Joel Owens
What do you pay for lawn care on your buildings??
7 August 2011 | 4 replies
For 25 bucks I could barely afford gas, blades, and weed eater string.
George P.
clean the Dryer Vent
26 November 2012 | 15 replies
The cooling fan blades and motor should also be cleaned.
Shiloh Guin
Floating Laminate Floors - Thank you for existing!
22 November 2017 | 7 replies
Look at the top photo then the bottom... now think (Is that worth 587$ plus an afternoon and a rather dull miter saw blade?)
Daria B.
LVP over concrete and wood subfloor - underlayment needed
1 March 2019 | 30 replies
It also eats jigsaw blades and most of the cuts I made with the jigsaw were with all teeth gone, the blade was essentially a knife (still worked).
Ron Luna
Laminate or vinyl plank
27 August 2018 | 8 replies
Saves time going back and forth to the saw and saves costs on blades (which are expensive at $30-$50 each).
Nick Thomas
Top 3 DIY Skills To Learn For Rehabbing?
6 July 2018 | 35 replies
Swap the Diablo blade between that and the small mitre all the time!
Ryan Beckland
To spray or roll/brush your paint?
11 March 2008 | 24 replies
You do need a razor blade to get the thick paint off but it is a breeze to do with a little moisture.
Jim Zatko
Best website for advertising rental properties?
20 November 2016 | 16 replies
With that said, I still use the Blade and get my highest quality renters from there still.
David Doyle
Estimating a value on a buildable lot
13 May 2013 | 8 replies
Emilio R - I know that there are probably 1,000 other posts here on BP about spec building, but I was just curious (from the generic example above) if you, have found it possible to do spec homes (or have known others) who honestly manage to pull off consistent 30% returns on specs and/flips.Ex: Sales Price $450k ($135k profit) #'s adjust for any area/marketThe reason I ask is because - *in a perfect world* - it seems like a no-brainer business when a 30% return could mean an 80% + cash-on-cash return if the initial equity outlay was a 'respectable' 50% down.In other words, without walking on a thin blade of <=20% down, it seems that incredible returns can be made over and over if given a year's-horizon.