My channel is about homemade products, about design and repair in the house. We make our own hands, fix our car, build on a suburban area, conduct tests, analyze. Everything about construction and repair, useful tips, articles, analytics. #do_it_yourself #building #home_renovation #car_service #homemade #advice #DIY #CleverBill_DIY
It is not permissible to glue drywall to damp walls. Also, it is not practical to glue drywall indoors to external walls; here it would be better to install the sheets on a metal frame.
I don't usually comment on videos that have helped me, but I have to give you a HUGE THANK YOU!!! I used this T15 torx to remove a damaged schrader valve from my car's air conditioner line. This work perfectly. Thank you again.....
I have had to recommend a few sensors due to this issue and I always feel bad because of how much it cost for a simple issue. Thank you for taking the time to figure this out, I will try it out next time instead of hurting someone’s pockets :)
a water reducer is in simply terms a quick closing valve. it will surely protect from the high pressure surges that are in the main pipe, in front of the regulator (since his main job is to reduce the pressure downstream) but it will also create or amplify/contain the water hammer blows in the pipes after him. i actually read in some instruction of such device that the installer have to provide a way to prevent this phenomenon when installing their product (by installing a small pressure vessel after it (a 2 litter one or something small that will deal with the increasing pressure from quick closing valves inside the house or the quick closing of the regulator). when the length of pipe after the reducer is not very short, the phenomenon is not very visible, the pipe is absorbing this blows, but i personally experimented this by mounting under a sink a pressure reducer, and 2 glass filters. since the length of pipe was very short, rapidly closing the sink valve will create a water hammer effect that will be contain by the pressure reducer in that short length of pipe (the reducer will close since the pressure after him will be greatly over the set one). the victim of this behavior (even though i knew this) was one glass of the filter. twice). then i installed a 8 litter pressure vessel (exaggeration but didn't find a smaller one or a water hammer protector in my area) and everything is ok now. sooner or later, if u don't have something weaker to break, and is just pipe, ... the pipe will break, or the joints, or the flexible hoses of the valve, something will brake from those blows.
To minimize the load on the gearbox and other plumbing fixtures and fittings from water hammer, there is a special device called a water hammer damper.
Here only at your own peril and risk, since the tiles are very heavy! If the walls have normal adhesion to the glue, then the sheet of drywall itself is held on to the glue quite firmly and cannot be torn off by hand. But if it is a damp room, then the glue may come off the walls.
This is brilliant. This can be diy built with furniture struts or even cable wire anchored to the back wall and attached to the clothes rod. The length of the cable determines how far the rod will lower
The water entering the room is not always ideal; mechanical impurities contained in it can do a bad job. A mesh filter for mechanical water purification can protect and extend the service life of plumbing equipment and household appliances.
I wished you had mentioned how pressure reducers can Create a Closed Loop system, and possibly having an adverse effect on water heater pop off valves without installing an expansion tank?
I honestly don't understand why you don't have more subscribers. The level of research put into these videos is sooooo good. I just wish you would also put a list of recommended brands for each appliances at the end of the video or in the description box or something but all in all, you're doing amazingly. I really appreciate it!
Sir can you able to send me any of your drill machine that is not useful for you now I will be so thankful for your help 😢 Please any drill machine your choice 🙏
I've worked on tires, and this is something I'm going to try in the future. The issue I see is that when the core breaks it's usually due to corrosion locking the valve core into the valve stem, and when you crank on the tool, the core snaps. This corrosion also weakens the valve stem itself, so be careful when using the torque head tool you don't flex the stem or it can snap (I've seen people snap them putting air in their tires.). but as I would be recommending to the customer to replace the TPMS stem (if possible not all sensors have a separate valve stem from the body of the sensor) /sensor anyway, I'd give it a try and if it A: didn't work due to corrosion locking the broken core into the stem, or B: flexing and snapping the valve stem then I'd be replacing the part anyway. I will definitely have to give this a try in the future.