Chandelier installation going bad
Christy Forbis
5 years ago
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Pre-slope and liner install bad??
Comments (13)After a week of the installer being busy when we were available and us being busy when he was available we finally got the preslope fixed and liner installed. Flood testing currently 20 hrs in and holding water! Now I'm stuck once again. I can not find lath for the curb in town. Lowes points me to chicken wire in the gardening section. DH had to go to OKC recently and stopped at HD and bought this http://m.homedepot.com/p/--2.5%20METAL%20LATH/202093395 But installer says its wrong stuff. What exactly am I looking for? Can anyone link me to the right stuff via HD or Lowes website?!...See MoreKitchen cab install while on vaca? Good or bad idea?
Comments (14)Bad, bad idea. This is where you should follow your intuition. Here's my experience. In my last kitchen we did a simple remodel. I was upstairs with my toddler while the contractor was installing the cabinets. I come downstairs to check on the progress. To the left and right of the kitchen window were upper cabinets with the sink centered on the window. The right upper cabinet was further from the window than the left upper cabinet. It looked awful - it was off-balance and threw off the room. When I asked the contractor why he didn't position the cabinet the same distance from the window as the one on the other side, he told me b/c the layout didn't show it that way. I asked him, don't you think it looks a little off-balance and he agreed that it seemed weird to do it that way. I asked him to take it down install it the same distance from the window as the other cabinet. He got a bit huffy with me and I reminded him that at the beginning of the job if there were any questions regarding the layout and the installation or if something did not seem right to him, he had been instructed to ask me before he did anything. Granted in the scheme of things this probably doesn't seem like a big deal, but my point is that I was in the house and he still didn't check with me. I can't even begin to imagine what would go on if I was out of town. To undo things and redo costs not only money, but time. I would suspend the installation until I returned. Have a great trip!!!...See MoreHelp: bad tile install going from bad to worse
Comments (8)Big edit for this post, you posted the Kerdi shot while I was typing. So... 1) The flex in the floor that is causing the grout to crack: It's possible that the Kerdi Tray was not properly bedded in thinset, so as the slightly flexible tray flexes, the inflexible grout is cracking. It's also possible that the small size of the penny rounds is resulting in point loading on the foam tray. The foam compresses ever-so-slightly, the tile moves, the grout cracks. The floor...Is your guy using thinset as grout? Grout as thinset? With the penny rounds, it almost looks like he's doing an all-at-once installation. Setting the tile, promoting between-the-tile-squeeze-through, then grouting. All at the same time. A negative with that is that he's grouting and cleaning the grout before the thinset has fully cured. When I grout I'm pretty aggressive with the grout float in order to get grout into every nook and cranny. I don't want to leave any voids. If your guy took it easy when grouting so as to not displace the unbonded sheets of penny rounds, he could have left a few voids beneath the surface. If he wanted to be gentle while cleaning the grout, he might have used too much water during cleanup, that can also weaken the grout. I don't know why the floor is being grouted piecemeal. That's an easy way to get uneven grout color on a floor. As he continues to tile, he'll have to chip out parts of the hardened thinset/grout at the edges fo the already installed sheets to get the subsequent sheets of tile to mesh with the already installed sheets. He'll need to be careful to not ding the Kerdi membrane. It's also a recipe for mismatched spacing at the edges resulting in being able to see the individual sheets of tile versus the floor being one harmonious surface of penny rounds. With him sliding the floor tile under the bottom course of wall tile, I do hope he's not leaving any unfilled voids in the floor-wall corners. 2) Bullnosing. He bullnosed the tile after they were on the wall? Yeah. Probably not going to get a good outcome. Should be an easy remove and replace. The bowed wall? The tiler tiles on what he gets. If he gets a bowed wall courtesy of the framers, he can put the blinders on and tile right over it...or he can address the bowed walls with whoever hired him...the GC? The homeowner? Then the tiler can either tile right over the bowed wall, OR he can have the contractor fix the wall before he tiles, OR he can repair the wall himself and then tile. One added item...I can't tell what exactly is going on int he bottom left corner of the already installed tile. Could simply be that the tile spacing is skewed and he lost the pattern. After this floor is done and everything cured, I'd recommend having the GC pull the drain grate, install a plug, and flood the floor. As the floor tile is covered with water, watch for air bubbles. They'll indicate voids under the tile or in the corners. Once flooded, pull the plug to see how the floor drains. Make sure it drains completely and that water is not held in the corners. With a Kerdi Tray, the slope of the floor and a properly draining floor should be a no-brainer. But based on what I'm seeing and what you described regarding the bullnose, this could be a "no brain" installation. Sorry for that. Remediation after-the-fact is always a tough spot to be in. Good luck....See MoreMiele DW Circulation Pump or Motor going bad with loud noise?
Comments (28)@nwfan, did you ever solve the issue with your machine? We have a 2010 Miele Inspira that has also been making a similar noise for some time--we replaced the impeller for the circulation pump a few months ago (fortunately Miele USA does still sell the parts separately, though you have to call them directly) after finding that the impeller had split into two just like Petr's photo, which improved but did not entirely resolve the noise. Ignored it after that since it was cleaning fine but now it is giving us an F14 fault code and stopping at that point in the cycle, so clearly the noise was indicating something wrong. We've taken it all apart and checked most everything that is a common source of that code but nothing seems obviously amiss, so we're running out of ideas. Curious to know whether you found a solution (and if so, what the problem ultimately was)....See MoreChristy Forbis
5 years agoBeth H. :
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