Saturday, January 25, 2020

Let there be Light! DIY recessed lighting installation project

I am no electrician, but I had a handy father who was not afraid to do his own home repairs and maintenance, and I had tinkered with electronics since ~6th grade. So when it came time to install recessed lighting in our upstairs fitness studio, it was not a far leap from hearing how expensive it would be to hire a professional to rolling up my sleeves and doing it myself. Besides big savings, what the kids and I learned in the process will stick with us a long time. Plus .. it was really fun overcoming all the frustrations and challenges along the way! As usual, I leaned heavily on expertise of knowledgeable staff at our local Lowes and a few friends.

The primary things I knew going into it:
  • Safety: Electricity moves through wires, A/C is not DC, 120 volts is not lethal (phew!), a breaker box will save me if I do something stupid, and keep the breaker off while working on the isolated circuit.
  • Know-how: Copper is ground, Black is neutral, White is line. Yeah, ok, I had to relearn this one: Copper is ground, White is neutral, Black is line ("hot"), and so is Red when it exists. (Thanks Joe for catching my flub here!)
  • Also I had experience cutting perfectly good drywall on a perfectly new home when I installed our cat door a few years ago.
And where I got to level-up (my boo-boos):

  • 14/12 gauge electrical wiring is really, really rigid and hard to maneuver: Leave sufficient slack, and strip with generous lead.
  • Not all 6" LED housings from the same company are the same size. I bought four in two styles with the intention of sampling and swapping once we decided, but we kind of locked ourselves in to the ceiling hole sizes once I had all four up.
  • But in general my drywall holes could have been just a bit smaller and didn't need the little notches sticking out. Hmm. I could putty and paint these minor flubs some day.
Helper helping in planning :)

Let's go!

The box makes it look easy :)

Severed the 4-conductor ceiling fan assembly wire.. didn't leave myself much play down to the switch into the junction box :(

Original builder did a lot of draping of wires, I wanted to run them through the joists for a more polished finish

The final cut(s)!

The scariest part of the project was placement of LED light fixtures (will they illuminate enough? Will it look silly and uncoordinated in our oddly shaped ceiling?) and the holes in ceiling drywall:
Recessed LED lighting came with simple, circular templates
Gulp! Cutting drywall.. fast and decisive is the way.
WOW - so so close to the joist in the attic!! :O Just barely missed!

Final Product

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Boyhood adventures in oak hills / brushy creek / brazos county

We had a great childhood in Brazos County. We grew up in one of the rural parts around College Station know as Oak Circle and Runaway Acres, but we didn’t know these labels at the time. In fact, we didn’t know many labels at all— we explored where curiosity led us, and those thorny, green wait-a-minute vines stopped us no more effectively than the barb wire kind.

Today, studying an aerial map, I can still fairly accurately pinpoint many of our typical Saturday morning routes of thirty years ago. Utilizing large print, land elevation maps on loan from the TAMU library, we might plan the quest the week before or recon afterward. We’d put on our long pants, long sleeves, and mud shoes, collect our snacks and lunches in a bag, and head out. Each journey began with the necessary exiting the neighborhood, the public roads, the acceptable. I can see on this map some nondescript shrubbery off the bend in a road where I recall we happened to know that the fence was easily passable because it was loose or missing a section. This was one of several portals to transport us between the exposed, hot, sunny walk along public roads into trespassing, unknown, and adventure.

We found terrific satisfaction having come out of the public and into the other side, our private, dangerous adventure underway. Everything was a discovery: the dried up mud hole where we prayed to God on our knees to levitate us out; the exposed dashboard of a sunken automobile stuck in the ground; the small, intimate family cemetery under a tuft of trees; unofficial dirt roads leading out to unofficial campfire sites with broken beer bottles. We hiked right up to the back of the TAMU observatory, nuclear reactor, and Easterwood Airport. We rarely had any specific objective other than wanting, ultimately, to reach that mighty Brazos River, the great divider between Brazos County and Robertson County, the brown body of water rumored to carry alligators (or at least alligator gars).

But we learned a lot on these adventures. We thought our White Creek was quite big. We found the scarce, picked-dry, white bones of a few unfortunate cattle who also thought the drops of the ravines were quite big. (I preferred finding deer skulls, because they looked cooler.) We confirmed that a color tv pulled from a wet creek, once the water had evaporated and webs cleared out, only required minor knob twisting to come back to full working condition. I used it in my bedroom for AV experiments and watching shows like In Living Color and forbidden music videos on The Box channel. We learned all at once that out here some folks use ravines at the edge of their property as landfills and that in these landfills a kid can find some really cool machine scraps and that running from an angry herd of cattle (what we thought was a stampede) was very scary and that that found 2-cycle motor we hoped to haul home for restoration could be dropped for the moment and retrieved at a later date.

And that goal of following the big creek to the river? The creek we followed had many tricky spots to maneuver: some places thick with pokey brush or no sand bank on which to walk without slipping into the water; some bends with a ridge towering high overhead; most of the creek had water in it; occasionally we’d find a segment where a fence literally spanned the creek. We always feared snakes, though I don’t think we ever saw any. The creek we followed steadily grew big enough that it had other smaller tributaries spill in to feed it. But what a feeling to get to where the high ridges drop straight down, the water is always present, and, lo!, the creek joined another, much larger stream, a river! Of course we had to cross it. Crossing such a breadth was tricky, but once on the other side, we rejoiced, victorious, and stuck a makeshift flag made of a dry stalk into the ground declaring ourselves rulers over Robertson County. Later, with the aid of an aerial map during recon, we would come to learn that all along we were following but a tributary and finally met and crossed only White Creek itself that day. What a let down, but, also, what a laugh. And what a lesson: even not reaching the contrived goal was a very rewarding achievement as well. We would save the Brazos River for another time. Now so many years later I can see just how physically close to the river we had actually come that day.

The walk back was always unbearable. Maybe our adventure was cut short and one of us was scraped up, limping, or both. Maybe we were lugging found treasures, taking turns if it was heavy. Maybe we were just exhausted from a long morning of hiking. One thing was always the case: the blazing hot afternoon Texas sun was baking-in our memories for a lifetime.


Sunday, January 17, 2016

"Fort Jonas" has a name .. And railings!

Of course I trust my own kids to be careful and agile enough to be safe on this death trap, but we didn't want to take any chances with the rag-tag miscellaneous friends of them. So we decided to adorn the 7ft platform with safety railing.

To add to the effect (and to get some parallel helper working), I pulled out our kids' hammer as well as their great-grandfather Harold's hammer which he bequeathed to me during his lifetime. He was a prolific craftsman, and I thought it was fitting to tie it all together:


First we hauled up all the railing frames built out of 2x4s. Our ten year old pulled out the guns and really helped with this effort:





Meanwhile, the five year old stays out of trouble  with a book:

Ten year old's math helped us chop 13 12' flat boards into 3' pickets. With this load, some 1 1/2" nails, and three hammers, we went to town hammering away!






A job well done!


Next up.. Roof? Maybe a slide or something like that? Or cool gadgets like ringer bell, knocker, or Gatling gun?? :D











Friday, December 25, 2015

Fort Dedication

This Christmas morning, the boys each received a large golden nail as a memento to their hard work which were mounted to the underside of the fort platform. The fort is not complete, necessarily, but let's face it: once Christmas vacation is over, time to tinker will be scarce again..






Thursday, December 24, 2015

And on the Fourth Day there was a Ladder!

All hands were on deck for the construction of this 60° pitch ladder. 18" rungs of 2x4s, stringers of 2x6s.