Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Goodbye & Good Luck

As you may have already guessed, I've decided to move on.  This is the last DIY article, and my new blogging endeavor will be aimed at helping people in a different way.  Did the Ball home get fixed up and stop breaking?  Not at all.  Here's a snippet of what's happened since the last article:

Installed a new Chamberlain garage door opener when the 20 year-old unit died.  If your vehicle was built prior to 2012, the Homelink option in your cars probably won't work with a new opener.  The "version 2.0" Chamberlain opener needed a Homelink repeater to work with our vintage 2003 built-in buttons.  The job was tedious and took a long time, but wasn't overly complex.
 
Note: Belt drives are quieter than chain drives.




0% to full charge on my
Galaxy 5 in 2 hours



Replaced 2 outlets in the house with USB wall chargers.  These babies charge your phone, tablet, headset, etc. with a USB cable.  No adapter is required.  Also, each USB outlet pushes 2 amps, which is 2-4x more juice than most plug-ins. 






These little guys thump!


Hooked up 2 Sonos Play 1 speakers for my sweetie.  These speakers stream Pandora, XM, or your favorite internet radio directly from the internet via a Sonos Bridge.  Your smartphone or PC acts as a remote.  It's hard to believe that so much sound comes out of something so small.







Repaired the stairs and rails on the deck.  It needs to be totally replaced, but we're lacking the funds this year to wave a magic wand and pay someone.  I'd rather just buy a gallon of kerosene and strike a match, but my friends say that might be dangerous.  My fall project will be installing a new floor, staining the wood, and firming up the rail supports with carriage bolts. 

The current project is replacing the face plate on our high class Bosch dishwasher.  Hey, you need at least one high class thing in a Ball home to spruce it up.  This expensive piece of plastic ($75 with shipping) is weak and poorly designed.  Maybe the new one will last a little longer.  At that price, building a Bosch dishwasher from parts would be an estimated $100,000.

See the broken plastic below the button?

Thanks everyone for reading, and good luck with your own DIY projects.  The sun is setting, my bourbon glass is empty, and I bet you can hear ice rattling.

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