In what feels like a flash, I met my wife, got married, had a child, and now instead of being a single dude wrenching on badass Jeeps, I’m a domesticated suburbanite whose projects are mostly house projects. As someone with zero experience fixing houses and 15 years of experience fixing largely rusty cars, I wasn’t sure how my skills would translate. Well, I just replaced a furnace blower, designed and built a deck, designed a bathroom (!) and have lots more projects coming; what have I learned is that not nearly all of my skills translate over.
Wrenchers wrench. If you’re someone who calls yourself a wrencher, then you can probably fix anything, whether it’s a car or a house or a plastic flower garland (a (fake) flower fell off my wedding garland, so I used a lighter and melted its stem back on — my wife was impressed!).


Wrenching is a beautifully-transferable problem-solving mindset that applies to so many elements of one’s life. Upon discovering that something isn’t working, you analyze the system to figure out how the component works, you establish the failure modes, and you determine which potential repair is the most optimal given constraints. Working on cars has been a huge player in getting me to where I am today, professionally, and it’s something I think everyone should at least try.
So I figured I’d be able to do a bunch of home repairs on my wife’s townhouse to save us a bit of money, as contractors are expensive. I was mostly right, but it wasn’t easy because houses are quite different than cars.
Houses Are Not Nearly The Precision Instruments Cars Are 
The first thing I noticed was that, relative to cars, houses are built really poorly. Maybe “poorly” isn’t the exact word, but the precision and quality of the components in a car — even the worst car on the market today — are so much higher than those of a house.
Take wiring for example. I repaired our house’s furnace blower the other month, and my god — the wires were all over the place, held in by wiggling connectors and wire nuts; it was terrible.
Even on an old car from the 1940s, the wiring is cleaner than this, and that’s for a number of reasons:
- Cars have to endure lots of dynamic motion and a variety of weather conditions
- Cars have to be mass-produced, whereas each house is its own thing
- Cars are generally designed to be serviced more often than homes
As a result, cars have beautiful nylon connectors, sometimes with silicone gaskets built in. The wires are often part of a nice, clean harness/loom, and everything is nicely color-coded in a way that can be easily deciphered with a Hayne’s Manual.
And that’s just the wiring. Look at the mechanical bits of any car, and everything is beautifully stamped/forged/cast, and every part is perfectly interchangeable/standardized. You simply remove an old part, put a new one on following instructions, and bob’s your uncle.
Houses — especially old ones — are just not anywhere on the same level. I mean, look at the ductwork coming from this furnace!:
Some of that difference in perceived quality owes itself to materials.
The Materials Are Totally Different
Cars are generally made of steel, aluminum, or carbon fiber, whereas homes are made of wood, concrete, plaster, and stone. These materials are way, way different than one another, and because of this, I found that working on homes — while still wrenching, technically — is a markedly different overall experience than working on cars, and only really requires an actual wrench for a few jobs (like plumbing).
For example, I had to pour some concrete for my deck, and I’ll be honest: I had no clue how to do it. I didn’t know how deep I had to dig, I didn’t know I had to put gravel at the bottom of the hole, I didn’t know what concrete to use, I wasn’t sure how to make it look good, I wasn’t sure how long to let it cure before installing anchors — it was all new. In fact, it was so new that, when the contractor came in to actually weld my deck (since that job was too much for me), he just redid the pour using a nice concrete form:
The composite wood on top of the deck was also a new material, as — aside from maybe a Morgan or an old Model T or a bus — wood is largely absent from from the car world. I’d never before used a nail while wrenching on a car (obviously I’ve hammered nails before, but just not in cars), and while I had used self-tapping screws similar to the ones I used on my deck, generally in the car world it’s frowned upon to use anything other than a bolt for a mechanical connection (you’ll find some screws on interior trim).
There are some subsystems of a home that feel similar in nature to a car; for example, plumbing can sometimes feel familiar. If you’ve run brake lines or fuel lines or coolant hoses, then you probably have a decent understanding of various fittings and how to use thread tape and how to use hose clamps on a rubber coupling.
Honestly, this plumbing coupling:

Doesn’t look much different than my Chevy K1500’s upper radiator hose connection:
And there are certain machines in a home that might seem similar to certain parts of a car — a dishwasher might seem similar to, say, a wiper motor. But by and large, fixing cars and fixing house are extremely different largely thanks to the differences in material makeup, and with that difference comes differences in tools.
Tools
I’d say my automotive toolset is sufficient for probably 1/2 to 2/3 of the house projects I’ve worked on, and sometimes I’ve made do even when my tool isn’t optimal for the job.
For example, ideally I’d use a mitre saw to cut wood boards or a circular saw:
But all I had was a metal chopsaw, so I used it:
Also, ideally I’d use a pipe wrench to fix my plumbing issues, and I normally have a pipe wrench for tie rod adjustment, but since I’ve lost that wrench, a pair of vise grips did the job. But quite often, I had to go out and buy new tools.
I cannot use my sledgehammer as a jackhammer — well, not easily. So I bought a cheap jackhammer online:
In a house, you often have to seal a lot of things off, because sometimes the gaps are huge. Cars, generally, are built with precision, so any use of RTV silicone is relegated to sealing up systems like differentials and oil pans and cooling systems; any sealant in the vehicle’s body is not serviceable.
Look at all the caulking I had to do for just the shower pan:
Now look at how relatively little RTV went on this diff:
Naturally, given how much of this silicone you need for pretty much all house projects, I went out and bought a caulking gun:
In the car world, a jar or a small tube of silicone does most jobs:

Of course, we have grease guns (see below) that operate exactly the same way, but homes typically aren’t as pro-grease as the underside of cars are.

And then there’s paint. Painting homes is way, way easier than painting a car. You just buy a can of paint, a roller, and some masking tape, and you take care of business:
With a car, you’re going to want to spray the paint onto the smooth metal surface. And while a rattle can is better than a roller for anything that isn’t a tractor, even a rattle can won’t get you a great paint job on a car — you really need to use a paint booth and a spray gun. It’s honestly an art, whereas painting a house is a job anyone and their brother can do.

But aside from paint and automotive rust, I’d say overall working on a house is actually more difficult than working on a car, and that’s because many home repairs are aesthetic in nature.
Design/Aesthetic
While my wife was giving birth to our child Delmar (not his real name), we were moving to a new place that had a leaky bathroom. This meant we had to have the floor torn up, the wood boards underneath replaced, a new “hotmop” installed — it was a big job, and one that I myself was not comfortable undertaking.
My primary concern was that, unlike replacing a car’s control arm or driveshaft or wheel bearing, this job would have huge aesthetic implications, and my wife and I would notice them every single day.
So we hired contractors to handle everything, and to retile the bathroom. At this time, my wife was very pregnant, so when the contractors asked us what type of tile we wanted to put back in, my wife said: “I do not want to think about a bathroom remodel right now, you take care of it!”
Me?
While trying to work and take care of my wife, I had to figure out how to redesign an entire bathroom, and let me just say: It was like nothing I’d ever done with a car. And more than that, the people involved in home renovations are a totally different crowd than those on car forums. So when I went on social media/message boards to ask how to remodel my bathroom, I was interacting with what felt like a different group of folks than I was used to (for one, it seems more women are involved with home renos than swapping out vehicle suspensions, for whatever reason).
Anyway, take a look at what the old bathroom looked like:
After a bunch of runs to the Floor & Decor store with my 1989 Chevy K1500, I brought in the tiles I chose, gave it to the contractors, and prayed that my bathroom design — which, aside from a bit of input on forums and from my wife’s friend, I largely “winged” — wouldn’t upset my wife. Here’s the final result:
That’s the challenge of house repair — you have to make sure it looks nice, and given my current skillset, I could not have laid those tiles so nicely. The contractors did a nice job, though for over $20 big ones, they better have!
That’s the other thing worth talking about: Price.
Cost
I have to say: Overall, I was surprised by how cheaply you can fix house if you have the skills. That latter clause applies to cars, too, as mechanics shops are charging more and more lately due in part to technician shortages.
Really, with both cars and homes, farming out the work is going to be extremely expensive, with houses taking the cake. I mean, 20 big ones for a bathroom remodel? That’s absurd. There are few car repairs that would cost that much, because cars just aren’t that expensive to begin with; at a certain point, you just buy a new car.
But with a house, you can convince yourself that the remodeling costs will end up being worth it when you go to resell, because houses — especially in the LA area — are just so expensive.
Again, if you just go out and buy some tiles and retile yourself, you can remodel a bathroom for just a few grand. Ditto with most home repairs, including floors and roofs. But it’s all about having the skills, and in some cases, the permits.
Problem Solving & Basic Engineering Theory
As I alluded to at the start of the article, certain elements of automotive repair translate to home repair pretty much perfectly, with the big one being problem solving skills.
Take this issue I was having with my toilet. The lid was sliding all over the place! Since I hadn’t ever fixed a toilet lid, I went online and found this video:
The video shows that you just press the gray button in the center, and the lid lifts off. The issue I was having is that the allen screw holding the bracket to the toilet was just spinning.
Having dealt with the worst possible “nut on back side is spinning” issue on a Chevy HHR, I knew what to do; I had to get some vise grips on that nut. So that’s what I did; I reached behind my toilet, got vise grips on the rubber nut, and then tightened the screw. Boom, my toilet was fixed.
So some of these obvious bits of wrenching intuition definitely transfer over, and so does basic engineering know-how.
The deck above is something I designed myself after the previous deck completely rusted out. The issue with the previous deck is that the deck-boards were screwed into the 2″ steel tubes, allowing water to get trapped in the tubes (which lacked drain holes). So with the new design, I had the welder chuck in some angle iron, to be used for both fastening the composite boards boards (so no water would get in the square tubes) and to provide some support for the boards.
I ran a static analysis on the deck, finding that the previous steel tubes were too thick for this application — 11 gauge (0.120″) tubes were more than enough for a short three-foot deck extension. What’s more, the previous version of the deck’s legs had literally rusted where they went into the ground (they were just hovering; it’s not clear what was keeping my deck up), so the redesign employs a raised concrete footing with a bolted attachment instead of embedded (the bolted attachment makes it so that you can replace a leg without breaking out a jackhammer) as you can see above and in a previous image.
I’ve had lots of experience with metal corrosion, and one of the main culprits is stagnating water, while the second is stagnating dirt/grime that can trap water. I noticed on the deck that the gap between the steel tube butting up against the home’s bricks was trapping all sorts of junk, so I broke out the roofing “wetpatch” — this black tar-like substance — to fill in the gap the entire length of the deck.
So yeah, engineering know-how like static analyses, and basic experience of how rust proliferates translates over. Honestly, plenty of automotive wrenching translates over, at least enough to make learning the ropes associated with all the new materials and tools relatively enjoyable.
My next project is going to be a fun one. You see the steel gate above that I pulled out of a dumpster? I’ve purchased some wheels and an electric gate-opener, and I’m going to buy a v-track, with aims to build a nice automatic sliding gate at the end of our driveway.
This is going to involve me pouring concrete and drilling holes with special masonry bits — it’ll be tough, and will definitely feel new. And I like that; I like learning new skills, even if they’re only kinda new.
How did you not put a spaghetti strainer in that shower? Have you forgotten your roots?
Ha! Or a garbage disposal in the drain like Kramer did!
The most shocking revelation here is that David added significant rust prevention.
I am a lot more of a pussy when it comes to house repairs. the embarrassment of a failure on a house reno/fix is hits 100 times harder maybe because i have my wife and kids living in it….
One of the amusing unsung commonalities between car and house repair is the fact that in both you have the possibility that a previous owner has left a truly mind-boggling and mysterious “fix” or “improvement” for you to discover. Except houses, especially older houses, often have many more owners and much vaster possibilities for the imagination of the clueless, excessively frugal, and/or unscrupulous to run wild. We, for example, pulled back some drywall to discover that a previous owner had, for reasons that remain a mystery to this day, knocked out a long section of masonry wall on the first floor….but not the second and third. (An even more baffling possibility that can’t be ruled out is that they actually built the wall on the second and third floor supported by the floors but no wall beneath it) How it was still standing was anyone’s guess.
May the Tracys never encounter decisions as baffling as that … or the one in my first house, where the previous owners plugged the refrigerator into one of those brown extension cords, which went down through a hole in the baseboard into and across the basement, where it was plugged into an adaptor screwed into a light socket next to the furnace.
Somehow, the inspector missed it. He also never cashed my check, so … (shrug).
Hacked wiring is definitely a commonality between car and house repair. Our century old craftsman had a nice ‘tape ball’ wiring splice inside the wall that we discovered when gutting the kitchen. No box, no wire nuts. Just twisted wires and lots of electrical tape. At least it was the good rubbery electrical tape. I avoid any car that appears to have had the wiring messed with.
One of my greatest skillsets I’ve picked up, having spent the better part of 20 years as a professional wrench, is the ability to make friends in OTHER trades.
Then I regularly do the “labour swap”. My electrician friends help me wire my house, my HVAC friends help me troubleshoot, etc. All I do is offer my garage and expertise to fix their rides and work trucks.
It has saved me tens of thousands of dollars, and made us all closer friends in the process.
I grew up fixing house with my Dad, then learned to wrench on cars (myself) and now fixing up my own old house and barns. When I first moved here I set up an auto shop within months where the cow stalls used to be and it gets used every weekend. Stupidly, it took me 15 years to set up a proper woodworking shop in the hayloft.
I prefer wrenching to fixing house because of the precision and there’s generally 1 correct way to reassemble something. On a house the options are almost limitless, depending on your tools, skills, and budget. It can be overwhelming contemplating all of that. I’m an engineer so everything has to be analyzed and planned out before any real work begins.
Understood on screws seeming uncommon, but flow-drill screws are very common in HV battery packs and (I believe) body structures
Ah David, you are in the exact same spot I was in when I was 28 years old and had just gotten married, got a house and had my first son. My bicycle mechanic skills and frugality helped a lot, but it was also more work since we didn’t have enough money to pay contractors. Not only are houses built to different tolerances, but also, contractors often just don’t listen and do what you want done. Some will be great and others will purchase the cheapest junk they can get away with and do the quickest and shoddiest job they can to reach the payday.
Parenting is a different tool set than car wrenching or home repairing, but I feel that Delmar NHRN is going to be a great kid with parents like you two! With kids, the instructions come from all angles and are conflicting. Just follow your heart and lead with love. The rest is noise. Only you and Elise are Delmar’s parents. My two boys are now going off to Wentworth in Boston for Mechanical Engineering in the fall (one as a freshman and one as a transfer). I’ve made it to the other side and I now see why my parents did and said what they did. They have both passed away but would have been proud of their grandchildren and how my wife and I are doing. You’ve got roughly 18 years of love and challenges ahead. It’s worth it.
Thank you; such a nice comment!
I also have learned so much about my parents these last 9 weeks. Parenting is hard! And they did a great job, even if sometimes I got a belt to the Arsch!
My grandmother had the dreaded “wooden spoon”. I avoided it most of the time.
Parenting is hard, but the more effort on the front end, the better result on the back end. Watching my kids graduate as smart and healthy young adults was a great feeling. So was riding along in my son’s NC Miata on a track day and realizing how great he was as a driver.
I really enjoyed the car related books and would read them to the boys. We also played “Car, Truck MINIVAN!” when we stared out the window at the road and would name the cars as they went by and yell MINIVAN when the (rare) one would go by. Of course nowadays it would be Suv, Suv, Suv, Truck, Truck, Crossover…SEDAN!
I eagerly look forward to reading more about your adventures however big or small.
Don’t worry about the skills, nowadays you can learn anything online. If you can’t find something in english, try in spanish (or portuguese or russian, Brazilians and Russians fix a lot of things because is cheaper than buying) and use YouTube’s translation.
And I believe sooner or later that will be a post like “I got a Golden Retriever and my cats did not enjoyed. How I fixed this…”
I was installing a ceiling fan and the English instructions were so, so bad that I looked at the other language instructions. I don’t read, write, or speak French, but those instructions were what I followed as they were better than the English.
Static analysis on the deck? Generally you need to account for the live load too, read people, and wind, rain and seeing how you are in California… Earthquake.
That’s much better than the 16′ 4×4’s holding up decks on sloped sites in my neck of the woods…makes me nervous just looking at them.
Maybe David designed it using 3d modeling software with stress analysis, like a good nerdy engineer 🙂
After retiring in 2019, I bought a bunch of power tools (miter saw, planer, router and table, table saw, etc.) that I never worked with before. I redid a small deck, which I need to resurface now (live and learn), demolished a rotted pergola (did not suffer any injuries), replaced the sand grouting of the paver brick patio with polymer bonded sand, tore off one wall of a small cottage to repair rot and redid our landscape lighting. All this and other small projects give me a sense of accomplishment. Although I did a lot of hands-on work throughout my career and was responsible for design of multi-million dollar vacuum deposition systems, I eventually ended up in upper management where people sort of doubted my hands-on experience. After retiring, I think I needed to prove to myself that I could do some of these things at the level of DIY. Some of my fun experiences are designing things using a CAD program and then finding out that the design cannot be built.;) Serious electrical work and plumbing (I hate plumbing), I leave to the pros. I stopped working on cars after I transitioned from a rusted ’67 Beetle to a nearly new ’81 Corolla.
Honestly it’s remarkable how badly new houses are built, and how expensive they are relative to how bad the build quality is.
It’s actually quite a bit like the RV industry.
Nailed it. The more I dig into our house, the more I learn that they are often just slapped together fast for profit with no thought for long term ownership. At least that goes for here in the USA especially in the past 30+ years. Homes built pre 1900 seem built to last.
Yeah, people wonder why I like old houses…. it’s because they’re built well from the start! Sure, you probably have to re-do some mechanical to modernize (especially electrical), but the underlying structure was built right to begin with, so you have a solid basis to make it nice.
As a side note, I also love single pipe steam if it’s a system that was installed by someone who knew what they were doing and hasn’t been messed with by people who don’t. It’s quiet and efficient as long as the pipes were sized and sloped right and the vents are still functional. If they’re not, swapping out a couple of vents is quick and easy.
Yeah, I call BS on that. They weren’t built “well”, they were just structurally overbuilt.
I’ve never been in an “old” house that had level floors or squared walls unless the owner had spent significant amounts of money redoing the foundation.
They’re also far more likely to have mold, moisture, ventilation, plumbing, and electrical issues.
And then there’s ‘survivorship’ bias…all the really crappy buildings deteriorated/junked long ago, just like cars.
Hah. Well, that’s a valid point. 🙂
Let’s throw in a few more things about “old” houses:
Yah, but I still prefer my 1930 craftsman home with all it’s quirks/character over a new build. We bought a new build in a subdivision many yrs ago from a decent builder, but when stuff started needing replacing, we sold it (for a profit) and moved back to our old 1920/30s neighborhood.
Every time they show a picture of David with that look on his face it reminds me of that guy from Raiders of the Lost Ark. No, not Harrison Ford. The guy who gets the medallion burned into his hand. Hope nothing like that happens to you during repairs, David.
Congrats on your new house/home. It’s looking good!
We realize you’re exhausted, David, but diction! In American English, you use vise grips for holding objects. Using vice grips may result in negative outcomes ranging from being slapped to having your wrist broken to being arrested, after which you won’t be fixing anything until you make bail.
Fortunately, you’ve aced the use of caulk, so I haven’t had to retire to my fainting couch.
As for auto to house crossover I’ve found an oil filter wrench does wonders on stuck jar lids.
A “strap wrench” could be good foe stuck jar lids
Or hot pads that have 1 side with a layer of thin rubber
“I ran a static analysis on the deck, finding that the previous steel tubes were too thick for this application — 11 gauge (0.120″) tubes were more than enough for a short three-foot deck extension.”
Uhmmm… what kinda engineering safety factor were you using?
This. And also, what was your design loading?
As a civil engineer, my math is easier than the mechanical engineers but we work with much less precise inputs. A bad assumption will totally mess up the calculation no matter how many times you check the math. They have standards for live loading for different types of structures, and I believe residential deck is one of the categories.
If there are any structural engineers please chime in, I took a few structures classes but ended up in transportation so I’m not practiced with applied structural design.
As a structural engineer, you just round off PI to be 4 and then add a safety factor.
I don’t have it in front of me, but I’m certain the IRC has live loads for decks (I think around 50 psf). The design is usually based on deflection not ultimate strength, I believe it’s l/360 for flooring but decks might be different. The residential code is far simplier than the structural design used in other buildings. With tables giving maximium spans for various joists in certain applications. Steel would be a bit different I don’t think they provide guides on that and it would require calculations showing the deflection is within limits.
I ran a large steel beam down the middle of my detached garage to support attic (I didn’t want trusses). I had to run the calcualtions to ensure the beams deflection was within specs for a roof support as part of my drawings for review.
Granted, I’m in a totally different discipline of engineering, but do civil and/or structural engineering reference texts include a special “Wife and Child” safety factor?
You did a great job with the bathroom – LOVE that vertical stripe tile! I have never seen anything quite like that. how 3D is it? It looks like narrow slat wall. And you truly have been domesticated – I would have expected SOMETHING with some rusty patina in there, just because.
Next up – DIY a full kitchen remodel! I’ve done two, and am saving a fortune in my new house that is about to start building by doing the kitchen and bathrooms myself (other than tile, but I really do need to learn that skill). But no tile in the new kitchen, doing the “countertops as backsplash” thing with laminate.
Ultimately, if you can learn to fix a car, you can learn to do nearly anything around a house, IMHO. Especially now that how to do practically anything is out on the Internet. As I get older, I am finding I rather prefer working with wood to wrenching on cars, though I am still too cheap to pay to have much done on my cars, and once the new house/garage is done with the planned lift and A/C in the garage, even less. Hopefully back to just paying for tires and bodywork.
Amusingly, if you know what you are doing and have the right paint (which is a problem these days), you CAN brush paint a car and have it come out beautiful. Many early cars were hand-painted. But the right paint is the stuff that potentially causes your offspring to be born with three eyes, or you to drop dead at 40…
Lawnmowers have engines, and appliance repair resembles car repair. I’m OK with most projects, but I never want to do another sheet vinyl bathroom floor. I’m also not fond of drywall, although the skill set is similar to bodywork.
I’m not a fan of drywall either, but my dislike has gone down considerably since I purchased a powered drywall sander with shop-vac connection. The lack of mess and breathing drywall dust has decreased the suck factor considerably. Easily the best $120-ish I’ve spent in a while!
Wow! Just check interwebs. DIY level versions of these did not exist back when I was rehabbing our house.
My son is in process of buying a neighbor’s fixer upper, so I know what I’m going to buy!!
Mine was just a (relatively) cheap one from Harbor Freight. It uses 12″ disks, has an LED light ring, and does an amazing job of controlling dust when paired with a shop vac. I highly recommend one for DIY-level drywall work!
Incoming sister site: Housetopian
Ha! Soon to be a H/G TV show.
I did wrenching on my cars in the 70′, 80’s and early ’90s.
Then it was home stuff in the 80s and 90s.
And soon it will be complaining to my caretakers.
It’s been a good run, but I’m running out of juice.
They could add a section to the Discord for Home repairs
“I’ve got 15 days to fix all these problems for an open house…”
Soon David, Jason, SWG, and Mercedes will own a bunch of dilapidated 1-bedroom houses all over their state.
Yeah… Working on cars, I could do tune-ups and oil changes. Check fluid levels. Pay attention to maintenance schedules. The basics. Not a genius, but not an idiot either.
Around home, I could do basic plumbing and electrical.
When my wife woke me up in the middle of the night, saying “something sounds funny” from down the hallway and I found a burst hot water pipe to the sink in the bathroom down there… I turned off the hot water valve for the sink, grabbed every towel we had and mopped up the water.
Replacing the blown hose with a metal-wrapped version was easy-peasy. Dealing with the mold that grew up through the linoleum floor a few months later, after that event was not. Insurance agents, asbestos abatement, oy.
In our 1st house I did a ton of work
1st. Rehabbing a 2.5 car garage.
. Redid the roof…Tore off 2 layers of shingles on the detached garage roof down to the sheathing. Put a 2nd layer of sheathing (osb) on top and then tar paper and new shingles on top + replaced all the faca board and metal trim edging.
Next reinforced the structure of the walls via new 2×4 blocking between the uprights. Then re-insulated and further reinforced the structure sheer strength with osb as “drywall” and painted it for a more finished look. Next was replacing the garage door horizontal springs. I got help foe this one. Lastly replaced the “man” door and replaced the garage door opener. Oh I also repainted the outside too, including repainting thr garage door itself plus replaced all the electrical outlets on the exterior and a few on the interior.
Moving on to the house…
1st main floor bathroom took it down to the studs and rebuilt it. Including 4′ high 3×6″ porcelain subway tile all around, new door, sink, toilet and new tub (removed a windows that was in the tub surround. Tiled to the ceiling in the tub surround too. And raised the ceiling. And of course new extraction fan and new lighting and new marble title flooring. The subway title.turned out really nice though was pretty tedious.
2nd redid 90% of the electrical, farmed this one out to a sr. Master electrician bc it was a mess. Ended up upgrading the wire.from the pole to the house, new external meter.and an upgraded 250 Amp electrical panel and I had a whole house surge protector added while in there (included moving the location of the electrical pannel) and rewiring +90% of the wiring too.
Next was new windows (farmed out)
Then adding AC (MN house), farmed this out.
Then brand new steel siding replacing old aluminum siding that was easily 50 years old (hired out)
Completely re-finished the basement myself, 1st took it down to the cement block walls. When tearing out 2×2′ carpet squares found 9″ lanolilium tiles, had them tested and yep asbestos found in the adhesive so hired a professional asbestos crew to remove them. I reinforced the foundation walls, painted on that thick water intrusion prevention sealant for good measure, then insulated with closed cell foam, then installed raised floor subfloor, built the finished drywall walls on top of the subfloor, had professional electrician install lights and new outlets. Then installed drywall, mud/tape/lots of sanding and paint.
Next installed a drop.ceiling and engineered finished floor. Oh and I added a 2nd bathroom while I was at it.
Then replaced all the interior doors with oak hardwood. As well as the front side exterior and storm/screen door and thr front storm door.
Also in the back yard I built 3 raised bed gardens and replaced a rotting wooden deck (barely above the grass) with a concrete patio. Which included removing 6 yards of topsoil (by hand – won’t do that again). Prepped for the pour with 1st tamping, then sand and crushed rock, re-bar plus form boards and hired a concrete truck. We had to hand wheelbarrow the concrete from the truck to the patio site. I waited for it to dry and then made the relief cuts with a rented concrete saw and then sealed it.
And of course repainted every room inside 2x. 1st time when we moved in and 2nd time when we moved out.
Also replaced all the interior lighting fixtures and befoe selling a light kitchen remodel including refinishing all the cabinets including building new drawer boxes because they were a custom size before reattached the drawer fronts
Oh and restomoded the furnace (all new internals over a few years) and had the water heater replaced.
And of course replaced all of the appliances
After all this we sold the place about what we bought it for once adjusted for 13 years of inflation.
Believe it or not all the out of pocket expenses for all work about only ended up being about $40k
An incredible amount of work however I learned a LOT and it was very satisfying knowing we left that house 100x in better shape when we left it than it was when we moved in. And just like DIY auto repair nothing better than the satisfaction of doing an excellent job yourself with home DIY repair or improvement too
Oh the garage got new siding when the house got new siding to match. And of course the new siding already included new finished paint as well!
I was getting exhausted just reading and thinking about what all you did! I get the satisfaction that comes with DIY, but I’d be disappointed that it didn’t markedly increase the inflation-adjusted selling price.
Haha yeah short of a structural renovation and putting a brand new roof on the house I did pretty much all I could have done. I tried to limit myself to 1 major project per year.
I Totally understand that perspective. I used an inflation calculator to confirm we basically sold it for what we bought it (inflation adjusted). I bought that home in 2007 so market was high.
I like to view the experience as we got to live where we wanted in a nice quiet neighborhood with good neighbors for $40k over 13 years in a major cosmopolitan (for USA) metro area with parks, lakes and bike paths everywhere. Put in that context it was a heck of a good deal.
I’ve had good luck with random Chinese gate openers you get off vevor or Amazon. I know someone who kept telling me to buy the ghost he has been though about 2 or 3 of them while the Chinese one just keeps kicking and probably cost 1/5 what he paid initially. There is place called direct tools outlet it’s owned by TTI the people who make Milwaukee, Ryobi, Heart, and Ridgid power tools. You can find some good deals on some things there and they have sales on the weekends. Alot of times you can buy the tool without the battery cheaper then you could rent it for a day or two.
Nice job on the bathroom, I do look not like that fashion the old one had. A good thread (if you’re on bsky) https://bsky.app/profile/rahaeli.bsky.social/post/3lqkyfxsiec23 the horror, the horror.
Getting to buy new tools is the best part.
One other big difference: home improvements are much more likely to be recouped at the property value goes up. Cars, rarely so.
This is a good point, and it’s related to the fact that cars are mass produced but houses aren’t, at least not in the same way.
I’m up to bathroom #8 at this point in my one relationship and two houses. One more to go and I retire from bathroom rehab projects for my wife (and me, of course it’s for me, this isn’t just for you, it’s for me too, and the house, don’t forget the house, and the kids, the kids need a new primary bathroom, did you forget the dog, the dog needs a walk in shower because she is 15 years old)
LOL, one more to go.
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. One more to go. LOL LOL LOL
There will be another house at some point.
I’ve been through thousands of houses, but I’ve never noticed a deck built in a steel frame. They’ve been made of redwood or a composite such as Trek. Where is this commonplace?
I’ve seen it with condos and some townhouses in larger metros. I think they are some of them are prefab. Fortress building products does alot with them and fairly sure some big national builders have a stake in them.
Same. MA carpenter here. I’ve never seen steel framing for a deck. Is this an earthquake thing? Or something else?
Same, I’ve never seen it here in Michigan. The framing is always wood without exception, even if the deck boards are another material like Trex. Don’t really see the appeal of the steel, it’s a lot easier to use wood and from an aesthetic perspective, it’s not like you’re gonna be looking under the deck anyway. You can even still do a steel railing with a wood frame deck, I see it all the time.