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8 January 2021 | 3 replies
eg: Timber, live stock, solar farm, farming etc.
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28 September 2016 | 10 replies
Frames are 1/2" Plywood (no particle board), dovetailed drawers with soft close feature, 3/4" doors with raised panel vaneer.
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15 September 2015 | 4 replies
There's a need to upgrade the electrical panel.
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23 September 2015 | 9 replies
just did renos on a rental property, they had ceiling panels in the basement washroom, I went to see why the fan is so loud, and I found that they put the whole kitchen hood fan there :) it even had the working light in there
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18 October 2015 | 7 replies
I could (and have, for two GE panels) walk into any hardware store and buy reasonably-priced breakers, made by the panel manufacturer, that would fit and work in a 30, 40, or 50 year old panel.
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14 October 2017 | 17 replies
Also there is generally some wording at the end that is something like "While we have made a best effort we cannot see behind walls/panels etc so get each system inspected individually".
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19 December 2017 | 6 replies
If each unit does not have a electrical panel dedicated to that unit, you will be rewiring the units .
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6 September 2017 | 6 replies
Purchase price 147KListed for 299K, sold for 285 (went under contract for 290 but dropped it another 5K at buyer request after the appraisal just to get out of the deal)Home Depot credit card: 10K (appliances, fixtures and other things we picked out and purchased ourselves rather than having GC use typical builder grade stuff, also husband did some of the work himself so bought his own materials)Brought 40K of our own cash to the closing table, loan total when paid back was 185 (original loan 175 plus 10K in accrued interest, 12 month balloon loan so we did not have to make payments during the rehab, which helped a lot with cash flow, also loan had rehab costs folded in so for the most part we paid our guys out of the loan and not our own pockets)So (numbers are round): 285 sale price - 185 (loan payback) - 40 (cash we brought to closing) - 10 (Home Depot card) - 10 (closing costs) = 40K profitWork done: insulation and vinyl siding (this ate 18K of rehab budget but was unavoidable as cedar shakes were disintegrating), converted to natural gas heat (ducts already in place, changed out electric hot air blower to gas one and gas company ran the gas from the street for free), replaced AC compressor, new water heater, two new bathrooms, replacement windows, new appliances but left the wood cabinets b/c they were in perfect condition and I could not justify painting/replacing them, new kitchen backsplash, removed wall between kitchen and dining room, wood laminate flooring throughout except for new carpet in downstairs den, painted the deck/railings, new garage doors, one new slider, all solid wood interior panel doors, of course fresh paint and new light fixtures throughout.dining roomThere was moisture damage downstairs from bank not winterizing and pipes bursting...thanks, bank.Hauled out enormous old woodstove and broke up ugly old hearth and left good flue for someone to add new pellet or woodstove to if they want to, we figured not everyone wants a woodstove and this way the buyer can decide to add one back if desiredBathroom off downstairs den, chose a walk in shower for variety, hosing off dog or muddy children, disabled access, etc.
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18 August 2014 | 37 replies
HOWEVER some important pics are missing which are pics I always include when sending pics to rehabbed (when wholesaling) or when my business partner and I analyze a potential rehab: roof, electric panel box and switches, wall outlets, siding, windows backyard, front yard/walkway/steps.