Ralph, wonderful video as always. The Merc looks great inside and out, and I bet it was fun to take it on a bit of a roadtrip.
Charlie, I'm sure your wife is much the better for being under your care as she recovers. I hope things continue to go well and you have more time for other pursuits.
I haven't hardly posted anything here or on the main list in quite a while. The Portland, Indiana engine and tractor show is under way right now, keeping Gene plenty busy no doubt, but I'm sorry to say I likely won't even make it over there for an afternoon. Three different contractors coming to the house today... electrician, insulation company, and a door salesman.
Big project at home lately has been renovation of our "sunroom," originally a porch that was enclosed decades ago and has been modified at various points since then. All I'd intended to do was build a little "hall tree," as my wife calls it, a place to sit and put on your boots or hang up some coats with some shelves above for hats and gloves. Then we thought it'd be nice to add a light on top of it to illuminate the knicknacks and such that my wife plans to put up there. While investigating how to run a wire up there, I discovered there wasn't a bit of insulation in the wall... so we figured we might as well fix that before we built anything new up against the wall. Pulled off all the old paneling, all the old drywall, cleaned everything up, and then of course realized this would be the ideal time to add some new outlets, make the room lighting a little nicer, etc. And shoot, that old entrance door is just drafty as can be, and with the wall stripped down I could see it wasn't even framed in very well... so this is the project that never ends. Anyway, I just got the wiring all finished last night, and just in time because an insulation contractor is on his way to spray on new cellulose insulation. The door salesman will take measurements for a new exterior door and then come back and install it in several weeks.
All the rest of the house is solid brick, 13" thick, but the sunroom is just brick veneer over wood sheathing (actually 3/4" tongue-and-groove planks...pretty nice stuff!) over 2x4 wood studs. But the stud spacing was crazy, nothing consistent at all. I added a few new ones on 4' centers to make it easier to put the new drywall up, but that just made the overall spacing even crazier, so no way to use fiberglass batt insulation without having to custom-cut every single piece. So I'm happy to contract out the spray-on cellulose. Never seen it done so I'll be interested in the process. I guess it takes a couple days to dry, so I'll plan to hang the new drywall next weekend. After that I'll be looking around for a drywall finisher to do the mud and tape... that's another task I don't mind hiring out.
Here's a photo as it looks now, just before the insulation goes on.
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The electrician is coming to add a sub-panel next to the main breaker panel in the basement. Main panel is fine but full, and although I'm happy to run new circuits I don't feel up to adding a subpanel myself. While he's here he's also going to wire in a new quick-disconnect cable for my old Winco 20KW PTO-powered generator... some prior owner had put a nice transfer switch out by the electric meter and that generator came with my JD 620 when I bought it from a neighbor a couple years ago, but I didn't have the nerve to try to wire it in myself.
Then this afternoon Lowe's will deliver the drywall along with a bunch of other 4x8 stuff I need for other projects: pegboard for a new workbench in the shop and another one in the basement, MDF for benchtop worksurfaces and shelves, plywood for a future little roof extension over the entrance door to the sunroom ("project that never ends"...)
Hope this finds you gentlemen well.
Dean
Saint Paris, Ohio