See also
- gems@1169
- my blogpost on ERE author’s homesteading experience
- [17] DIY home improvement for strata-leasing]U.S.
Some things you can throw away and buy new. Some of the rich may do that, either by choice or by laziness. There are pros and cons:
^ investigate/research, then repair is a practical skill. If you are rich you are often perceived as unskilled at some of these things.
^ moving + installing the new piece can be expensive and time-consuming
^ fixing things can be enriching and a learning experience
^ some issues are really easy to fix. So perhaps do some basic research first. Careless disposal is unwise and wasteful.
▼ can take up too much time in many cases. For example, A broken window-grille — the repair tcost is inevitable , DIY is usually higher tcost.
— protection of livelihood: DIY experience can significantly reduce panic and the ensuing stress… cf nonswimmers on a /dugout canoe/
- Some professional repairs are expensive
- Some professional repairs do not strengthen the weak points as I could in DIY to push out the next failure
- DIY repair can give you insight for the next purchase or installation
— home improvement achievements
- vertical monitor no longer sliding down
- stand`desk retractable handle fixes
- good usage of black+whiteboard
- —-
ForgotMyPhone! hook+charger @exit
- #1169 Cockpit1 joining two tables at the same height, creating a virtualized large table for boy
- [t]#1169 turned washing machine 90 degrees to make room in the tight cockpit4
- [$t]
#1169 Cockpit4 power sockets
- [t] #1169 gate lower bolt lubricated and unstuck, after prev owner said it was forever stuck.
- [$] #1169 bathroom ceiling LED too bright at night … costly to replace
- [ist] power extension bar from China — The grip inside the socket was too loose … poor contact
- [ist] secured the failing edges and corners of the lie-down shelf-cum-table from Ikea, to extend its lifetime.
- [is] bolster .. too thin..
- legacy padlock
- [$] stand`desk retractable handle fixes
- [st] boy’s bed .. strengthened backplane (wrong English) with additional wood planks
- —— minor achievements beyond G10
- [$] vivoY02 power button sensitivity improved with knife cuts
- #1169 room 1 door peg was screwed on slanted. Reason? There had been a broken screw stuck-in so the previous handyman had to screw into lower spot. I took the initiative to screw right beside the stuck screw.
- charging “station” for L399 .. boy’s suggestion
noise-reducing chair socks
- [$s] glued the “D” key on Aspire without paying the shop
- [is] meimei’s L-tabletop has a small drawer underneath. Its protruding corner often hit my back when I work under the table. I tried various corner cushions until I found the thick sealing tape.
- [$] fridge big box
- water gun at #1169… I didn’t spiral down into the “involution habit” [shopping for cheapest hose.. sealing both ends of the hose 100% water-tight… experimenting/fixing the unreliable lever-switch…] Instead, I used the (non-standard) existing hose, accepted the lever-switch + occasional leak. What’s the cut of Gordian Knot ? I hard-block the water most of the time and “unblock” only when needed, like once a month, so all the problems are “reduced” to trivial.
- [is] kitchen sliding door. quick-n-dirty: Contractor used a screw to maintain positions of the two frames (wrong English?), but over the years the screw had dented the other frame on the edge, and therefore become less effective….
- handphone finger hook secured
[is] the single glass shelf below bathroom mirror — left-shifted to make way for boy’s toothbrush
- [hs] punchbag — I spent many hours locating and drilling 4 holes, without damaging the tile. The set-up is fairly durable so far. I also taped up the tears and the zipper.
- [i] desk below the printer used to have a shelf that was in-the-way when I sit down with a laptop. Now I removed the shelf
- [$is] bolt on main door is now usable after I shifted the “strike-plate” .. high value/effort ratio
- [hs] ceiling fan remote: secured at low spot
- [is] sliding windows .. need to fully close for aircon but there was always a gap on the each extreme end…
- [$] wiring cabinet for optical modem, wifi router
[is] the single glass shelf below bathroom mirror — left-shifted to make way for boy’s toothbrush
- meter rooms -> wall-mounted hooks to make use of vertical space
- kitchen built-in cabinet -> drawer
[i] Ikea long picture holder facing room2 was tilting down… managed to /wedge/ a screw to prop it up again.
- [$i] sofa removable /upholstery/ .. kids tend to kick or push them, so the zipper were weakened and broken. I spent hours nailing them down, without leaving a nail head protruding.
- [is] one big hook in storeroom to hold all my wires
- [is] brown shoe cabinet shelf pieces warped under pressure, became too short and unstable. I added longer pegs to hold them in place.
- laundry line outside .. strengthened with wire
- [$] piano heater power plug .. broken by boy. Repaired
- [i] shaft below water meter .. I got TownCouncil to replace it.
- [is] suction lamp cable too short .. extended
- [s] put on a thick black “condom” over brass door stopper of the flip-up type
- [h] 3-piece picture — put up without drilling new holes. I did deepen some existing holes.
- — unranked new items
- —-
- [h=one of the harder jobs]
- [s=simplicity]
- [i=scratching a big itch(such as an persistent annoyance), satisfying]
- [t=time-honored]
- [$=high monetary value]
- [
= innovative ]