The patio guy thought he could start at the end of July so there is some downtime again. It will give me some time to pull up the old patio to make room for the new one.Any updates? More pics please
The patio guy thought he could start at the end of July so there is some downtime again. It will give me some time to pull up the old patio to make room for the new one.Any updates? More pics please
We then discussed whether I paid him the 'everybody got to learn their new career at my house' price, or the quality work price, because I'd hate to see the quality work price by comparison. Well. He didn't discuss much but he did stand there warming my foot.
I mean. Why start now and ruin the streak?Guess nothing goes perfect.
You mean the bar that goes to the ground on the none latch side? How about a chain around BOTH of them so they cannot open at all?drop bar on the double gate so that only one opened.
sigh..............so math is not their strong point nor is reading a tape measure............gurrrrrrrrr2 outlets about 33 ft from the pool that didn't meet the 6ft to 20 requirement.
Well they sure did that!!!!If you're going to fail, might as well go down in a blaze of glory I always say.
ALL of them for sure.................sigh again..............LAZY and sorry to the max!Half of them are way off and I wanted them all flattened and taped.
Gurrrrrrrrr for sure!The little white dot under the seam is the bottom corner of the track poking through.
Both sides (double gate) have a drop bar and he wanted me to get a new one on the right side that was lockable, effectively making the double gate a single, which I could then open on occasion if a vehicle had to pass, etc.You mean the bar that goes to the ground on the none latch side
It's kinda on me too because I knew about it, but they added an outlet at the panel so I figured they knew they could get away with being close enough.sigh..............so math is not their strong point nor is reading a tape measure............gurrrrrrrrr
In alot of places you need an outlet near the pool so you are less likely to use extension cords that could fall into the pool to power your radio / robot / cellphone charger / etc.forgive my ignorance, what is the 6 ft to 20 requirement for the outlets?
I got bagged on the cheap ones. In MA, they need to be UL listed and my inspector didn't waste amytime calling it out. The only ones that are UL listed are $70/ea, there are a grand total of 2 that are officially listed. Oh, and in MA code, a window is considered an egress that needs the alarm. So i have $700 of alarms i need to put on doors and windows.It turns out I could have bought the cheap door alarm because he only wanted to hear it beep, not to verify the UL2017 approval. $50 extra wasted there but the 'real' ones were weeks to deliver so if I failed for that I couldn't fix it soon. It was better to have it just in case.
ed through.
The safety guy wanted me to have padlocks/masterlocks for the 3 gates in case we went away and he wanted me to be able to secure the drop bar on the double gate so that only one opened. I found 3 locks in the garage and used stainless steel clamps to lock the drop bar. He was happy when I sent him pictures afterwards. It turns out I could have bought the cheap door alarm because he only wanted to hear it beep, not to verify the UL2017 approval. $50 extra wasted there but the 'real' ones were weeks to deliver so if I failed for that I couldn't fix it soon. It was better to have it just in case.
When buying my house county inspector insisted all doors that faced the pool including the garage get the junky alarms. This delayed the transaction as the PO‘s were apparently slow to move.I got bagged on the cheap ones. In MA, they need to be UL listed and my inspector didn't waste amytime calling it out. The only ones that are UL listed are $70/ea, there are a grand total of 2 that are officially listed. Oh, and in MA code, a window is considered an egress that needs the alarm. So i have $700 of alarms i need to put on doors and windows.
I find it ironic that the UL testing is for doors and gates - so by using it on a window - you are using it outside its tested application and void the test. Good job MA building code writers. Oh, 3 of the windows are 10' off the ground and you would land on the edge of a retaining wall.
I almost got bagged for only having one on the patio door. He told me I needed a 2nd one for the screen door also, so we could have the big door open and still have an alarm.I got bagged on the cheap ones
Same in FL (technically)...I got a lenient inspector and since I had the UL rated ones on the 4 doors, he let it go that my 5 windows had the cheap ones.I got bagged on the cheap ones. In MA, they need to be UL listed and my inspector didn't waste amytime calling it out. The only ones that are UL listed are $70/ea, there are a grand total of 2 that are officially listed. Oh, and in MA code, a window is considered an egress that needs the alarm. So i have $700 of alarms i need to put on doors and windows.
I find it ironic that the UL testing is for doors and gates - so by using it on a window - you are using it outside its tested application and void the test. Good job MA building code writers. Oh, 3 of the windows are 10' off the ground and you would land on the edge of a retaining wall.