james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2011-02-06 04:59 am
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This is why I can't have nice things
Bus went missing. A bunch of us at the Stanley Park Mall split on a cab. That got me a few blocks from my place. Slog home, put a snack in the microwave, the power dies before I can hit on. I put the frozen snack back in the freezer, wait the power cut out. Power comes back on. I turn on the microwave.
White smoke comes out. See, I forgot to put the food back in before turning the microwave back on....
Fuck fuck fuck.
At least I didn't burn the house down.
Well, I know what my next major purchase is....
Any recommendations for cheap, reliable brands of microwave ovens?
White smoke comes out. See, I forgot to put the food back in before turning the microwave back on....
Fuck fuck fuck.
At least I didn't burn the house down.
Well, I know what my next major purchase is....
Any recommendations for cheap, reliable brands of microwave ovens?
Re: for all that is holy
The plumber had to cut off the tile, cut through the wall to get access to the pipes, cut through both pipes to replace the unit, and then install the new one. (He also replaced the shower head, but I think that was because it came with the faucet part at the hardware store.) The shower does not have a separate shut-off valve, and there was no other access to it other than through a wall.
This took 5-6 hours. I'm not pleased with the cost, not by a long shot, but for "oh crap the water has to stop NOW," I don't believe I was ripped off. If I'd been able to plan its replacement better, and hire a handyman, it probably would have been quite a bit less.
The part that I do hate is that I'd been thinking of replacing it for a while (I absolutely hated the old one, it was too hard to use), but I just put it off a bit too long.
Re: for all that is holy
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(Edit: Hmm, actually, I may just be thinking about kitchen/bathroom sink faucets, where the shutoff valve is easily accessible below the sink. I'm not sure whether many of the other houses I've been in have had shutoff valves for tub/shower faucets or not.)
The house my parents built (well, designed and general-contracted for and had other people build, mostly) actually had the showers backing up against a partition wall within the bathroom, and they put in plywood access panels in those walls so you merely had to unscrew them rather than chopping up the drywall, and the shutoff valve was behind that. Very convenient, and I'd forgotten that that arrangement of things was unusual.
Re: for all that is holy
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Just after we moved in I needed some kind of service to the first floor bathroom toilet. Plumber accidentally broke that intake pipe. However it was just in the basement and had direct access. He installed new pipe and a new turn-off valve, it wasn't as costly because all the crap is accessible. But that bathroom,.. we need to redo the tub plumbing and that will take pulling off paneling in a stairwell. yikes.