thanks for video, got small issue that i dont understand. For example you made such beautiful coating on your floor, then pay attention to cotton cloths you had used, but what about plaster Gyproc walls and the edges near the wall. If you drop there even 1 tip of oil does it mean that paper/curboard surface of Gyproc may ignite or combust itself in 1-2 hours. I really want to use, but i dont understand how to treat floor in such places near walls. Cheers and thanks
I suggest that when you do a backup right click on the backup file in the File menu and select Download to save a copy on your PC. After an upgrade of ROS the local backup would likely be scrubbed.
In the spirit of better late than never, I'm here to say this is the only example I've found where LVL has been used for stair treads. It seems that LVL is often used for stringers, but not for treads. I see that you painted yours. We sanded, stained, and polyurethaned ours. We have a full flight of open treads and 2 partial flights with closed treads. We made all the treads and then selected the ones that looked nicest on both sides for the open treads since both the top and bottom are visible. We really like the front edge showing the laminations, the same as the tops of the closed stringers. We built and installed our stairs in the winter of 2021 while we were renovating. They've been protected with heavy brown paper during our renovations but as we're nearing the end (almost 5 years later), we've uncovered the open tread flight to the second floor and still love how they look.
Everybody please note that this video was uploaded in Winter (December) ....... In Finland. Hahaha. The first coat did all the sinking-in, this was the second coat, and took longer drying because the wood was already saturated by the first coat.
Oh that can be tricky. Either you need to rub harder… kind of to take it off. Even using a light sand paper. Then you start again. Or… waiting longer for it to dry more could also help. In some patches where that happened to me, I rubbed harder 💪 Starting again. No it’s not fun. Good luck.
Hi, bin gerade über dein video gestolpert. Kannst du sagen welche Cellulose du genau benutzt? Handelt es sich wirklich um reine Cellulose oder um modifizierte Cellulose (z.b. Methylcellulose)
@timboslice4019 that’s true. If I was a qualified electrician or in a country that does not require electrical work to be done by a qualified electrician… then it might be a different video.
You can control bulbs without a hub. You can control outside the house. I have it built into my pixel phone and can control it with google hubs too. The video didn't show me at all why an experience would be better with the hub. For me the advantage of connecting to google hub is to integrate multiple brands of devices. I am looking for a video that will explain why I should shell out more money when a google or Alexa hub can do it too. Explain the differences and how you can integrate more than just with Philips hue in a home if you so choose. Rating B- for video.
Hi Paul, I'm a ( 14 in total ) Tasmota user with node-red for over 10 years that function flawless with absolutely no issues. Been trying for maybe 6 months now to see/use them in this **** HA and to no avail. Have had may new installs of HA on various systems with the same results, HA may see and be able to use maybe one of the devices ok the rest are either show as grey'd out and marked unavailable or are nowhere to be found in HA. So thought your vid maybe the missing link, but at 2:38 in the vid I am totally lost. Remember I am a total nubee to HA as I have never as yet seen anything working in it but am seasoned user of node-red and Tasmota. Can you throw any light ( no pun ) on why this **** HA gives so much problem to some, clearly your no one the 'unfortunates' - Kind Rgds.
The part where you say Useless is Exactly what I’m looking for. I’m going to install a Hue light switch module on an indoor switch that controls both my porch light and garage door sconces since I have them wire together at the switch. Looks like this will perfectly work for sunset On and sunrise Off control. It requires geographical location which it should. Sunset and Sunrise times are different every day and vary by longitude and latitude. Thanks for your “Useless” commentary
😀 Great that you live in a part of the world where sunrise and sunset work perfectly. Here in Finland it’s already that time of year where sunset is at 10pm. Soon it doesn’t even get dark. The street lights (controlled by light sensors) don’t turn on at all overnight soon ☀️ So for me I have realised that light sensors (like the city infrastructure uses) would be the go. Thanks for your comment. I’m always keen to hear if anything in one of my videos helps one way or another. Happy tinkering.
@@PaulWarrenEaton Ok, thanks! Im going to use raw linseed oil for a new wood playground skyfort2 this week. The parts came from China and the quality is bad. the wood is severely dehydrated and some pieces are cracking a bit. Hopefully linseed oil helps to preserve it better.
@@PaulWarrenEaton Quick question. Im going to use the raw linseed oil outside and Im going to dry playground parts outside in my backyard. Do you think its Ok? No rain in sight, we're in drought.
I have a mix of both older hue and new hue bulbs. The older hue bulbs won't take the new firmware. Even though you can select it in the app settings, for the older bulbs, it will not allow “Power on State”. I'll have to relocate those bulbs out of my bedroom.
it is not a good idea to insulate with such insulation from the inside, because moisture from the room will pass through the reeds and stop in the concrete wall, and the insulation may be wet
Please do share if you have any extra info. However this is based on principles that have existed long before modern insulation techniques. The clay actually draws moisture out of the concrete. On the other side of the wall there is also correct drainage.
Great video! exactly someting i am looking for to add to my temp sensors from Tuya. still some yaml code error i need to figure out, but i'll figure it out (i hope)
My slow reply but I’ll post it anyway. The paper makes the whole wall air tight. Making the structure airtight with paper can still let vapour in the air pass through but it helps keep the heat in or cold out. The wool and paper together really do make things warmer. Plastic is a vapour barrier. I want the walls to ‘breathe’. Air tight but not blocking vapour. I prefer not to live inside a plastic bag 🤣
hey there and thx for your great tutorial - but i got a problem....dont know why... i want to generate an offset for a govee humidity sensor....but always an error pops up: template: - sensor: - name: "Govee_with_Offset“ unit_of_measurement: "°C" state:> {% set govee = states('sensor.h5179_f058_humidity') | float %} {% set offset = states('sensor.goveeoffsethumidity') | float %} {{ (govee*offset)}} Error is: "can not read a block mapping entry; a multiline key may not be an implicit key" I created the template sensor "Govee_with_Offset" and another one "GoveeOffsetHumidity" The entity card I created isnt changable too - I have to set a Conditiontemplate and when I imput "1" there is stand 1% ?! Sorry for dumb question but this is my first time doing this :-9 Maybe you can help me here...
Best to overkill than under kill & collapses . I'm not sure if you screwed or bolted the top & bottom steel plates of the prop so it doesn't accidentally move.