub and five sinks. Oops, just made me wonder if I need a drain for the refridgerator. Probably not. If it melts all the ice we can just use all the nice towels to sop it up. From here, the drain leaves the house under the front deck and will run about another 30' to the septic tank connection. I won't make that until after plumbing inspection for two reasons. One is that it's much easier to test the system with it disconnected (we have to fill it with air or water and let it sit awhile). The other is because the line will run along the current surface of the ground which we plan to armor and cover with pit-run, which is a driveway-building project and not in the time/money budget right now.

So people ask from time-to-time when they can help, and I don't really have firm plans yet for "work parties". That said, you are welcome to stop by anytime to either throw in someplace or just to say hi. I have several more hours of plumbing underneath. I tell you, if it turns 100 again that's the place to be. It never got above about 75. And no, I won't admit to taking any naps there during the heat wave!