- Nov 12, 2017
- 12,640
- Pool Size
- 12300
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
JOB 1
I'm grateful for a natural gas valve right where I want my outdoor BBQ, but it stuck out way too far (which governed the exact location for my BBQ, without any side-to-side leeway) and was way too low behind my BBQ to make it easy to get at. I like to shut the gas valve off after each use of the BBQ, which was kinda a pain.
So I moved it. I raised the valve and pointed the connector straight down to relieve all the stress on the gas hose leading to the BBQ. Then I painted it, just 'cuz. I was all done before I started wondering if a gas valve and outlet are supposed to be a certain height off the ground. Oh well.

The whole chunk from the valve to the connector used to come straight out from that 4" of pipe coming out of the wall, so it was pretty much always in the way of something. And the hose would stick straight out off the end of that, making it protrude even further into my patio space, and stressing the hose hanging horizontally off of the connector. Now it all tucks in nicely behind my BBQ. Yah, it's ugly, but it's behind the BBQ. And the valve is now very easy to reach.
I added another "cam mirror" in the rafters above the valve, so now I can verify that the valve is off while doing my nightly video check of all my door locks and gates and hose bibbs. This image is cropped from a still from my PTZ pool cam. The mirror is quite a ways away from the cam, but I still have enough zoom and resolution to see if the gas valve handle is horizontal or vertical (off or on).
JOB 2
The white blotches in the cam image are me treating the grease stains on my stone. You can see a "before" stain in the lower-right corner of the valve pic. There were some under the BBQ, and a bunch all over my deck, left over from my July 4 party.
I used Pour-N-Restore (that's the white stuff). It works OK. It lifts out some stains right away, others need a few applications. By the time I'm done they'll be hard to see if not gone altogether. This stuff. I've done two coats so far. Probably have to do one more tomorrow on a couple stubborn stains.
Our fellow TFPer/stone expert @mcleod taught me the correct MO. Pour-N-Restore seeps into stone while wet, and draws grease up and out as it dries. It's best applied in the shape of a shallow bubble, at least 1/8" thick, not painted on flat. That gives it enough "drawing power." It's very easy to use, but not cheap anymore. That 32oz bottle I linked is 20 bones.
I'm grateful for a natural gas valve right where I want my outdoor BBQ, but it stuck out way too far (which governed the exact location for my BBQ, without any side-to-side leeway) and was way too low behind my BBQ to make it easy to get at. I like to shut the gas valve off after each use of the BBQ, which was kinda a pain.
So I moved it. I raised the valve and pointed the connector straight down to relieve all the stress on the gas hose leading to the BBQ. Then I painted it, just 'cuz. I was all done before I started wondering if a gas valve and outlet are supposed to be a certain height off the ground. Oh well.


The whole chunk from the valve to the connector used to come straight out from that 4" of pipe coming out of the wall, so it was pretty much always in the way of something. And the hose would stick straight out off the end of that, making it protrude even further into my patio space, and stressing the hose hanging horizontally off of the connector. Now it all tucks in nicely behind my BBQ. Yah, it's ugly, but it's behind the BBQ. And the valve is now very easy to reach.
I added another "cam mirror" in the rafters above the valve, so now I can verify that the valve is off while doing my nightly video check of all my door locks and gates and hose bibbs. This image is cropped from a still from my PTZ pool cam. The mirror is quite a ways away from the cam, but I still have enough zoom and resolution to see if the gas valve handle is horizontal or vertical (off or on).
JOB 2
The white blotches in the cam image are me treating the grease stains on my stone. You can see a "before" stain in the lower-right corner of the valve pic. There were some under the BBQ, and a bunch all over my deck, left over from my July 4 party.
I used Pour-N-Restore (that's the white stuff). It works OK. It lifts out some stains right away, others need a few applications. By the time I'm done they'll be hard to see if not gone altogether. This stuff. I've done two coats so far. Probably have to do one more tomorrow on a couple stubborn stains.
Our fellow TFPer/stone expert @mcleod taught me the correct MO. Pour-N-Restore seeps into stone while wet, and draws grease up and out as it dries. It's best applied in the shape of a shallow bubble, at least 1/8" thick, not painted on flat. That gives it enough "drawing power." It's very easy to use, but not cheap anymore. That 32oz bottle I linked is 20 bones.
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