Retaining Walls – Not So Simple

Retaining Wall tiny - failed

This is a tiny retaining wall and it failed. It’s leaning and the homeowner is none too happy! (C) Copyright 2020 Tim Carter

This column appeared in the February 29, 2020 edition of Tim's newsletter.

DEAR TIM: I want to build a retaining wall that’s going to look great for years. At my last house, I had a short retaining wall around a patio that started to lean out towards the lawn. The little wall was but 10 inches tall for goodness sake with no soil pressure against it. Why do you think that wall failed and what can I do to build retaining walls even three feet tall that will not tip over? Jonathan H., Melville, NY

It’s hard for me to fathom a short tiny retaining wall like that failing, but by gosh you can see it in the photo Jonathan sent me. Sure enough the tiny wall is leaning about three inches back towards his lawn.

There are two thoughts that come into my head as to why his tiny wall failed. I surmise the footing that’s under the wall is missing or a very bad design. I’ve seen very narrow thin footings under failed walls like his.

Jonathan’s wall is but 8 inches wide. I would have installed a footing that was no less than 6 inches thick with two number 5 steel rods in it continuous along the length of the footing. I would have made the footing 24 inches wide so it would be three times as wide as the wall itself. This allows fill dirt to be on top of 2/3rds of the footing. This weight helps offset tipping forces.

Jonathan also lives where the ground freezes. Frost heave could have easily tipped this wall over a little bit each year. Jonathan’s photo has a very important clue in it. The water from the patio-side of the wall has to drain somewhere and it appears it goes into the soil along a wide crack between the patio and the wall.

This water can be super-charging the soil under the house side of the wall. Frost heaving can be greater on that side of the wall because of this water concentration. Water freezing in the crack between the wall and the patio can also slowly start to tilt the wall away from the patio.

Retaining walls are not as simple to design as you might think. This is why structural and civil engineers are math experts. An interesting thing happens as a retaining wall gains height. Doubling the height of a retaining wall doesn’t mean the tipping forces behind it double. They increase in a non-linear fashion. The tipping forces on a wall of a given height can be three to four times what they are on the same wall half as high!

A three or four-foot high retaining wall can have tipping forces measured in the hundreds of pounds and sometimes higher than one-thousand pounds if the ground above the wall is sloping up away from the wall. Gravity, one of Mother Nature’s tools, is very patient and persistent. It can start to tilt the wall away just a fraction of an inch per year, but over time these fractions add up to whole numbers.

Mass, or thickness, is your friend in almost all cases when designing and building a retaining wall. The thicker the wall is at its base the better. The wall can get thinner as the wall gains height.

Concrete block retaining walls need to be reinforced. This means reinforcing rods need to be installed that tie into the footing and these rods must be surrounded by a concrete grout in the hollow block cores. Any block wall taller than three feet should be designed by an engineer if you want it to last for decades.

Retaining walls can have a backwards lean to them. Think of the wall as you pushing your shoulder against a millstone. You lean into the millstone to give yourself more leverage. The lean doesn’t have to be drastic, but it can surely help ensure the wall looks fantastic for many years.

Drainage behind retaining walls is also very important. I always installed perforated drain tile behind my walls and made sure the pipe had an outlet to daylight so water would never build up behind the wall. I’d never directly backfill against the wall with soil. I’d always install a 6-inch-minimum layer of washed gravel behind the wall so water could flow down to the drain tile with minimal resistance.

Here’s another tip if you want your new retaining wall to look fantastic for as long as you live. Once the wall is built, but before you backfill against it, coat the back of the wall with two coats of some asphaltic water or damp-proofing foundation coating. This will prevent, in almost all cases, water from seeping into your wall.

Water seeping into the wall can carry dissolved salts from the soil, from salted parking lots above you, or even salt in the ground water itself. This salt solution will seep through the wall, the water will evaporate on the visible side of the wall, and you’ll be left with pesky efflorescence salt deposits on the front face of the wall.

Don’t underestimate the soil pressure behind retaining walls, especially those with a parking area above them. Not only do you have to contend with the pressure and weight of the soil, but when a heavy truck parks just two feet away from the back of the wall, you also have added weight pushing against the soil. GL as we say in Morse!

Column 1342

February 23, 2020 AsktheBuilder Newsletter

My guess is you might be a new subscriber. Let's imagine you came into Skyline Chili to place a carry-out order. I used to make cheese coneys and 3-ways by the thousands there many moons ago. I would've sauntered up to the carry-out counter uttering these words, "Geia' sou". That's Greek for hello. I also would've asked if you wanted onions on your cheese coneys. You might have forgotten to remember drinks. Believe me, I'd make sure you had plenty of Pepsi.

Let's assume you've eaten about fifty 5-ways with me here over the years. I know, I know, I remembered to make yours inverted, so calm down. Tell me if you've ever eaten the little oyster crackers with a large dot of hot sauce on them. Man up if not!

Winter Cold & Tile Floors = BRRRRRRRRRR

About a month ago, I mentioned why my feet in the morning are NEVER cold when standing on my tile bathroom floor. Please peer at this photo:

uponor hepex

Questions for you:

1. How exactly did I create these warm spots?
2. Is it hard to do?
3. Can you create warm floors like this in an existing home?

CLICK or TAP HERE for all the answers and TWO amazing videos showing you some magic.

CLUES: Look for the keyword Uponor when you land on that page.

I NEED Your Help

I'm trying to decide the color to repaint my man cave and also which new door would look best. Currently, my man cave is canary yellow and I have a solid metal door. You can see part of the drab gray metal door on the right side of the photo below.
Tim's man caveYour input would be greatly appreciated. All you have to do is click the three following links to see my top three color and door choices.

Below those three links is a link to a page where you can provide your input.

Thanks in advance!

Choice #1

Choice #2

Choice #3

CLICK or TAP HERE to tell me what you'd select if you were my interior designer.

Combi Boiler Update - One Year In

Fifteen months ago, I installed a new combi boiler in my home.

CLICK or TAP HERE to see the one I installed.

Why did I choose this boiler?

1. It's a modulating boiler. This means the burner works like the one on your stove. You can adjust the flame to the amount of heat that's REQUIRED at that point in time. My old boiler was either on FULL BLAST or it was off. Imagine trying to simmer gravy with your burner on FULL BLAST! A modulating boiler saves you huge money on your fuel bills.

2. It's far more energy efficient. Only 5% of the heat created goes out through the vent pipe. My old boiler was wasting 15% of the energy put into it.

3. The boiler also acts as a tankless water heater. I have UNLIMITED HOT WATER for showers or other tasks so long as I have well water and propane. This is why these things are called combi boilers. They combine tasks into one machine.

My combi boiler is working so much better than my old boiler. In the past when the temperature outdoors dropped below zero, it was impossible to keep our giant living room warm. Weeks ago, it dropped to -9 F and I performed a test.

Before going to bed, I set the thermostat in that room, I have eight different heating zones I can control, to 70 F. The next morning before dawn, the room was 70 F. With the old boiler, the temperature would have been 62 F or less.

You may know that my daughter was just starting to build a new home last year at the time I was installing my new boiler. I suggested that she put in a combi boiler. Are you interested in the status of her new home? I'll have a report SOON, so be patient. Patience isn't your strong suit? Practice makes perfect.

My daughter decided to install a Noritz Combi Boiler because it's able to heat the house and domestic hot water at the same time. My boiler can't do this.

When I'm heating my house and then call for hot water at a shower or sink faucet, the heat is temporarily suspended from going out to the heating loops. It's never an issue unless you decide to compete in an hours-long water sports event at your home.

CLICK or TAP HERE to get lots more information and detailed step-by-step installation photos of my daughter's Noritz Combi Boiler.

BOTTOM LINE: I'm a HUGE FAN of these combi boilers. If I had to go back to work in construction do you know what I'd do?

All I'd do is install the Noritz Combi boiler all day long in many different houses. I'd do no other jobs but put these magic boxes on a wall.

It's SO EASY to install one. To make the job go faster, be sure you have a Ridgid Press tool so you don't have to solder any of the copper tubing!

CLICK or TAP HERE to see how FAST those tools make leak-proof joints. Here's what the tool looks like:

Install Copper Tubing Pipe Tool

For comparison sake, please watch this SHORT video to see how long it takes to solder just ONE HALF of a copper joint.

CLICK or TAP HERE to watch me solder a copper fitting.

Clean YUCKY DIRTY Floor Tile Grout

Please look at this photo. You don't have to come clean (pun intended) and share if your floor grout is unacceptable like this:

Dirty Grout Floor Tile

Do you want to see what the grout looks like CLEAN?

Do you want to know how EASY it is to get it clean like that?

I thought so!! CLICK or TAP HERE and watch the video showing me cleaning floor grout.

Want a DEAL on getting Stain Solver?

"Heck yes, Tim. Hand over the promo code now and all your delicate things will be given back to you unharmed."

Okay, okay, those N-gauge model-train locomotives in your hand ARE delicate!!! Be careful! Here's the promo code that EXPIRES in just 18 hours!!!!

PRESIDENT

CLICK or TAP HERE now if you just want to order the Stain Solver.

Remember, the President's Day Stain Solver sale ENDS TONIGHT at midnight.

! ! ! LAST CALL ! ! !

Treasure Hunt Game Ends Saturday the 29th!

My annual Treasure Hunt Game ends in days.

You can win one of five $50 Amazon Gift cards if you just answer a few silly questions.
Annual Treasure HuntCLICK or TAP HERE to play the game.

That's enough for a Sunday, right?

Tim Carter
Founder - www.AsktheBuilder.com
President for Life - www.StainSolver.com
Published in CQ Magazine - www.W3ATB.com

P.S. What do you know about retaining walls? Did you know that something VERY BAD happens the taller the walls get? And for all those algebra experts out there, it's a non-linear function.

Lookie, lookie here for the "dets" as the younger folk say. If you're older and a little crusty around the edges, CLICK or TAP HERE.

Installing Large Format Wall Tile – It’s All Finesse

large format wall tile

These large pieces of marble are in a master shower. This is not a beginner DIY project no matter what you’ve seen on TV cable shows! (C) Copyright 2020 Tim Carter

DEAR TIM: I’m remodeling a large bathroom in my home. The large shower stall is going to be tile as well as the floors in the room. I cut out some pieces of scrap cardboard to resemble large-format tile and it’s going to look perfect. I’ve never done a job like this. I’ve done my own tile work for years and had decent results, with the largest tile installed 8x8 inches. What tips can you share to ensure success? I want this job to look perfect in every way. Tom B., Charleston, SC

Do you have the drive and passion for tough DIY jobs like Tom does? If so, that’s a remarkable quality. I applaud it. Some pros try to talk you out of things. I will in certain situations if I know something is far too difficult or requires hundreds of hours of practice. Installing tile is not one of these situations, but installing large-format tile is absolutely one that a beginner should not try.

It’s important to realize that almost all tile and natural-stone products are made so the top surfaces are smooth. There are any number of Mexican tiles and some others that have an uneven top surface or slight bullnose edges, but let’s not worry about those for this discussion. I’m going to assume Tom is installing a tile or natural stone that’s got a very flat top surface.

For a finished tile job to look spectacular, the tile need to be in the same plane once installed. This doesn’t necessarily mean level and plumb, although those are two noble goals you should aspire to.

Flat, or in the same plane, means that the surface has no humps or dips in it. Imagine placing a large straightedge on a surface and the bottom of the straightedge on the tile. When the tile is in the same plane, there will be no gaps under the straightedge and it will not rock back and forth on a high spot like a teeter-totter.

When remodeling, you may have to apply thin shims or strips of wood to wall studs to get them all in the same plane. The tile backer board will conform to the studs so if the studs are all cattywampus, that Tim Talk for askew, then the backer board will mimic this unacceptable surface.

Forget about using large-format tile for the shower floor. You need to choose something that’s small because I’d recommend you install tile on top of a preformed shower base kit that has the shape of a very shallow funnel. You want all the water to run to the drain and these preformed shower floor kits achieve this goal. Large-format tile will have voids under them and will eventually crack.

If you’re building a new home, I highly recommend the use of floor trusses to get a perfectly smooth floor surface in wood-framed houses. If building on a concrete slab, ask the concrete masons to take extra time to get the floors flat in the places you’ll have tile. In a remodeling situation, you can use pourable floor-leveling compounds to get a floor nice and flat.

Be sure to install floor tile over a mat made to uncouple the tile from the floor. There are quite a few systems out there and this newer technology is paramount to a long-term crack-free tile floor. Pay very close attention to the stiffness of a wood floor system. If the floor is bouncy, there’s a good chance your large-format tile will crack over time. It’s a major job to try to stiffen an existing floor and that’s the subject of another discussion we may have on another day.

You may want to look into the wedge floor leveling products. These are handy products that allow you to get the top surface of adjacent tiles all in the same plane. The industry standard for allowable offset is 1/16th inch. This is actually quite large and you can almost always have a much tighter tolerance.

But be aware that if the wedge starts to pull one tile up out of the gooey thinset to make it flush with the adjacent one, a void space may develop under the lifted tile and that’s a possible crack location. This is why getting the floor flat in the first place is so important. These problems are minimized with smaller-format tile.

Once you have the tile installed, all your hard work can be ruined if you don’t know how to grout the tile. You need to use the right grout to avoid issues. Unsanded grout can be used on joints up to 1/8-inch in width. Use sanded grout for larger joints.

Water is your friend and enemy when grouting. Too much water when mixing will ruin the grout. Too much water when wiping and striking the grout joints will absolutely ruin it. Please watch my four-part Grouting Floor Tile series on my AsktheBuilder.com website so you don’t ruin your new tile!

Column 1341

February 16, 2020 AsktheBuilder Newsletter

I think you may be a brand-new subscriber! Holy watermelon, let's celebrate! Did you know you can eat watermelon in the shower and not worry about dripping the delicious nectar juice on yourself? A friend told me this was possible. Yes, you need to have the water on to make this work, not just stand in the shower sneaking extra melon with your clothes on, silly!

You could be a subscriber that's eaten celery and peanut butter with me over the past few years while we sat on overturned drywall mud buckets. Yummy! Do you remember that story I told at lunch about Dr. Caster, my historical geology professor?

Building Scars

Please look at this photo. What do you think of the different-colored brick?

HAH! That was a trick question! I shot this photo in Cincinnati, Ohio in Pleasant Ridge about four years ago while I was on a walk. The house was about 457 feet north of Montgomery Road on the east side of the street.

That's a beautiful multi-colored wire-cut brick isn't it? But what's going on with the mortar? CLICK or TAP HERE to understand what's in play and how you can avoid TENS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS of repairs.

George Washington and Abe Lincoln!

Here's another photo to gaze at:
Metal Pot - Milk Stain

This is a metal pot. The black stain is from milk. How's that possible?

Easy - turn on the burner to heat it up, walk away and get distracted. You can also melt plastic birds on tea pots the same way.

CLICK or TAP HERE to see the metal pot after it soaked in Stain Solver.

What does this have to do with George and Abe? Both former presidents drank lots of milk, and Abe had a glass of chocolate milk each night with two pecan cookies. Don't believe the unfounded and ugly rumors about him and Disaronno. Not for a second.

What's more, how do you think George got his muslin frock clean after splattering it with cherry juice when he cut down his Dad's favorite tree?

He used Stain Solver of course! He also used Stain Solver to get the mud stains off his pants after crossing the Delaware River. The infantry of the Continental Army using Stain Solver to clean their uniforms in hot water pots hanging over campfires is a story oft told at West Point.

Abe wore white shirts when he did his legal work for the Rock Island Railroad. He routinely got black ink on his sleeves because he hated wearing sleeve socks. Abe's wife Mary loved to use Stain Solver to keep her man's work shirts looking like new!

Thomas Jefferson told his admirals to use Stain Solver to get algae off Old Ironsides before they finally switched to copper plates. He wanted the ship to look its best before he dispatched it to kick the Barbary Pirates' butts. But I digress.

Wait, wait ... I worry you think I'm being mendacious. Tsk tsk.

Let's celebrate Presidents Day with the new the Presidents Would Have Loved Stain Solver Sale!

Stain Solver is a multi-purpose certified organic cleaner. CLICK or TAP HERE to see my all-time FAVORITE before/after photos sent in by a customer.

Use the following promo code to get 10% off any purchase greater than $25.00.

PRESIDENT

You also get FREE SHIPPING to the four commonwealths plus the other 44 states that are all bunched up next to one another.

The sale ends in one week. I'll be sending out reminder emails, but realize that quantities of the size you want are LIMITED. We only have so many boxed at the fulfillment center - I'm telling you the truth about this!

CLICK or TAP HERE to place your order.

New Amazing Instant Whiteboard Product

Please use your peepers to peer at this photo:

post it flex write

That white rectangle is a very SMALL sample of a new product.

Can you finish the puzzle??? What were ALL of the WORDS I wrote on it???

CLICK or TAP HERE to see if you were right! There's NO WAY you'll guess right. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHA

I'd say that's quite enough for a Sunday, what say you?

Tim Carter
Founder - www.AsktheBuilder.com
Salute to the Presidents! - www.StainSolver.com
Morse Contest Today! - www.W3ATB.com

Do It Right, Not Over!

P.S. How can you prevent cutting through buried electric cables? Call that number? Well, that's a start.

What about roofing nails? Did you know your roofer is almost FOR SURE going to use the WRONG ONES on your new roof?

CLICK or TAP HERE to discover the secrets about both topics.

Ken Caster Historical Geology Professor

Dr. Ken Caster - University of Cincinnati

I had the distinct pleasure to meet and be taught by Dr. Kenneth Caster at the University of Cincinnati (UC) between 1972 and 1974. He's one of a small handful of college professors that left an indelible imprint in my brain, fortunately for the better.

ken caster

This is Dr. Ken Caster. This is a Fair Use of the image as it's owned by a public-funded agency.

The first and only class I took from Dr. Caster was about fossils. Historical geology is a class based on the hundred of thousands, possibly millions, of plant and animal fossils that make up the march through time of the geologic record.

It's a topic deeper than the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean, and it gets deeper by the day as more new information about the historical record of animals and plants is discovered.

King Caster

One of my most profound memories of Dr. Caster was his royal demeanor. He was a world-renowned geologist by the time I got to UC and he knew it. He had an entourage of graduate students that followed him down the hallways hanging on his every word.

As an undergraduate student, I don't ever recall him saying "Hello" to me while passing in the hallways going to and from class. It's as if I was invisible. That's okay because he was probably contemplating more behavioral discoveries about horseshoe crabs.

Dr. Caster was an authority on these amazing creatures.

Authority & Intimidation

When he'd come to teach each class of mine, he'd have an 8-inch pile of books, papers, and folders in his arms. He'd place them down on the desk next to the lectern.

I now think it was just a clever prop he used to project his power.

He'd immediately begin to teach and completely fill all of the blackboard space with impossible Latin names of the fossils. He'd also draw very detailed illustrations of fossils using colored chalk. Each one was a work of art.

To keep up, you had to know shorthand. I later discovered that a fellow professor, Dr. Bullard, would request the blackboards NOT be erased until such time as he could come in and photograph each one. Oh, how I'd love to have a few prints of Dr. Bullard's photos!

When it came time for a test, Dr. Caster would walk into the room head held high, he straighten the test papers on the lectern, gaze slowly across the entire class, and utter these words, "Today we're here to test the depths of your ignorance."

It was the most intimidating statement I've ever heard from a professor. He wasn't kidding when he said it.

But it was true. We were ignorant.

The Sharp Lens of Time

Years later, I finally understood what he was saying. Here I was, a junior still wringing wet behind the ears, not having a clue about what existed in the written record concerning everything about fossils.

Even if I understood and retained every word of what Dr. Caster taught in the historical geology class for the entire year, I might have only known 0.00001 percent of all there was to know at that time about fossils.

Yes, I was indeed ignorant.

Each time I turned in my test, I knew I had failed it. Dr. Caster made a point to ask lots of questions, most of which there was never time to answer. I'd estimate he had no less than thirty questions on each test. You had 90 minutes to answer thirty questions. Each one was an essay question.

Hah! There's no way you could write a detailed answer in three minutes much less ten. 

There was no such thing as a multiple-guess question on a Caster test. You brought several blue books with you and you would fill one or two for sure. At best, I maybe could only answer eight of the thirty questions.

How could I possibly pass the class if I didn't answer most of test questions?

That's the magical side of Dr. Caster. He knew we were Padawans. He knew we had no chance of truly understanding what he knew.

Test Scores

I have no memory of Dr. Caster returning graded tests. I have this sneaking suspicion he threw them in the garbage after skimming through them never lifting a finger to grade them.

Each quarter when my report card came in the mail I was astonished to see I had received an A for the class. Surely he had made a mistake.

No, he didn't.

Dr. Caster was measuring performance based on attendance and attitude. If you gave him your attention in class, watched him add to the air pollution level in Cincinnati by creating chalk dust, and you had the guts to show up for tests, you got an A.

attitude pin

I think Dr. Caster would have given one of these to each of us in his class, but that would expose his softer side. RIP Dr. Caster!

I hope you had the good fortune to be taught by such a magnificent human being. I'm so very grateful to have been in his classroom.

Rest in Peace Dr. Caster. I wonder if you're chasing horseshoe crabs up in Heaven!

Want to know about another UC professor that had a profound impact on my life? Then you need to meet Dr. John Alexander.

Post-it Flex Write Surface

post it flex write

Post-it® Flex Write Surface | Here's a very small sample of the magic film you apply to a wall. This is the teaser sample sent by the company so you could play with it. See below for the GIANT sizes you can buy. Alakazam! - instant white board - permanent markers wipe off with WATER! CLICK or TAP HERE or the photo to buy it now.

Post-it® Flex Write Surface - Permanent Markers Wipe Off

I tested the Post-it® Flex Write Surface product and it works. It works really well.

You know that permanent markers can ruin a traditional whiteboard - and yes, there is a toxic chemical you can use to restore one should you make a mistake and not use a dry-erase marker.

I'm not a big fan of clear toxic chemicals that can soak into your skin, are you?

The Post-it® Flex Write Surface is a thin film with a self-adhesive backing. You can apply it to any painted wall. BOOM! You have a whiteboard in seconds in any room!

It's perfect for home use and office use. A very good friend who was a school teacher mentioned it would be ideal for school science-fair projects!

Post-it® Flex Write Surface:

  • comes in a variety of different sizes up to 4 x 8 sheet and a roll 50-feet long x 4 high - cut and customize it to fit any size - CLICK or TAP HERE to order a giant roll.
  • has self-adhesive back surface
  • applies to a painted wall in seconds
  • remove from the wall with no damage
  • MAGIC! - permanent markers wipe off with water
  • NO GHOSTING!
post it flex write surface

This was done with a Sharpie. You know that once it touches something, the mark doesn't go away.

post it flex write

I waited for 30 minutes to ensure the marker was dry. I tried rubbing it with my finger. It was PERMANENT - or so I thought. Then I wet a clean paper towel and wiped off the marker with NO EFFORT. It's magic! CLICK or TAP HERE to buy this amazing product now.

post it flex write

The Post-it® Flex Write Surface comes in a roll. You can buy it in different sizes. CLICK or TAP HERE to buy the size you need.

post it flex write

Here's an old white board made for my kids by my father-in-law. They ruined it one day using permanent markers. HAH! I'm going to apply a new sheet of Post-it® Flex Write Surface and it's going to look like new! CLICK or TAP HERE to order yours now.

 

Prevent Cut Electric & Cable Lines and Roofing Nails

plastic pipes in trenches

Those gray plastic pipes in the trenches will soon have electric and cable-TV cables in them. The pipes help prevent future cut lines. The photo should be saved and taped to the electric panel cover! (C) Copyright 2020 Tim Carter

Prevent Cut Electric & Cable Lines

QUESTION #1: Tim, what are your thoughts on burying electric and cable-TV lines? I can buy approved cable and wire that’s rated for direct burial saving the cost of installing it in conduit. What’s been your experience with underground utilities like this? What would you do and why? Glenn A., Columbia, SC

Glenn’s questions are excellent. You may wonder the same thing if you’re building a new home or you might have a remodeling project planned at your home. Heck, it could be just a simple project of adding a new post lamp out on your back patio.

I didn’t build the home I currently live in. It has lots of underground buried cable. Just this past spring, all of a sudden one of my circuit breakers started tripping indicating a dead short. Had I been testing the electric monitoring system I’m now using, I would have been alerted to the dangerous arcing weeks before the breaker started tripping. But that’s a story for another day.

I traced the cause of the dead short to a small place where a buried cable passed through a plastic conduit that was installed under my driveway. The cable was rated for direct burial, but the annual frost heave in the soil here in New Hampshire had caused the cable to rub on the sharp cut edge at the end of the conduit. Eventually the up and down movement severed the insulation and the bare wires shorted out in the soil.

Had the cable been buried in conduit all the way from the house up to the post lamp at the end of my drive, I would not have had to waste a day replacing the cable and installing 70 feet of new conduit. I was shaking my head the entire time digging the new trench thinking, “How could the electrician or builder think saving $30 was a good idea?” That’s all the conduit would have cost when the house was built.

I’m a huge fan of putting all underground cables and wires inside conduit. I’m an even bigger fan of putting these in trenches deeper than the National Electrical Code minimum depth. Take this one step further, I’m a monster fan of taking photos of the open trenches after the conduit is installed and visible. Shoot photos from many angles showing future homeowners where the conduits and cables are buried. I print out these photos, put them in a waterproof plastic bag and tape the bag to the electric panel for safekeeping.

If you’re not a fan of using conduit, you may change your mind when that gardener in your family pierces a buried cable while digging a hole for that new bush or tree. With that in mind, it’s a really good idea to think about where landscaping might be in your yard. You may want to route underground cables and wires away from these digging zones of death. I’ve seen aggressive diggers cut through conduit thinking they were chopping a rock or a root.

Roofing Nails

QUESTION #2: It’s time for a new roof on my house. I’m going to install asphalt shingles. I decided to read the installation instructions before talking with roofers. Galvanized roofing nails are required. Are there different types of galvanized nails and is one better than the other? Is there anything I can do to make sure this is the last asphalt shingle roof I install? Maria P., Kalamazoo, MI

There’s a really good chance you might be in Maria’s shoes soon as more homeowners like you are replacing their asphalt roofs faster than they should have to. I was one myself as my own asphalt shingle roof that was supposed to last 30 years started to fail in just nine years or so.

I was so upset at this I wrote a book about why asphalt shingles disintegrated much faster than the shingles I used to install decades ago. My book, Roofing Ripoff, is an easy read and not one shingle manufacturer disputes the claims in the book. That tells you right away that what I say in the book is truth. But I digress.

roofing ripoff

Here's my Roofing Ripoff book. It's an easy one-hour read. You'll save $5,000 reading it. GUARANTEED. CLICK or TAP HERE to read the first three chapters for free.

There are big differences in galvanized nails. The best ones are hot-dipped galvanized nails. Better yet are ones that are double dipped. In this process, regular steel roofing nails are dropped into a vat of molten zinc. The nails are immediately heated up by the searing molten zinc and this creates a steel/zinc alloy. The zinc coating is relatively thick and it protects the nails from rusting.

The other methods of galvanizing nails are mechanical and chemical. These two methods also attach zinc to the steel nail, but the coating can be quite thin. Chemical galvanizing happens when the steel nails are put into a vat containing a zinc-based chemical solution. Electricity is sent into the vat and the zinc is pulled out of the solution and bonds to the steel nails.

Mechanical galvanizing happens when steel nails are tumbled in a large drum with zinc dust, glass beads, and a chemical. The zinc dust is hammered onto the steel nails. My own asphalt shingle roof had nails that had one of these two galvanizing processes and many of them had rusted after just ten years.

When I was doing research for my Roofing Ripoff book, I was the first person in the world to discover that copper ions bond with sun-damaged asphalt molecules. When the copper locks onto the asphalt the asphalt molecules are unable to bond to nearby ones. This keeps the asphalt supple for many many years preventing the shingles from curling and losing ceramic granules.

I recommend applying a thin 12-inch-wide copper strip up at the top of the roof that’s blind nailed on new roof installations. The ultraviolet rays of the sun split off copper ions and these are washed down the roof with each rainfall where they grab onto the asphalt. Install this affordable thin copper rolls on each side of your roof and it’s quite possible your new asphalt shingles can last forty, or more, years like they used to. Check out my Roofing Ripoff book for photos and more details.

Column 1340

February 9, 2020 AsktheBuilder Newsletter

Is this your first real newsletter issue? I'm so glad you're here. I've got quite a few prizes in store for you. If you'd like a chance at winning a $50 Amazon Gift Card, be sure to play my annual Treasure Hunt game below. The game ends in just three weeks. Play now or I'll have you walking the plank, matey!

You might have done one or more rodeos with me here. This issue looks to be like that broncing Brahman bull we rode about two months ago. Remember that rocking newsletter?

Joe's Patio Door Woes

Please peer at this photo:

patio door hinge types

That's a hinge, right? What do you think's going on?

Can you surmise Joe's plight?

CLICK or TAP HERE to see if you were close. I'm very curious as to what you'd do if you were in Joe's shoes. Believe me, Joe always wears clean socks, so there's nothing to worry about.

Guessing Game

Study this photo and think about what it might be:
cabinet mold

This is not an easy thing to figure out, you know!

Here's a clue: What goes up into the air when you boil water? Take that image one step further. Is there water in certain things you cook or fry?

CLICK or TAP HERE and tell me if you guessed wisely. You're NOT going to believe the before/after photos.

There's a prize waiting for you once you land on that page. The prize will DISAPPEAR from the page in just a few days!!!!!

 

CLICK or TAP HERE NOW to get FREE quotes for ANY job around your home from LOCAL REPUTABLE contractors, not wandering contractors trolling for their next victim!

Apron and Farmer's Sink Photos/Videos

I'd like you to look at this photo for a second and try to conjure up WHAT I was up to a week ago:
Tim's message to future remodelers

Do you like opening prizes on Christmas morning, on your birthday, or on special-occasion days? Beneath the wrapping paper is something, but you don't yet know what it is.

It could be a kit to build something or it might be some stunning jewelry in your favorite color. What? ... I have to PUT TOGETHER my own present?

When I was still building and remodeling each day, I was blessed to discover prizes wrapped up and hidden inside walls and other mysterious void spaces in homes.

A carpenter might have signed his work. A builder, remodeler, or other subcontractor might have left a beer, soda, or medicine bottle in a wall. Old newspapers were sometimes stuffed into cracks or voids.

It was a delight to discover these things in houses. Looking at the advertisements in a newspaper or magazine that's 50 or 75-years old is eye-opening. Yes, you could buy a gallon of milk for ten cents. New houses sold for, are you sitting down, $7,000 - what you might now pay for a deluxe appliance.

I strive to create wonderful time capsules in all my jobs to pay forward the joy I had peeking into the past. CLICK or TAP HERE to watch a short video of some things I've discovered in walls and what I include in my time capsules.

Never forget that future remodelers LOVE knowing when something was installed. That's why I sign and date my work.

CLICK or TAP HERE to see what I signed last weekend. There are STUNNING PHOTOS there as well as two videos.

Dig for Treasure, Matey!

My LE Johnson Hardware Annual Treasure Hunt started last Sunday!

Annual Treasure Hunt

Five players who answer the silly questions in Step Three of the game are going to each win a $50 Amazon Gift Card.

That could be YOU!!! What can you do with $50 of FREE sweet moola?

CLICK or TAP HERE NOW and spend five or ten minutes looking at STUNNING PHOTOS of how LE Johnson hardware can transform your home into the next cover shot on a Better Homes and Gardens magazine cover.

BE SURE to WATCH me in the VIDEO on the Treasure Hunt page!

I'd say that's enough for a Sunday, what say you?

Tim Carter
Founder - www.AsktheBuilder.com
GET CLEAN USING OXYGEN - www.StainSolver.com
Invisible Happiness Waves - www.W3ATB.com

Do It Right, Not Over!

P.S. Do you know what the MINIMUM size is for a deck or patio if you plan to have a table on it for four people? Come on, tell the truth for goodness sake. What size do you think I'd make it? CLICK or TAP HERE to see if you were right!

P.P.S. Did you see the recent news? That silly 'i before e' grammar rule was recently disproved by science!

Apron Sink Photos

apron sink front

Apron Sink Photos | This is the apron sink in my own home. It's vitreous china and has a stunning apron design. CLICK or TAP HERE or the photo to purchase an apron sink now. I also helped install an apron and scullery sink at my daughter's new home.

Apron Sink Photos - Not For a Beginner DIYr

Here are some photos and videos I've created for you to give you an idea of what apron sinks are and how difficult they can be to install. All of them are quite heavy.

CLICK or TAP HERE NOW to get FREE QUOTES from local remodeling plumbers who can install an apron sink for you.

apron sink photos

This is the inside of my apron sink. It's a dual-bowl one. Note the bowls are not equal in size. You need to really pay attention when you drill the holes for the faucet so the spout gets water into the smaller sink! CLICK or TAP HERE or the photo to purchase an apron sink.

My Daughter's Scullery Apron Sink

The following are photos of my daughter's scullery apron sink being installed in her new home.

CLICK or TAP HERE NOW to get FREE QUOTES from local remodeling plumbers who can install an apron sink for you.

apron sink framing

This apron sink is going to fit between two cabinets. I had to build a saddle to support the sink. Do you want to buy an apron or farmer's sink? CLICK or TAP HERE or the photo to get one in days.

apron sink drain hole

A hole needed to be cut to provide access for the basket strainer under the sink. This allows you to tighten the compression nut on the top of the tailpiece. Oh, did you know I've been a master plumber since age 29? Do you have questions about installing an apron sink? CLICK or TAP HERE to arrange a personal phone call where I can help you!

apron sink installation

Just before you install the apron sink, you need to sign the work. Future remodelers LOVE to discover these rare pieces of information. Yes, it's time for the Reign of Terror to begin to get the job done!

apron sink install

It took two people to get it this far. Once some of the weight is on the platform, one man or woman can slide it into place. That assumes you got the width of the opening right, silly! CLICK or TAP HERE or the photo to purchase this Kohler apron sink.

apron sink kohler

This is what an apron sink looks like before the countertop is templated and installed. CLICK or TAP HERE or the photo to have your own apron sink.

 

apron sink install

I think you understand what you're looking at. CLICK the PHOTO now for magic to happen.

CLICK or TAP HERE NOW to get FREE QUOTES from local remodeling plumbers who can install an apron sink for you.