Friday, December 10, 2010
Some Pros and Cons of DIY Plumbing
Read This BEFORE You Tackle That Plumbing Job Yourself!
With the rising cost of…well…everything, more and more homeowners are turning to do-it-yourself (DIY) projects for everything from growing their own produce to car repairs. DIY home improvement has always been popular, and there are benefits and drawbacks to undertaking these projects yourself.
When it comes to DIY home plumbing, there are thousands of plumbing resources available—books, videos, online resources, television shows, magazines, and more. DIY plumbing is attractive because it seems relatively easy and can save a significant amount of cash over hiring a contractor or professional plumber. But before you take on that plumbing project, consider the pros and cons of DIY plumbing.
DIY Plumbing Pros
One benefit of DIY plumbing is that you can usually trust who you’ve hired – as long as you trust yourself! Though asking for referrals from friends and family is a generally reliable way to find a good professional, many homeowners are wary of inviting contractors into their homes. When you know you can do the work yourself, you never have to worry about the skill or reputation of workers in your house.
Also in the pro column, many basic plumbing and drain repairs -- like unclogging a slow drain or plunging a stopped up toilet –- are relatively easy and quick. It may seem silly to call a professional plumber on these occasions, so knowing how to do them yourself can save a lot of hassle and a ton of cash...especially on weekends or holidays when plumbers’ rates jump drastically.
DIY Plumbing Cons
The main problem with DIY plumbing is that there are a lot of unknowns to contend with. Even simple projects like repairing a leaky faucet or changing a shower head can quickly become more complicated than the average weekend warrior can handle. And a plumbing mistake can be far more costly than messing up the paint job in your living room or installing a crooked chair rail in your dining room.
Another DIY plumbing con is that changing your home’s plumbing significantly, such as expanding your kitchen or adding on a bathroom, usually requires a permit from your local municipality. For plumbing amateurs, navigating this often complex process can be difficult and may cut into your project deadline and budget. Professional plumbers are adept at cutting through bureaucratic red tape in order to secure the proper permits, ensuring your plumbing job is completed on time and on budget.
If you carry homeowner’s insurance, your carrier may require that any significant plumbing work be conducted by a licensed professional. If this is the case and there is any damage done to your home during the course of the plumbing project, your insurer will only pay on a claim if the work has been performed by a qualified plumbing contractor; if you do the work yourself and a disaster occurs, you’ll have to foot the bill out of your own pocket.
Plumbing is often physically taxing work. Carrying pipes, knocking out walls, shimmying into tight spaces, and loosening tight or rusty pipe joints requires strength and stamina. Plumbing and drain jobs often require the use of chemical solvents, welding and soldering equipment, torches and other potentially harmful materials and tools. If you’re not up to the task physically, best to leave the work to a plumbing pro.
Bottom Line: Don’t Take Chances With Your Home's Plumbing
If you have some plumbing knowledge and are a natural handyman, many plumbing jobs can be done on a DIY basis. But let’s face it – in this day and age, most homeowners – male and female – aren’t very mechanically inclined. Plumbing is a complex skill that requires years of training. Letting an inexperienced person play with plumbing is like letting a child play with a loaded gun. Bad plumbing work today will lead to extensive and expensive plumbing repairs tomorrow. When in doubt, call the plumbing professionals at Horizon Services. You’ll get a quick, accurate diagnosis of your plumbing problem and effective, affordable plumbing solutions that you can trust.
Related Plumbing Information from Horizon Services…
Thursday, December 09, 2010
PUMPKIN FRY
With yellow pumpkin, we can prepare sambar, poriyal, sweet etc. But making fry with it is a different one.
This is a very simple fry but one can see it is delicious in taste. This is my daughter in law's favourite dish and she herself prepared for this photograph.
பரங்கிக்காய் வறுவல்
Ingredients:
Yellow pumpkin cut into small slices- 2 cups
Onion [thinly sliced] - 1
Finely chopped tomato- 1
Finely chopped coriander- 2 tbsp
Chilli powder- 1 tsp
Coriander powder- half sp
Turmeric powder- half sp
Salt to taste
Oil-3 tbsp
Procedure;
Heat a pan and pour the oil.
Add the onion and fry it to golden brown.
Then add the tomato and fry it until they are mashed to a paste and the oil floats on top.
Add all the powders, pumpkin pieces, salt and little water to cook.
When all the water is evaporated and the pumpkin is roasted, sprinkle the coriander leaves and mix well.
The delicious pumpkin fry is ready now!!
This is a very simple fry but one can see it is delicious in taste. This is my daughter in law's favourite dish and she herself prepared for this photograph.
பரங்கிக்காய் வறுவல்
Ingredients:
Yellow pumpkin cut into small slices- 2 cups
Onion [thinly sliced] - 1
Finely chopped tomato- 1
Finely chopped coriander- 2 tbsp
Chilli powder- 1 tsp
Coriander powder- half sp
Turmeric powder- half sp
Salt to taste
Oil-3 tbsp
Procedure;
Heat a pan and pour the oil.
Add the onion and fry it to golden brown.
Then add the tomato and fry it until they are mashed to a paste and the oil floats on top.
Add all the powders, pumpkin pieces, salt and little water to cook.
When all the water is evaporated and the pumpkin is roasted, sprinkle the coriander leaves and mix well.
The delicious pumpkin fry is ready now!!
Q & A on Showplace Cabinets
Q.
Hi Peggy... we are doing a kitchen refresh (keeping the same footprint but replacing the appliances, cabinets and countertops/backsplash)... and plan to replace our current cabinets... we found a local vendor - Kitchen Design Center - see http://www.kitchendesigncenters.net/ ... and we are working w/ them ... they offer semi custom cabinets from the following manufacturers...
"To keep ahead of the market, Kitchen Design Center has expanded it's cabinet lines to include the wonderful cabinets of Showplace Wood Products showplacewood.com, Cardell Cabinetry http://www.cardell.com/ Woodland Cabinetry woodlandcabinetry.com ,Decora decoracabinets.com as well as our full line of Woodharbor Cabinets - RockGlen, Cast Point & Woodharbor woodharbor.com."
They recommended Showplace Wood Products for us and are preparing a proposal "as we speak"... I did some checking on Showplace and got what appears to be some mixed reviews... see http://ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load/bath/msg0110192332481.html... the comments are now somewhat dated so maybe Showplace has improved their product... but the comments gave me some pause for concern...
So I did some more checking and found your blog/post on cabinets... one of the vendors who you like - Wood Harbor - is offered by Kitchen Design Centers although I don 't know if they are more or less expensive than Showplace... or whether or not Showplace is a better choice... apparently they offer lots of options and can produce and almost custom-like "fit"...
We like the folks at Kitchen Design Centers... and they offer some nice "project management" options regarding tear outs/installation of appliances ... and "hawking" the project ... sort of what a general contractor would do for a lot less $...and since we are only doing a refresh and not moving any walls, installing new lights, minimizing any painting or drywall work, no changes to our wood floors, I don't immediately see the benefits of spending thousands of $ for a general contractor if these folks can provide the same services via subcontractors that they work w/ but of course, we would have to purchase cabinets from them to secure these other relatively low-cost services...
But if we aren't getting a good product... or we are paying more for the product to pay for the other services, then maybe we need to rethink this..
So the real question...finally... is what do you know/think of Showplace Wood Products?... and how do they compare to the 3 vendors you "like"?... and should we ask for a second proposal using Wood Harbor instead of Showplace?...
Any advice would be greatly appreciated...Best...Lenny
A.
Hi Lenny,
Congratulations on doing your due diligence before becoming a complainer on GardenWeb!
I do not work with Showplace cabinets at all.
So I can not comment on their quality.
I am familiar with Woodharbor products and highly recommend them as you have seen.
I would ask Kitchen Design Center for some references (3-5) of consumers who purchased a similar kitchen to yours, in Showplace cabinets, RECENTLY.
Then call ALL of them and ask them if you can come out and see their installations.
Ask them if they had any problems such as the ones detailed in the GardenWeb Forums posts.
Ask them if they are satisfied with the services of Kitchen Design Center.
Ask them if everything was delivered on time.
Ask them if anything was missing or damaged.
Look over the installations carefully to see if they meet your standards.
Realize that Kitchen Design Center is NOT likely at all to give you unsatisfied customers' names, so the work is likely to be their best.
If it isn't up to your standards, look elsewhere for your installation work (and perhaps your cabinets as well).
You should always go through this exercise before hiring anyone to do work in your home.
That way you won't be surprised to get substandard work or products.
Installation of cabinetry is pretty subjective.
Usually you get what you pay for.
It takes time and talent to do it well.
The best cabinet installers are usually finish carpenters, the kind who do crown mouldings and wainscoting and such.
Then there is what the installers have to work with - the cabinets.
If they are not manufactured square and true, or warped wood has been used, or there is shipping damage, or the wood is not high enough quality, or, or...
If the cabinets you are looking at (Showplace) aren't up to your standards, you might need to look at something a little higher priced.
Your dealer probably asked you about your budget and recommended accordingly.
Then there is attitude.
Some installers can make almost anything look great, with nary a complaint.
Others expect the manufacturer to almost do their work, and whine at every inconvenience.
Sometimes it's hard for a homeowner to know whether their installer is a whiner or whether the problems with the cabinets are real.
Usually the homeowner takes the installer's word for it because that's who is in their house.
Then there is the dealer:
Most dealers are hard-working and try their best to do a good job.
The fact is that ordering a set of cabinets for your kitchen involves a bunch of decisions, any of which can be forgotten or overlooked and cause problems when it comes time to install them.
Some dealers are, at best, charlatans selling snake oil.
Obviously you want to avoid them.
But you do only one or two kitchens in a lifetime.
That's why it pays to ask for references and actually follow through.
Because you, as a novice, have no other way to judge what you are getting.
Good luck with your project and please let us all know how it goes.
Peggy
Hi Peggy... we are doing a kitchen refresh (keeping the same footprint but replacing the appliances, cabinets and countertops/backsplash)... and plan to replace our current cabinets... we found a local vendor - Kitchen Design Center - see http://www.kitchendesigncenters.net/ ... and we are working w/ them ... they offer semi custom cabinets from the following manufacturers...
"To keep ahead of the market, Kitchen Design Center has expanded it's cabinet lines to include the wonderful cabinets of Showplace Wood Products showplacewood.com, Cardell Cabinetry http://www.cardell.com/ Woodland Cabinetry woodlandcabinetry.com ,Decora decoracabinets.com as well as our full line of Woodharbor Cabinets - RockGlen, Cast Point & Woodharbor woodharbor.com."
They recommended Showplace Wood Products for us and are preparing a proposal "as we speak"... I did some checking on Showplace and got what appears to be some mixed reviews... see http://ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load/bath/msg0110192332481.html... the comments are now somewhat dated so maybe Showplace has improved their product... but the comments gave me some pause for concern...
So I did some more checking and found your blog/post on cabinets... one of the vendors who you like - Wood Harbor - is offered by Kitchen Design Centers although I don 't know if they are more or less expensive than Showplace... or whether or not Showplace is a better choice... apparently they offer lots of options and can produce and almost custom-like "fit"...
We like the folks at Kitchen Design Centers... and they offer some nice "project management" options regarding tear outs/installation of appliances ... and "hawking" the project ... sort of what a general contractor would do for a lot less $...and since we are only doing a refresh and not moving any walls, installing new lights, minimizing any painting or drywall work, no changes to our wood floors, I don't immediately see the benefits of spending thousands of $ for a general contractor if these folks can provide the same services via subcontractors that they work w/ but of course, we would have to purchase cabinets from them to secure these other relatively low-cost services...
But if we aren't getting a good product... or we are paying more for the product to pay for the other services, then maybe we need to rethink this..
So the real question...finally... is what do you know/think of Showplace Wood Products?... and how do they compare to the 3 vendors you "like"?... and should we ask for a second proposal using Wood Harbor instead of Showplace?...
Any advice would be greatly appreciated...Best...Lenny
A.
Hi Lenny,
Congratulations on doing your due diligence before becoming a complainer on GardenWeb!
I do not work with Showplace cabinets at all.
So I can not comment on their quality.
I am familiar with Woodharbor products and highly recommend them as you have seen.
I would ask Kitchen Design Center for some references (3-5) of consumers who purchased a similar kitchen to yours, in Showplace cabinets, RECENTLY.
Then call ALL of them and ask them if you can come out and see their installations.
Ask them if they had any problems such as the ones detailed in the GardenWeb Forums posts.
Ask them if they are satisfied with the services of Kitchen Design Center.
Ask them if everything was delivered on time.
Ask them if anything was missing or damaged.
Look over the installations carefully to see if they meet your standards.
Realize that Kitchen Design Center is NOT likely at all to give you unsatisfied customers' names, so the work is likely to be their best.
If it isn't up to your standards, look elsewhere for your installation work (and perhaps your cabinets as well).
You should always go through this exercise before hiring anyone to do work in your home.
That way you won't be surprised to get substandard work or products.
Installation of cabinetry is pretty subjective.
Usually you get what you pay for.
It takes time and talent to do it well.
The best cabinet installers are usually finish carpenters, the kind who do crown mouldings and wainscoting and such.
Then there is what the installers have to work with - the cabinets.
If they are not manufactured square and true, or warped wood has been used, or there is shipping damage, or the wood is not high enough quality, or, or...
If the cabinets you are looking at (Showplace) aren't up to your standards, you might need to look at something a little higher priced.
Your dealer probably asked you about your budget and recommended accordingly.
Then there is attitude.
Some installers can make almost anything look great, with nary a complaint.
Others expect the manufacturer to almost do their work, and whine at every inconvenience.
Sometimes it's hard for a homeowner to know whether their installer is a whiner or whether the problems with the cabinets are real.
Usually the homeowner takes the installer's word for it because that's who is in their house.
Then there is the dealer:
Most dealers are hard-working and try their best to do a good job.
The fact is that ordering a set of cabinets for your kitchen involves a bunch of decisions, any of which can be forgotten or overlooked and cause problems when it comes time to install them.
Some dealers are, at best, charlatans selling snake oil.
Obviously you want to avoid them.
But you do only one or two kitchens in a lifetime.
That's why it pays to ask for references and actually follow through.
Because you, as a novice, have no other way to judge what you are getting.
Good luck with your project and please let us all know how it goes.
Peggy
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