TSO Products said:
[member=26457]Cochese[/member] - what an inspiring thread! Shows what is possible on a modest scale, one step at a time.
Perhaps some members, considering a similar project, would be interested in knowing the budget.
I've bookmarked it to see it as you finish it.
Great post!
Hans
I wish you hadn't asked me about the budget. I was doing extremely well keeping track of everything right up until the Hurricane weekend. Went from just under $900 spent to over $1700 spent, best I can figure. Now that things are settled down I can keep better track. Still a number of huge expenses coming up, like putting down a decent looking floor, roofing, insulation, interior and exterior walls, etc. I'm guessing I'll end up spending somewhere in the 4-5k range, which is still quite a bit cheaper than I would have gotten by buying.
Cheese said:
Cochese said:
Windows, door locks, and starting my power runs.
While watching football no less... [thumbs up]
First off...nice job! It's coming together bit by bit. [big grin] Looking good.
Some questions:
Did you give up on buried electrical?
I assume you'll also run some electrical in the attic?
Do those doors flex or are they pretty stiff? Do they stay coplanar across the door opening?
Will there be some form of weather stripping on the doors? Both door-to-door and door-to-floor?
I didn't know those Hubbell power inlets were even available. Had I known, I wouldn't have needed to fabricate these. [eek]
Buried electrical was never really in the cards. That adds the expense of having it run and hooked up, plus surveying for a permanent foundation, and then if you've spent that much you might as well spend more to expand it. $15k wasn't really something I wanted to put in this house. Not after an $8k window bill.
I'll probably do one run of electrical up in the attic to handle the dust extractor, air compressor, a light, and maybe a spare outlet to sharpen tools with the grinder. Haven't decided on that last part yet.
The doors turned out better than I expected. The composite siding is pretty stiff, and using the Dominos I assume helped as well. I still need to do some minor sanding with the belt to keep things from sticking in one spot. Very happy thus far, and there will be some sort of weatherstripping. Will just depend on what I need out of it. There will also be some rigid foam and something on the back to allow for some light storage.
Suicide cables? Braver than I am. These are some Journeyman Pro jobs I got off of Amazon and used the Hubbell housing and deep metal box.