When you do finally get offered a TV show. Do not compromise on your style or most importantly the director's (Jordan) ideas and the master's (Paul) way to teach. Man how you both have grown in your RUclips skills from day 1 video. Also please remember me for an on-set all-access pass.
I started plumbing in a small town in west Texas and every dishwasher I ever did was hard wired. I never saw a switch for one until my house in Austin and never out a cord on one until working in Austin. On the trim cutting, I was just waiting to see the actual mitre box come out. In first year shop class in high school, the only project they make everyone do is the first one. After that you choose your own projects. They made us make a book shelf out of 3 boards. It’s basically a 2’ board flat, a 12” board up on one side and a 2” board out the bottom on the other side to make it lean. We had to make the whole thing with hand tools. The teach only bought raw wood so he did use the planer and table saw to make one long board for us. We cut every board with a mitre box and back saw and drilled our dowel holes with a bit and brace. Even on bigger projects in later classes he kept it very limited to hand tools. We cleaned glue ups with a spoke shave, drove screws with either a screw driver or push drill (yanked screwdriver as we called it). It’s good to learn those ways but 3 years of it didn’t make sense because if it’s supposed to be somewhat vocational, no one is going to use hand tools
Love the show guys! Reminds me of working with my dad. The quality, positivity, and full family togetherness shine through. 🙏 for your continued success and future videos. Also I really enjoy how you show every little detail, the step by step and include the knowledge + tips you've learned over your years. Real top notch guys! 👍
The toe kick saw is freaking awesome .I have never even heard of that .Love learning new things about what I do for a living , always learning something new.God bless you guys.
Been watching for several months now and have to say just watching how you and Jordan work and the tips and tricks along the way has been a tremendous help in my own DIY home renovation. This series is especially going to be helpful as it seems like it's not just going to be a remove and replace type of project to save some money, which my wife and I are all about. Thanks for all the videos and for helping hundreds of thousands of folks with their own projects.
I sure enjoy your videos. I’m a retired plumber and am always looking for tips and tricks! Your a very skilled tradesman. Keep up the good work! Always looking forward to watching your great videos! A great camera Man too!
Looks like Stud Pack is expanding to the Pacific NW! Hope your soon to be son in law and daughter enjoy all the work you guys are doing. Good family goes a long way!
Go get some jingle bells on clearance and tie them in clusters to hang on shelf corners and things, so when you get up and your head hits them, you know to look up lol. Great episode. I have a daughter in Birch Bay. I know the area! 😀
If you’re screwing into plastic and the hole has been drilled too big or stripped, I use a zip tie and put my screw back in and snip the end off flush. Great video guys. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I am thrilled to see you remove a range hood and backsplash laminate, which are the DIY projects that await me in my 2nd hand 35 yr old home. I'm eager to see you repair the damaged dry wall behind the laminate. Let's do it!!
WOW this little "toe kick" saw is amazing! I had to do similar project myself and i just used a buzz saw with the blade at an angle. It took a long time but it worked, but this little saw i will have to remember! Thats awesome!!
Great Job, Daughter and soon to be son-in-law must be super pleased with the work. Question, I thought you would prep and paint the walls before working on the floor? Love your show.
As a diy-er loving your channel. As a professional videographer I'm glad to see you are using a lavalier mic on Paul. My sugestion is, for a cleaner look, clip that mic to the neck of the shirt and hide that wire. Gets it out of Paul's way and moves the mic closer to the source i.e. his mouth. No worries about what direction the mic faces; its omni directional pick up pattern.
Toe kick saws are dangerous AF. Flooring installer for 27 years. I owned a few different types and none touch a simple oscillating saw. It takes longer but is safe as can be. Great series. Congrats on the family's addition of a SIL.
Awesome videos! You guys are pros. Only note; never lift a stove by the handle. We've broken the handle too many times on the job than I'd like to admit lol!
That toe kick saw might have been better than the hand saw. Made my day to see a new Stud Pack video. Many hands make light work, and especially if they are family. Thanks for sharing more than tips and tricks. Thousands of us take great encouragement from your videos. My family is praying for your family. God bless you all. 🙏🏻
I love the show. Very professional audio and video. As good as broadcast but not ads. Excellent work Guys. I didn't know there was such a thing as a toe kick saw. Makes fast work of the task at hand.
I really hope we don't have to wait another week to see the next one! Great job corralling the forces. Sometimes when you are used to a 2-man team and you suddenly get a bunch of people; you can't come up with enough tasks for everyone. You can also feel an urge to do it yourself if you see someone struggling. It looks like you guys nailed the transition! I also see that Washington has a mouse problem...it looked like that mouse wasn't getting enough air. It was turning blue. Lol. Last part of this comment is actually a question. What type of flooring did you lay down? I tend to use a vinyl core flooring. It is a bit more pricy, but is 100% waterproof. So, it does not need a vapor barrier. Otherwise, great work as always! Love the vids guys!
I've been an electrician for over 45 years and wired over 2000 houses in 3 different states, I have always hard wired dishwashers and range hoods. When I lived in Florida there was only 1 county that you had to put a cord on a dishwasher and it was weird to us.
What fun you guys are having!! I usually try to go over everything and make a list, and check it twice, but Murphys law is that you always miss something or tools ! Anyway, if the fiancee can work as a go-fer for you and Jordan, then that saves you a lot of time!! Great video guys 👦!!!
pro-tip to another pro, side cutters work wonders for removing staples from the floor. :) Also, for stripped out holes in the door frames, studs, etc..., use a utility knife to shave off small slivers of a paint stir stick and jam them in the stripped out hole. :)
Awesome video to watch. Excited to see the transformation. Very nice to see your family team up with the dynamic duo.i know the home will look great. Take care guys.
Great video. Thanks! I had to pull up a floor a year or so ago that was being replaced by engineered hardwood. I figured I'd save money on demo and do that part myself. I wish I had that toe-kick saw! All the staples I had to pull were about 4 inches apart to maybe every 1 inch on the seams. Thousands of them! To pull the staples, I tried a hammer and a flat blade screwdriver which worked, but was slow. Regular pliers that slipped a lot. Diagonal cutters with a twisting motion. That worked, but a lot of the staple would get cut. Needle nose pliers. Forget it! Channellocks worked well, but it was hard to get a grip on some of the buried staples. I finally tried a short pair of Stanley end cutters that I had. They worked the best. Just grip the staple, rock the pliers and the staple came right out. I bought a pair of 9 inch Knipex 5001225 end cutters and they made the job a breeze. I went with them because of the large surface area. Totally worth the $20 investment.
Why the vapor barrier on a raised foundation? Can that lead to excess moisture build up like the house that you did a video about a year or so back, I think the preacher. If I recall correctly they had a vapor barrier that trapped moisture in under the flooring leading to rotting out the sub floor and joists.
When I was building in Washington, in the 70's, the normal procedure for finishing cabinets, door, trim, etc. was to have it delivered to your painter. The painter would finish everything and deliver it to the job site for delivery. Very little finishing was done at the job site.
Glad that you guys recorded the trip. I still think that in considering all the hustle that this proj. required, Jordan did a good job. All of us Packsters know what he can do, so .there's no grading here. Looking for the Next! And as always.. Another Smashing episode!
Thanks y00h00. This is definitely Old StudPack (8 months ago) but we felt we needed to put it out before it was too late! We’re proud of the outcome and can’t wait to show you the process!
Awesome awesome awesome channel love these father and son channels, very real world informative channel. My wife and I just purchased our first home in Texas ranch style 4 bed room 2 bath home. I did all the renovations myself from new flooring and interior paint. Now I’m looking to painting the exterior and possible attached car port. Looking for ideas for exterior.
Wish I knew about the toe kick saw about 20 years ago when redoing the kitchen flooring. I cut it all with a sawzall stuffed/angled under the toe kick. Then chisel and nibble off the particle board. what a disaster. Looks good though. Tile went over it.
That toe kick saw is awesome. not needed very often, but when you do..........worth every penny. I spent hours (all day TBH) last year cutting out a hardwood floor out of a 10x13 bathroom. (they turned a bedroom into a bathroom and left the wood floor??????) with a buzz saw. It works, but it chews up blades, tears hell out of the toe kick (thank goodness it was black, $10 worth of paint) and takes forever. I didn't even know such a thing existed as that toe kick saw. Super neat. Really enjoy the channel. Learn something every time.
Crane makes a larger one. You can under cut a brick hearth with the correct blade to install LVP , hardwood, or laminate under it. Makes it look nice and slick. I've done the wire trick with the stripped hinge hole with a tooth pick. Works well also.
The handsaw was a rip saw from what I could see. Bigger and aggressive teeth. Just like the table saw has ripping blades and crosscut blades... It applies to handsaws. To crosscut or cut off you need a fine tooth crosscut handsaw. Even us old guys are forgetting the old skills and tricks we already experienced.
We remodeled our kitchen last year and our dish washer was hard wired in too. The Romex was just coming up from a hole in the floor without any changes conduit! Part of the sheathing was already worn away where it was coming up from the basement. All fixed now!
Hey y’all, we are in south Louisiana and have to travel to Colorado all the time to help my daughter “ fix” things. She is looking to buy a townhouse this year so we will doing a lot of this stuff. Thanks for the help!
Can’t wait to see part two. I’m moving into a new home in Va and I’m using a lot of your videos for ideas on tile and finish work. On your way back, come by Fredericksburg.
My first home 30 minutes away from supplies, 2 1/2 hours from a big box store. It is a challenge for sure Ps Jordan only use three fingers to hold your saw. Pointer finger towards the blade like a safety weapon hold… use non dominant hand to guide gentle back cut with thumb. And as you begin sawing don’t press down 😎
I used the copper wire trick on my motorcycle head years back. Head was aluminum and the spark plugs threads stripped, couple strands of wire held that baby in snug. Nice trick when you’re on the go
Awesome progress on the renovation... you make the work look effortless! So I did what you said: Got the toekick saw out vapor barrier on the like 👍button, but I think I put a way too much duct tape on it, hope the next guy isn't too mad when they go to press it, don't worry, I wrote your name on the tape so he won't know it was me 😜 LOL. Cheers and Happy New Year 2022!!!
When you do finally get offered a TV show. Do not compromise on your style or most importantly the director's (Jordan) ideas and the master's (Paul) way to teach. Man how you both have grown in your RUclips skills from day 1 video. Also please remember me for an on-set all-access pass.
A gift to become part of a family that works together.
The origins of Rad!
Randomly watched this video and thought the same.
Love love love that y'all jumped right in to help your kids and that you have a brother to come to the rescue with some tools!! That's real family!!
I started plumbing in a small town in west Texas and every dishwasher I ever did was hard wired. I never saw a switch for one until my house in Austin and never out a cord on one until working in Austin. On the trim cutting, I was just waiting to see the actual mitre box come out. In first year shop class in high school, the only project they make everyone do is the first one. After that you choose your own projects. They made us make a book shelf out of 3 boards. It’s basically a 2’ board flat, a 12” board up on one side and a 2” board out the bottom on the other side to make it lean. We had to make the whole thing with hand tools. The teach only bought raw wood so he did use the planer and table saw to make one long board for us. We cut every board with a mitre box and back saw and drilled our dowel holes with a bit and brace. Even on bigger projects in later classes he kept it very limited to hand tools. We cleaned glue ups with a spoke shave, drove screws with either a screw driver or push drill (yanked screwdriver as we called it). It’s good to learn those ways but 3 years of it didn’t make sense because if it’s supposed to be somewhat vocational, no one is going to use hand tools
I punched the Like button so fast I may have damaged the drywall! Looking fwd to part 2 👍
This is exciting. A whole house in 9 days without your tools? This is a great idea for one of your series. Can't wait for flooring!
I MUST say that I LOVE the way you talk about the Like button at the end of each episode! Very creative!
Love the show guys! Reminds me of working with my dad. The quality, positivity, and full family togetherness shine through. 🙏 for your continued success and future videos. Also I really enjoy how you show every little detail, the step by step and include the knowledge + tips you've learned over your years. Real top notch guys! 👍
1
I always paint the ceilings - pretty amazing - typically one coat - I call it the $100 remod.
This. Channel. Is. LEGENDARY!!! Bravo guys. I'm addicted to watching these videos. So excited for this new reno series.
The toe kick saw is freaking awesome .I have never even heard of that .Love learning new things about what I do for a living , always learning something new.God bless you guys.
Don't use that toe kick saw. Its very dangerous. I know too many people that have been injured with that tool. It has a terrible kick back.
One of the best "smash that like button" requests I've heard! Love the channel!
I would love to see you guys buy a fixer-upper yourselves and do a remodel series on it.
Hopefully not too many people see this Trevor but… we’re working on that 👀
Been watching for several months now and have to say just watching how you and Jordan work and the tips and tricks along the way has been a tremendous help in my own DIY home renovation. This series is especially going to be helpful as it seems like it's not just going to be a remove and replace type of project to save some money, which my wife and I are all about. Thanks for all the videos and for helping hundreds of thousands of folks with their own projects.
I learned something new. Thanks for showing us the toe kick saw. That's what under my stove looked like.
I sure enjoy your videos. I’m a retired plumber and am always looking for tips and tricks! Your a very skilled tradesman. Keep up the good work! Always looking forward to watching your great videos! A great camera Man too!
I'm always amazed at how many pigtails I wind up putting in my renos :D
Looks like Stud Pack is expanding to the Pacific NW! Hope your soon to be son in law and daughter enjoy all the work you guys are doing. Good family goes a long way!
Our family lives in Seattle and every home I have been in there has unpainted trim. Yuck 🤮
It's son-in-law, although I got a chuckle out of son and law.
@@daxmas625 I’m a professional painter in PNW and that’s not the case in all the homes.
On those stripped out cabinet door screws I use toothpicks and a little wood glue, works great.
Paul mentioned that option.
Wish I could watch a new episode daily , best remodel channel on RUclips
Hard wired dishwasher is not required code in Washington. All of my houses have always had a dishwasher that plugs into to a receptacle.
The NEC permits hard-wired dishwashers and range hoods. Most local codes don't overrule this. It's just an inconvenient setup, that's all.
Go get some jingle bells on clearance and tie them in clusters to hang on shelf corners and things, so when you get up and your head hits them, you know to look up lol. Great episode. I have a daughter in Birch Bay. I know the area! 😀
If you’re screwing into plastic and the hole has been drilled too big or stripped, I use a zip tie and put my screw back in and snip the end off flush. Great video guys. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
OMG YEEEEESSSSSSS Channel locks are my favorite tool for removing staples!!! Works so well
I am thrilled to see you remove a range hood and backsplash laminate, which are the DIY projects that await me in my 2nd hand 35 yr old home. I'm eager to see you repair the damaged dry wall behind the laminate. Let's do it!!
Aw, Jordan making sure Pops doesn’t bang his back on the closet hardware. ❤️ he’s literally got your back
WOW this little "toe kick" saw is amazing! I had to do similar project myself and i just used a buzz saw with the blade at an angle. It took a long time but it worked, but this little saw i will have to remember! Thats awesome!!
Pops, you're very energetic. You should try watching these videos at 1.5 speed like I do...I get tired just watching. Love that Toe-kick saw.
You’re a good man helping out across country like that.
I'm glad to know about that toe kick flooring saw. The big team was shaking and baking!
Great Job, Daughter and soon to be son-in-law must be super pleased with the work. Question, I thought you would prep and paint the walls before working on the floor? Love your show.
As a diy-er loving your channel. As a professional videographer I'm glad to see you are using a lavalier mic on Paul. My sugestion is, for a cleaner look, clip that mic to the neck of the shirt and hide that wire. Gets it out of Paul's way and moves the mic closer to the source i.e. his mouth. No worries about what direction the mic faces; its omni directional pick up pattern.
Toe kick saws are dangerous AF. Flooring installer for 27 years. I owned a few different types and none touch a simple oscillating saw. It takes longer but is safe as can be. Great series. Congrats on the family's addition of a SIL.
Awesome videos! You guys are pros. Only note; never lift a stove by the handle. We've broken the handle too many times on the job than I'd like to admit lol!
That toe kick saw might have been better than the hand saw. Made my day to see a new Stud Pack video. Many hands make light work, and especially if they are family. Thanks for sharing more than tips and tricks. Thousands of us take great encouragement from your videos. My family is praying for your family. God bless you all. 🙏🏻
Much appreciated Norm thx 👍👊
That toe-kick saw is great, just remember to adjust the depth of cut to avoid the concrete ! I think you can buy a cordless version of this saw !
I love the show. Very professional audio and video. As good as broadcast but not ads. Excellent work Guys. I didn't know there was such a thing as a toe kick saw. Makes fast work of the task at hand.
So much progress when you have a plan .. And when you know what youre doing .
Great Video Gents .
I like the flush cut toe kick do the hokey pokey saw. One will be a welcome addition to my tool arsenal.
Awesome guys. Always look forward to seeing/watching your next video..
I really hope we don't have to wait another week to see the next one! Great job corralling the forces. Sometimes when you are used to a 2-man team and you suddenly get a bunch of people; you can't come up with enough tasks for everyone. You can also feel an urge to do it yourself if you see someone struggling. It looks like you guys nailed the transition!
I also see that Washington has a mouse problem...it looked like that mouse wasn't getting enough air. It was turning blue. Lol.
Last part of this comment is actually a question. What type of flooring did you lay down? I tend to use a vinyl core flooring. It is a bit more pricy, but is 100% waterproof. So, it does not need a vapor barrier.
Otherwise, great work as always! Love the vids guys!
😂Mouse wasn’t getting enough air!!! Cuz all the appliances were hard wired! Yea, that’s it 😀🤣
to plug old holes.... Make sure you have a bag of golf tees. They work great to pound in old holes and break off.
This is one of your very best videos. I am with you on the old school saw. I guess you don’t miss anything that hasn’t been invented yet.
Flooring installer here. Just watching for the floors
That craine toe saw looks nice.
Great video. Never used a toe kick saw, but now I want one in my arsenal.
Thank You guys! Your video will make Thursday a great day!! Keep up the good work!
I've been an electrician for over 45 years and wired over 2000 houses in 3 different states, I have always hard wired dishwashers and range hoods. When I lived in Florida there was only 1 county that you had to put a cord on a dishwasher and it was weird to us.
Awesome work, like to see you two helping family.
Best channel on RUclips right here must be awesome working with your dad.
Another great video! Quick and simple. Nothing fancy. Reminds me of watching "This old House" back in the day.
What fun you guys are having!! I usually try to go over everything and make a list, and check it twice, but Murphys law is that you always miss something or tools ! Anyway, if the fiancee can work as a go-fer for you and Jordan, then that saves you a lot of time!! Great video guys 👦!!!
Love when y’all tackle new machines.
I would pull the cabinets and put them back. I would only use the tow kick saw if no other option works.
pro-tip to another pro, side cutters work wonders for removing staples from the floor. :)
Also, for stripped out holes in the door frames, studs, etc..., use a utility knife to shave off small slivers of a paint stir stick and jam them in the stripped out hole. :)
Welcome to the Pacific Northwest! Hope guys guys had/have an absolutely fantastic time.
I love that you are so positive and encouraging
16:03 yeah you really got to talk with that girl 😂
Awesome video to watch. Excited to see the transformation. Very nice to see your family team up with the dynamic duo.i know the home will look great. Take care guys.
Great video. Thanks! I had to pull up a floor a year or so ago that was being replaced by engineered hardwood. I figured I'd save money on demo and do that part myself. I wish I had that toe-kick saw! All the staples I had to pull were about 4 inches apart to maybe every 1 inch on the seams. Thousands of them! To pull the staples, I tried a hammer and a flat blade screwdriver which worked, but was slow. Regular pliers that slipped a lot. Diagonal cutters with a twisting motion. That worked, but a lot of the staple would get cut. Needle nose pliers. Forget it! Channellocks worked well, but it was hard to get a grip on some of the buried staples. I finally tried a short pair of Stanley end cutters that I had. They worked the best. Just grip the staple, rock the pliers and the staple came right out. I bought a pair of 9 inch Knipex 5001225 end cutters and they made the job a breeze. I went with them because of the large surface area. Totally worth the $20 investment.
I keep a handful of wooden golf tees to use for stripped out screw holes. Works perfect.
Liked that taped the vap barrier, and that toe kick saw, EPYC Tool👍🏻
Yes!!! A new project!! You guys made my day
Thats awesome that you guys are helping them with the house, that's what family is all about
Why the vapor barrier on a raised foundation? Can that lead to excess moisture build up like the house that you did a video about a year or so back, I think the preacher. If I recall correctly they had a vapor barrier that trapped moisture in under the flooring leading to rotting out the sub floor and joists.
Great question. 2 different climates (Louisiana vs Washington) and one had ventilation and one did not.
Welcome to Washington, hope you guys enjoy your time here.
When I was building in Washington, in the 70's, the normal procedure for finishing cabinets, door, trim, etc. was to have it delivered to your painter. The painter would finish everything and deliver it to the job site for delivery. Very little finishing was done at the job site.
Waving to you from across the border near White Rock Canada.
Glad that you guys recorded the trip. I still think that in considering all the hustle that this proj. required, Jordan did a good job. All of us Packsters know what he can do, so .there's no grading here. Looking for the Next! And as always.. Another Smashing episode!
Thanks y00h00. This is definitely Old StudPack (8 months ago) but we felt we needed to put it out before it was too late! We’re proud of the outcome and can’t wait to show you the process!
Awesome awesome awesome channel love these father and son channels, very real world informative channel. My wife and I just purchased our first home in Texas ranch style 4 bed room 2 bath home. I did all the renovations myself from new flooring and interior paint. Now I’m looking to painting the exterior and possible attached car port. Looking for ideas for exterior.
So cool seeing the differences in construction types between regions. And now I get to see how a house like mine is done! I'm near Seattle myself.
use 45deg gooseneck needle for those staples! Way easier than channel locks!
For my info, what is your reasoning for not removing all old flooring and then paint and then put down the floor after painting? Great videos.
Can't wait to see this project evolve from start to finish.
Wish I knew about the toe kick saw about 20 years ago when redoing the kitchen flooring. I cut it all with a sawzall stuffed/angled under the toe kick. Then chisel and nibble off the particle board. what a disaster. Looks good though. Tile went over it.
That toe kick saw is awesome. not needed very often, but when you do..........worth every penny. I spent hours (all day TBH) last year cutting out a hardwood floor out of a 10x13 bathroom. (they turned a bedroom into a bathroom and left the wood floor??????) with a buzz saw. It works, but it chews up blades, tears hell out of the toe kick (thank goodness it was black, $10 worth of paint) and takes forever. I didn't even know such a thing existed as that toe kick saw. Super neat.
Really enjoy the channel. Learn something every time.
Cool thx Brian 👊👍
Crane makes a larger one. You can under cut a brick hearth with the correct blade to install LVP , hardwood, or laminate under it. Makes it look nice and slick. I've done the wire trick with the stripped hinge hole with a tooth pick. Works well also.
Happy new year, guys. This video gives me something to watch isolating with covid 😂
Happy New Jack! Get better soon buddy 💪🏼
The handsaw was a rip saw from what I could see. Bigger and aggressive teeth. Just like the table saw has ripping blades and crosscut blades... It applies to handsaws. To crosscut or cut off you need a fine tooth crosscut handsaw. Even us old guys are forgetting the old skills and tricks we already experienced.
I think Paul did it on purpose to mess with his son.
We remodeled our kitchen last year and our dish washer was hard wired in too. The Romex was just coming up from a hole in the floor without any changes conduit! Part of the sheathing was already worn away where it was coming up from the basement. All fixed now!
Thats how dishwashers were done up until about 10 years ago.
@@mph5896 I saw that and just shook my head. Talk about a fire hazard
Recommend a finer tooth saw for trim work.
Hey y’all, we are in south Louisiana and have to travel to Colorado all the time to help my daughter “ fix” things. She is looking to buy a townhouse this year so we will doing a lot of this stuff. Thanks for the help!
You’re welcome neighbor 👊👍🦞⚜️
I wish I had a dad as awesome as you
Had a couple Crain flooring tools back in the day. The undercut saw was pretty scary
Can’t wait to see part two. I’m moving into a new home in Va and I’m using a lot of your videos for ideas on tile and finish work. On your way back, come by Fredericksburg.
Thx Doug 👍. One of my brothers used to live there. Cool place👊
Wow, the Bay Crest hood put on the map by the stud pack!
Great content guys. Redesigning is something we deal with everyday and you hit a lot of these points right on the head!
Father and Son some quality time ⏲ is
Priceless 🙏 God Bless
Lot to do in such a short time. I hope you be ready in time.
Keep up the good work. Greating from the Netherlands and a Happy New Year.
So excited to see this series. I remember y'all talking about it and I always wondered if we'd get to see the videos from the trip.
toe kick saw! why have i never heard of this?? great video as usual.
Wow! Nice back-yard neighbors! Great video -- rough not having all your tools... Thanks!
Hi guys love the show keep doing what you’re doing thank you 🙏 from Australia 🇦🇺
Tow kick saw are amazing just a little dangerous at times
My first home 30 minutes away from supplies, 2 1/2 hours from a big box store. It is a challenge for sure
Ps Jordan only use three fingers to hold your saw. Pointer finger towards the blade like a safety weapon hold… use non dominant hand to guide gentle back cut with thumb. And as you begin sawing don’t press down 😎
Awesome job, neatly done guys. Your daughter is proud of you am sure.✔
I've used the plastic line from a string trimmer in the past to deal with a stripped out hole or too large holes. .
I used the copper wire trick on my motorcycle head years back. Head was aluminum and the spark plugs threads stripped, couple strands of wire held that baby in snug. Nice trick when you’re on the go
Steel wool works too
Awesome progress on the renovation... you make the work look effortless! So I did what you said: Got the toekick saw out vapor barrier on the like 👍button, but I think I put a way too much duct tape on it, hope the next guy isn't too mad when they go to press it, don't worry, I wrote your name on the tape so he won't know it was me 😜 LOL. Cheers and Happy New Year 2022!!!
Been looking forward to this series!