
28 December 2013 | 22 replies
Turned out whoever the plumber was who plumbed the tub, he was nice enough to cut the overflow pipe so that it inserts only 1/8" of an inch into the top of the tee.

19 December 2013 | 5 replies
There are a good number of fellow Canadians too; @Roy N. is especially knowledgeable and can be a great resource for your technical inquiries, even in QC because, as he mentions, he has some experience there and your province can be different in areas of taxation and law than the rest of North America.Replacing your previous job income in such a short time is a tall order for real estate investing so best of luck to you!

14 November 2015 | 144 replies
Step one, after having the property line clearly delineated, I'd cut the extension cord an inch onto your side of the property.

23 December 2013 | 15 replies
I think pretty much any demo work involving walls and ceilings are going to disturb the paint.For example if you cut a hole 36" tall by 24" wide on old sheetrock to install a recessed medicine cabinet that is 6ft*2, is that how they calculate it?

5 October 2015 | 49 replies
Rob K. we have his brother, 4' 6" tall & has some sort of complex....

23 December 2013 | 1 reply
It's suppose to be more then 18 inches from the roof.

11 January 2014 | 11 replies
Ok - I just saw this product on the Shark Tank and thought is was absolutely brilliant (as did the sharks, as seen by the feeding frenzy to back the company): WallRXYou can watch a demo hereBasically, it is a product that lets you fill wall holes up to 4 inches in just seconds.

26 February 2014 | 16 replies
The down side of this is you have to install the radiant floor heating system (pex pipe snaked under every square inch of living space-lots of labor cost).

22 January 2014 | 36 replies
I've done deals in 10 states, I have never seen RE tax stamps on any deed, that may be further west of my neighborhood.Some older folks believe the Abstract of Title is or contains a deed proving ownership, these were/are books, like 5" x 12/14" and usually a couple inches thick.