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8 November 2016 | 14 replies
Acrylic is a bad idea, as when it peels, it tends to fall into the drain.
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20 October 2014 | 6 replies
I saturate a cloth and put it around faucets and drains.
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26 December 2014 | 13 replies
You will need a plumber for rerouting the drain lines to make function correctly.
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22 January 2015 | 9 replies
Actually, there is, but I didn't realize we have to jackhammer out the drain to center it, and could have moved over the water lines that are set in concrete.
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8 August 2016 | 3 replies
I currently get all of my electric used on charging the car via my house solar system and with the heat of Florida draining my batteries faster than normal.. im really only averaging around 32miles on a full charge...
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1 May 2015 | 17 replies
The 4th time, he was "sure" there was a bigger problem with the plumbing, that the disposal needed to be replaced and there was an odor coming from the drain.
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3 October 2016 | 6 replies
But here's a rough idea of the basic steps involved and what it cost when I did it:STEPS:~ Drain the pool~ Remove pool equipment & cap off water lines~ Remove/cap off any unused electrical~ Knock down the edges around the pool and make holes in the bottom of the pool for drainage ~ Fill pool with "clean fill" material (i.e. soil, gravel, rock, sand, etc)~ Tamp the fill material as you put it in to compact it and reduce the chance of it settling over time once it's all fullCOSTS: (we did the labor ourselves so this is just for the material)~ $450 to buy a jackhammer to knock down the edges around the pool and also to make the holes in the bottom (we could have rented a jackhammer for cheaper but this way we own one and can use it on future jobs)~ $1600 for the fill dirt (it was a lot of dirt!)
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8 April 2017 | 4 replies
One of the things he noticed is that there is no drain pipe next to the condenser unit (like there normally is); there is no visible drain pipe anywhere.
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22 October 2016 | 2 replies
I looked on a few different HVAC web sites and I don't see parts listed except for thermostats and complete electric baseboards.If hydronic, then yes, but you'd have to know how to drain the boiler, solder heating element to pipes, and refill/bleed all the air out.
27 October 2016 | 23 replies
IF you have a lake close by and a way in you can get ALOT of water underneath, Second check for leaking pipes under there right now,,,both supply lines and drain lines.