Hopefully moar shimz.Thanks. Our inspector noted the shallow insertion as well and the wood shims are to be replaced with metal before the beams are grouted in.
Spotted in my workplace's employee parking lot this very morning:Next logical step after the Land Cruiser starts to feel small:
Diesel, low range 4x4 Sprinter, now with 100% more plans to have it be sold in the US.
One of those in high roof forms would finally shut me up about having enough headroom, I figure.
This sort of reminds me of Honda's SH-AWD system, only with the overdrive at the axle level instead of at the "center diff"-equivalent level. Per this article (noting that that white SUV is an RDX, not an MDX--that gen RDX indeed did have SH-AWD, though) with SH-AWD the rear differential can be driven up to 5.7% faster than the front differential. That overdrive is then translated into wheel-specific vectoring thrust by clutch packs on each half shaft, more or less.One of the main features of the GS F I was looking forward to experiencing is Lexus’s new Torque Vectoring Differential (TVD). The very simple explanation of TVD is that it is basically an open diff with electronically operated clutch packs on each output shaft with an overdrive gear that allows each wheel to be turned faster than its counterpart.
Many cars on the market today come with their own version of TVD that use the brakes to slow one wheel allowing the other to spin faster and increase (or decrease) steering response. But using the brakes to go faster is as oxymoronic as it gets, and most of those systems fall short pretty quickly once you start driving them hard.
More on this after a quick phone call today to the giant, 30,000 sq ft Bicycle Village in Aurora:I think I may have found my next commuter bike, for the post-move lengthened commute:
Trek XM700+. Previously announced but now showing up on the Trek US site!
So this musing from a page or two back has now become relevant once again: the Hackintosh is currently crashed. I think drive(s) are going, and that this all happened suddenly and apparently with multiple drives makes me suspect that something more centrally is going south, in the region of the motherboard.What I'd like to do:
1) At work: Have lots of screen space for "thinking area." Run Chrome. Run MATLAB. Run Excel, Word, and EndNote. Manage email with Exchange and IMAP accounts (via Thunderbird when on Windows, Mail.app on OS X).
2) At home: Have small form factor for use on couch. Sync with my iPhone using iTunes, run Photos (formerly iPhoto), run Lightroom, which more or less dictates running OS X. Similarly run Chrome, MATLAB, Excel/Word/EndNote, and Mail.app.
Builder's response:One exterior outlet on the porch looks like this: wood trim, metal flashing above, plastic box:
The other looks like this. Hmph.
Good.[Construction super] thinks one of the outlets is missing a part and this will be remedied
Everything will be symmetrical and fixed
The bottom one is called an "old work box" they missed it and had to fish the wall and cut it in after siding was installedOne exterior outlet on the porch looks like this: wood trim, metal flashing above, plastic box:
The other looks like this. Hmph.
I have no idea what that butt seams comment refers to, but I'm glad it's a good sign.The bottom one is called an "old work box" they missed it and had to fish the wall and cut it in after siding was installed
10' ceilings nice, are they putting a waterproof membrane on durarock before tile? Just because it's a cement board does not mean it's waterproof, the waterproof membrane can be a troweled on or a roll on
I'm a general contractor every trade has gone down hill in the past 30 years.....all drywallers smoke pot live in their cars and eat peanut butter sandwiches lol
They Coated each side of the butt seams without toiching the tape on their bed coat that's a good sign they are good finishers
Here's a bigger version of that photo (click):Is the drywall in the garage touching the concrete? They should have layed scrap pieces on the concrete when they hung it so there would be a 1/2" gap moisture will wick into and it will mold eventually
I'm totally not raining on your parade just pointing out what I would if I was your builder
I hope we don't run into that problem. With a builder this big and busy (46 houses being built at once!) there's no chance I can get them to do anything above what the contract specifies, and the contract has nothing about that. It does have a bit about them having to clean out the air ducts before turning the house over, at least, so we won't be blowing construction about the house for days.We make our plumbers camera the sewer line out to the street those little drywall cut outs for the outlets one of those falls into the toilet shoe it will catch paper and solids and you will have back ups and the builder will accuse you of flushing baby wipes, paper towels etc them you will have to pay for someone to power jet or run a sewer machine down the pipes
I'll have to weigh retirement timing carefully against FAFSA and the like, as my oldest kid will be entering college around this time, with the younger two years behind. Perhaps I will try to retire early so as to maximize my kid's chances for grants? Either that or just put my head down, accept that she'll get only loans if that, and work through the period.October of every year: Bonus time. Future bonuses per our new formula are likely to be smaller than this and next year's that are/were under the old formula, but it should remain non-negligible, probably on the order of $30-50k. I'm treating the bonus separately from my monthly budget and am basically assuming it'll be spent instead of saved each year on stuff like more solar for the house, etc.
2016-2017: Wife may go back to work. Negligible net increase in income due to increased preschool/aftercare costs.
2017-2019: Up for promotion around this time. + ~$1000/mo post-tax increase.
2018-2019: Older kid into kindergarten then first grade. + ~$500-700/mo (half day kindergarten is free but full day has a small cost that disappears when first grade is hit).
2020: Both car notes gone. + $964/mo.
2020-2021: Younger kid into kindergarten then first grade. + ~$500-700/mo.
2023: Done with my student loans (PSLF, effective ~0.4% rate). + $1588/mo.
2026: Done with wife's student loans, assuming I refinance to a new 10 year term this winter @ 2.8-3.5%. + ~$1000-1200/mo.
2030: Technically able to retire? I'll still have 15 years left on the mortgage, assuming I haven't been paying it down early...
Another option emerges:
My little bear-baby is 7 months old today: