My, how time flies!
It's been nearly a year since I've updated this thread, and I need to do that or it's going to auto-lock soon.
As you may remember from my previous posts, I had shoulder surgery in January last year. About 3 years ago I learned that I have irreparable rotator-cuff tears (complete separation) in both shoulders. Sometime in late 2015, I managed to tear the deltoid in my right shoulder, and damaged the long head of the biceps tendon (also in the right arm) enough that it had to be cut loose (Biceps Tenotomy). It wasn't something that happened all at once, it happened over a long period of time. All I knew was my shoulders hurt. I thought it was just normal โgetting oldโ stuff. I only knew it was bad when I woke up one day with a huge bruise on my right shoulder.
Anyway, my hope was that I'd be recovered enough to do some work in 3-4 months. That didn't happen. I was on short-term disability for 15 weeks. When I went back to work, I wasn't sure I would even be able to work to the end of 2016. It's only been in the last month or so that I've started having some relatively pain-free days. Before that, it was just a daily struggle. I'm happy that I can back off the pain med's now. I've got nearly full range-of-motion, but I've lost a lot of strength in my shoulders and upper arms. I have to avoid working above shoulder height now. I've had to change the way I do a lot of things, and avoid doing some things entirely. We did get a few projects done though, and I'll get the thread up to date now.
After getting the mini-split HVAC unit installed in the new room over the garage (then having the inside unit moved into the spot it should have been in to begin with) I had the interior walls insulated and sheetrocked. They haven't been mudded and taped yet. The mini-split is doing a great job of keeping the room heated and cooled. It's VERY quiet, both inside and outside the house. I also had the two small sections of wall on each side of the windows covered with the same T&G pine that we used on the ceiling. It was a good way to use up some of the scrap. These windows face East, and the morning sun was a little too bright for us, so we had some solar film installed on them. Fortunately, the type of windows we bought were OK to put film on. Some types of windows will overheat, and will void the warranty.
The ships figure-head is still doing a fine job of holding up the ridge beam.
When the walls in the new room got insulated, I also had some insulation blown in the attic space above the garage RV bay. I then installed some lights in the attic so we can see what's in there.
I then trimmed in the attic fan. I decided to not install a shutter on the garage ceiling to eliminate that source of noise, and just used some 1/4โ hardware cloth to make a screen for it. I also put a 2โ PVC pipe over in one corner so I can drop an air hose down to my compressor in the garage. Keeps me from having to lug the compressor upstairs when I'm working in the new room.
Sometime after the garage ceilings were sheetrocked, the boss and I had a conversation that went something like this:
โWhat about the floor receptacles in the new room?โ
โWhat floor receptacles?โ
โThe ones we talked about.โ
โI don't remember that.โ
โWell we did, and I'm counting on them being there.โ
"Aaauuuggghhhhhh!!!"
I think the conversation went on longer than that, possibly for days, but for some reason I've blotted it out of my mind now. I eventually came up with a plan that involved only removing one full piece of sheetrock from the ceiling in the garage, and a few narrow strips next to the beam to get a circuit over to the corner of this piece where the โXโ is. Then two receptacles were cut into the floor at opposite corners of the area exposed by removing the full sheet.
The boss is happy now, and she was able to use one of them for the Christmas tree this year.
That's about where we are now. There are some decks outside the new room that need to be rebuilt, and some landscaping work below the decks. Unfortunately, there is also a septic tank under the area we are wanting to build over, so I'm in the process of having a new tank installed now. The old concrete tank is sitting under this retaining wall about where the red box is, with the wall sitting on top of one of the covers. About 20% of the tank is covered by the wall. A new concrete tank is going to be installed about 20' downhill from the wall.
Stay tuned, it's probably going to be a busy spring and summer!
:):)
2001 Lance 1121 on a 2016 F450 โScuse me while I whinge.
And for all you Scooby-Doo and Yosemite Sam typesโฆโฆโฆ..Letโs Go Brandon!!!