Wednesday, March 14, 2012

So the CIA does a little torture you say.


I've decided that the best kind of torture would be to have someone kneel down on a drywall screw.  Let me tell you, I would give up any secrets I ever had thats for sure.

So I have to complete the door to the fireplace clean out before I drywall the area. I had the door and frame fabricated and now I have to secure it to the concrete blocks.  I will be going into town tomorrow for anchors then I'll finish that wall.

Looking into the ash pit area
Here is the door and frame ready for paint and install

Lower bathroom hall completed

Just the beam to cover and then the media cupboard


I built in the sub panel and now I will drywall it

More tomorrow

Len

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Where has all the drywall gone?

Well we never thought it would happen, but the huge piles of drywall are gone.  In their place are actual walls!

Putting up the upper sheet to hide the fireplace foundation


Len used a drill to cut out for the plug

Ta da!

The pile that once was is...gone
Walls and ceilings done in the media room
Now there are just some little bits and pieces for Len to finish up.  The plan is to hire someone to mud and tape or is that tape and mud?  Anyway, soon (?) we will be ready for paint.  Guess I better pick out some colours someday soon.  Len says that is my job.

Cath

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

A few bricks short of a fireplace

When I bought the stone they told me that I would need 2 1/2 tons of stone so I picked up 2 tons and now I need to get more.  I definitely won't need a 1/2 ton but I will pick up 20 square feet whatever that amounts to.


We used the leftover red brick as filler

I was finishing the other tall wall up in the loft when I ran into an obstacle.  The end of the beam that holds up the front entrance roof was sticking too far into the house by 3/8 of an inch.  This doesn't sound like a lot but it would hold the drywall out enough to show. So the fix, drill on the end with a spade bit till it was shortened.

The offending member

Drilled shorter and ready to go

Back under the vapour barrier

The finished North wall finally
Now I'll have a major cleanup from all the mortar that fell down through the cracks to the basement as well as all of the rock chips all over the place.

I'll probably start on the basement drywall tomorrow as the wall behind the fireplace will need 2 people to finish.  When certain people are home from globetrotting it might get done.  Cathryn should be back from Africa on Thursday.

Len

Monday, March 5, 2012

Another day of fireplacing and drywallingLooking gooder

We may run out of useful rocks before the fireplace is finished.  I may have to pick up some more when I go and pick up the hearth stone

Looking gooder
 I started on the loft south wall. It's actually easier since I am already 10 feet up and I can do the higher bits with a ladder. I used the lift to help out with the bigger pieces and should be able to finish tomorrow.



Not much to say, except that it snowed again last night but it is going to warm up again and it will soon be mush again.

Len

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Snow and more snow


As you can see there is a bright blue sky melting the snow.




The last pieces going in the great room.





This is the wall I can't finish till the rocks are all in place as the chipping of the stone will dent the drywall.


A view from the loft of the finished west upper wall.

More tomorrow.

Len

Saturday, March 3, 2012

March 2, 1974, got married to my first wife Cathryn. 38 years of bliss

Here's how it went today. Please don't read if your'e squeamish.

I'm in the office now doing the wall with the window.  I measured and cut the lower sheet (My first mistake) and located holes to pass the wiring through for the cable and the data runs. You'll notice that it took two ladders to get behind and back again after pushing the wires through. This wall has the drywall going in behind a post on the left adding to the fun.  So I slid the sheet in behind and started to secure it with screws.  Next I located the boxes and cut them out.  Four of them.

Now this is where it goes sour.  Because of the post on the left and the beam above there is no way I can put the upper sheet behind both at once so it seemed like a good idea to take it up to the loft and slide it down from above.   What a simple solution. (Second mistake)

The lower sheet

So after cutting the sheet to length (54 x 106 inches) I hoisted it onto my two sawhorses. Then I slid the lifter under and was able to pick it up.  Then the lift is tipped till the sheet is horizontal and up it goes to the loft. So far so good. 

I went up to the loft and slid the big sheet off of the lift and over to the north wall ready to stand and slip in. I should mention that I had the foresight to screw a couple of pieces of 2 x 4 so it wouldn't fall all the way to the floor.  Trying to cover all the bases.

This sheet is quite heavy and that is the reason that I cut the window out while it was on the loft floor. (Third mistake)  Now I tipped it up and brought it to the edge and slid id into position.  The left side went down but the right did not. It would not go.  Upon further investigation that was exactly correct. it would not go. The space between the beam and the studding was too narrow for about 18 inches.

Guess what, it had to go back down and get put in from the bottom. Now getting it back on the lift with the window cut out of it became a real challenge.  There is no floor up there to work on, only beams. I was able to get it back down somehow and then I realized that the bottom sheet would have to be removed for this upper one to go in and up. Duh!!!

Once that lower sheet was removed and dragged from the office, I was able to get this sheet in place. I used the sawhorses again to get it high enough for the lift.  Once on the lift I slipped it up and to the left behind the post and slid it up and behind the beam.  Oh but the lift was up against the upper beam and wouldn't go all the way so now what.

As in the next picture I place bricks and kept adding them till it was where I wanted it. I could move the lift out of the way now. Then secure it with screws and move everything out of the way to bring the lower sheet back in. Secure it and go to bed.  Harumph.

Adding bricks

Woke up the next morning to a great surprise. Water on the floor of the great room.  Too much to be Banjo the dog.  Luckily it was just a rain gutter malfunction allowing water to go down the sheeting and under the plate onto the floor. I guess if we had siding this would not have happened.  I'll be looking for a good siding crew this summer.
Water??

Some plastic between the wall and the gutter cured the problem

Office closet completed

The offending wall with the window,  post on the left and beam overhead


No progress today as Nigel had meetings in town
And on that note, with the office completed, I'm going to bed.

Len

Thursday, March 1, 2012

It's mortar not motor Doris

There's been some confusion as of late regarding the use of the term "mortar."  Mortar goes around things and motors go around. I hope that clears things up.

The next photos are  fireplace progress oriented.  The bake oven gets a layer of insulation and then tin foil and wire mesh. The "mortar" is applied to the mesh and the tin foil prevents the insulation from sucking all the moisture from the mortar. This will give a solid base to place more rocks tomorrow.

Mortar being added over the mesh

The oven all ready to cover 

Good progress on the back, the cardboard is for an expansion gap

The west side

Getting close

The east face
Of course my contribution would be the completed front hall closet and the wall to the office. I have a half wall done in the office so you can still see the great room but that will all be history tomorrow.
The front entrance

Powder room left and into the office
Not as much done by me today as this was band practice day which went from 10:00 till noon. I hate to break up my day but somebody has to do it.  Oh yeah and this morning I drove to the 108 for more "mortar".

Def:A plastic mixture of cementitious materials (such as plaster, cement, or lime) with water and a fine aggregate (such as sand); can be troweled in the plastic state; hardens in place. When used in masonry construction, the mixture may contain masonry cement or ordinary hydraulic cement with lime (and often other admixtures) to increase its plasticity and durability.

Len