I love everything that you've got on your Channel from the packout mods to what you're doing right now, and this is the very first time I am making a suggestion that you did not cover in your video. I have used walabot for about seven years, and I am very happy to see that you are using the wireless version that I recently got for my tool kit. The one thing that you did not cover, which is very critical for people that are watching this, is that studs not only run vertically, but they also run horizontally and your ability to put a cable down a vertical direction from top to bottom is directly related to whether or not there are horizontal cross beams that interconnect to the vertical ones. This is everyone's nightmare, myself included. You may want to add a supplement at the end explaining that the walabot can be utilized to determine whether or not there are horizontal cross beams or studs, and to make sure that you checked for this before you open the wall. In many of the installations that we do, different Builders have different standards that they follow. In the most recent cases, we've had to Notch into the horizontal stud in order to get cable down. It's no fun, and the alternatives are extremely difficult to envision.. Using the walabot has been tremendously helpful and goes beyond what a normal stud detector would be able to show you since it is only looking for the metal within the stud and the magnet on the stud detector would register this. I hope everyone takes this as nothing more than an observation of what other things you might encounter out there and I have to give mad props to Jake for everything that he puts out there and I became a fan when we started outfitting all of our technicians with Milwaukee boxes.
I love everything that you've got on your Channel from the packout mods to what you're doing right now, and this is the very first time I am making a suggestion that you did not cover in your video. I have used walabot for about seven years, and I am very happy to see that you are using the wireless version that I recently got for my tool kit. The one thing that you did not cover, which is very critical for people that are watching this, is that studs not only run vertically, but they also run horizontally and your ability to put a cable down a vertical direction from top to bottom is directly related to whether or not there are horizontal cross beams that interconnect to the vertical ones. This is everyone's nightmare, myself included. You may want to add a supplement at the end explaining that the walabot can be utilized to determine whether or not there are horizontal cross beams or studs, and to make sure that you checked for this before you open the wall. In many of the installations that we do, different Builders have different standards that they follow. In the most recent cases, we've had to Notch into the horizontal stud in order to get cable down. It's no fun, and the alternatives are extremely difficult to envision.. Using the walabot has been tremendously helpful and goes beyond what a normal stud detector would be able to show you since it is only looking for the metal within the stud and the magnet on the stud detector would register this. I hope everyone takes this as nothing more than an observation of what other things you might encounter out there and I have to give mad props to Jake for everything that he puts out there and I became a fan when we started outfitting all of our technicians with Milwaukee boxes.
nice!
😎⚒️😎⚒️😎
So u def not a electrician 😂😂
Lol
First