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What a job! :doh: I would have paid someone---and have already.
What a job! :doh: I would have paid someone---and have already.
I had a funny coincidence today. I finished hanging the light and ceiling fan in the master bedroom, when I hit the switches, nothing! No lights, no fan, I knew I wired it right, so I pulled the light switch and had power going in, same on the fan. On a hunch, I decided to replace the brand new dimmer switch, you would no, I was out of switches, had to run and get one. I was right, new switch, let there be light. As for the fan, I hit the switch on the fan housing to reverse it, and it worked. I thought, must be a defective switch, I flipped the switch again, and I noticed there were three positions, the middle being off! The instructions didn't mention this! I have never seen this, they are usually two positions, down draft, up draft. Now, even the remote works. Like O'Toole said, "Murphy was an optimist!"
I had a funny coincidence today. I finished hanging the light and ceiling fan in the master bedroom, when I hit the switches, nothing! No lights, no fan, I knew I wired it right, so I pulled the light switch and had power going in, same on the fan. On a hunch, I decided to replace the brand new dimmer switch, you would no, I was out of switches, had to run and get one. I was right, new switch, let there be light. As for the fan, I hit the switch on the fan housing to reverse it, and it worked. I thought, must be a defective switch, I flipped the switch again, and I noticed there were three positions, the middle being off! The instructions didn't mention this! I have never seen this, they are usually two positions, down draft, up draft. Now, even the remote works. Like O'Toole said, "Murphy was an optimist!"
Turning the camera 180 dg
Man, been neck deep in rewiring the last couple of weeks! Finally took time to treat it like a full time job the last couple of days. Replaced almost all the old Knob & Tube with modern grounded wire. Just need to hang two more lights, and a ceiling fan, then run a couple of wires in the upstairs bath. Getting a wire to the turret turned out to be the hardest part! If I had thought about it while the roofers were there, I could have simply drilled two holes, one in the roof and the other, in the adjoining wall on the turret, then they would have added the flashing. Ran two new circuits, 15amp and 20anp. They had the entire upstairs running through the kitchen circuit. Trying to figure out how to add a recessed light in the small hallway to the bath. There are probably more wires in the after shot, but it is safe and up to code now. Best part, I literally saved a few thousand dollars doing it my self!
My house had alot of that too .
Most of it I ripped out and replaced ,but where it was a headache to get at I just disconnected it and let it stay where it was .
Not an easy job ,my hat off to you!
All the Best,Fashion Frank
That wainscotting ceiling is impressive. The cost to use wood is no longer feasible. The interior wall of my detached garage are lined with wainscot also.
That wainscotting ceiling is impressive. The cost to use wood is no longer feasible. The interior wall of my detached garage are lined with wainscot also.
Like Big Man stated we have that on both our front and back porche ceilings and we also call it wainscotting and its the norm to paint them sky pastel blue.
All the Best,Fashion Frank
My 4-H leader, long since passed, told a story when I was in in her 4-H group about "sky blue" porch ceilings.
Her mother when she was a young child demanded the porch ceiling be a certain "sky blue." Her father, being less than educated, went and bought a bucket of blue paint and one of white, and proceeded to dump them together. "Too dark," said the mother. Several more white paint buckets were bought and used, all "too dark." Finally the mother (when she realized the source of the problem) suggested dumping some of the blue paint mixture into the pure white.
Needless to say, for decades after that, everything in the house that needed paint was sky blue- the walls, the furniture, etc.
Around here we call that "beaded board." All the celings (including the front and back porches) have that.
I replaced the wire to the switch today. I used the old wire to pull the new. Easy, except, I accidentally let the new wire fall back into the wall. Luckily, it was a straight run, so I went back down and pushed the wire up. Like I always say, I'd rather be lucky then good! Unfortunately, luck ran out, it was a double whammy, the switch wire was shorted, but, after I replaced it, the breaker tripped again! After doing a lot of testing, I found the little Chandelier the former owner had hung, was shorting out with some frayed wire. Will have to rewire it. Oh well, better now, then when the place is done.
We need to change your name to Electricianmen.