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Bioshuffle posted:I keep wanting to do my own Halloween projects, but with all the essential stuff I have to finish up, I'll probably end up caving in and getting everything from the dollar store. First coat you always want to use appropriate primer. I should have just bought cheap interior primer, it's not like this stuff is going to be up more than 30 days a year. I'm not a smart person.
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# ? Oct 7, 2020 22:22 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 07:26 |
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Some Guy From NY posted:I had my cabinets painted this past July by CertaPro. I got 3 estimates; the other 2 from local companies, and all were in the low $5k range. We hired Certa Pro to paint ONE room in my house. Our living room. It is about 300-400 sq ft but has a vaulted ceiling that was hard for us to get to. They charged $2k (less than the local companies quoted) and ended up sending 1 random guy. A contractor not officially employed by CP. He took 5 days to do it. Five. And the job was poo poo. But the first day he started... our baby decided to come 2 weeks early so I didn't have it in me to deal with it or even talk to CP. Wish I would have asked for a refund on second thought.
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# ? Oct 7, 2020 22:40 |
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well i put a few 75w 2700s in places and a pair of 100ws above my game table and they're a bit better ...then i found out my ceiling fan glass won't go over a standard A19 shape bulb and it only accomodates CFLs who the gently caress does that edit: i guess i could pop the plastic globes off the LED bulbs? they're just for show anyway Deviant fucked around with this message at 01:05 on Oct 8, 2020 |
# ? Oct 8, 2020 01:03 |
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Deviant posted:well i put a few 75w 2700s in places and a pair of 100ws above my game table and they're a bit better I had this problem swapping out regular incandescent bulbs with LEDs. I wound up just buying a bunch of similar ones and trying them until I found one that fit. I'm dreading replacing it.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 02:09 |
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H110Hawk posted:I had this problem swapping out regular incandescent bulbs with LEDs. I wound up just buying a bunch of similar ones and trying them until I found one that fit. I'm dreading replacing it. Really? Maybe an incandescent would fit, not that i'm going to try but I thought incandescents and LEDs were both A19 shape. It had curly CFLs in there before and those are the goddamn worst so out they go. Edit: i guess they're a tiny bit bigger? They're definitely bigger than CFLs
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 02:12 |
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Deviant posted:Really? Maybe an incandescent would fit, not that i'm going to try but I thought incandescents and LEDs were both A19 shape. It had curly CFLs in there before and those are the goddamn worst so out they go. That picture is basically exactly my problem with the light in my hallway. It's a hair longer from tip to base and the glass globe doesn't fit because the bulb bottoms out on it. Bought 4 different ones from home depot and took the bag up on the ladder with me, one fit, returned the rest (or put them elsewhere.) As you said, you can literally just file off the plastic to make it flat if you're off by a mm or two.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 02:19 |
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H110Hawk posted:That picture is basically exactly my problem with the light in my hallway. It's a hair longer from tip to base and the glass globe doesn't fit because the bulb bottoms out on it. Bought 4 different ones from home depot and took the bag up on the ladder with me, one fit, returned the rest (or put them elsewhere.) As you said, you can literally just file off the plastic to make it flat if you're off by a mm or two. in my case i'm off by more than a mm
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 02:22 |
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Deviant posted:in my case i'm off by more than a mm You might try one of those dedicated lightbulb websites, looking at the different shapes they sell. Someone might make just what you need. Or suck it up and use a CFL you have to replace every few years. They have gotten better at hard starts.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 02:26 |
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H110Hawk posted:You might try one of those dedicated lightbulb websites, looking at the different shapes they sell. Someone might make just what you need. Or suck it up and use a CFL you have to replace every few years. They have gotten better at hard starts. I mean, the fans are getting replaced, so i'll just get some that are a19 compatible.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 02:58 |
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The diffuser on the LED bulb is just a bit of plastic, you could hack off the end if you wanted. Might cause a bright spot depending on your luminaire though.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 03:50 |
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I was doing the ikea kitchen planner for a frameless cabinet design, this seems weird to me but maybe it's normal. I have framed cabinets, and on one side the counter top is 9' long. From left to right the cabinet widths are 21" for the left cabinet, then 39" for the under the sink cabinets, then 24" width dishwasher, then 21" again for the right cabinet. This gives 105", the extra three inches is a slight gap on both sides of the dishwasher, and then the countertop overhangs on the right side a few inches. With the ikea frameless cabinets, you get the same total width, but it's split up a bit differently: 24" left cabinet - 36" sink cabinet - 24" dishwasher space - 24" right cabinet = 108" Basically my existing countertop wouldn't overhang at all, but it seems like the sink placement would be slightly off. The sink itself is 33" wide, which would mean it should be centered with the sink cabinet, but if you used the ikea cabinets with my countertop, it wouldn't be aligned properly - it would be "left justified" above the sink cabinet. basically, for some reason my sink cabinet is 39", which is not a standard size at all. If it was 36" which is very much a standard size, and the left cabinet was 24" it would be fine, but it's not so I'm annoyed. edit: I guess actually I could do 21" left and then do two 1.5" filler pieces on both sides of the 36" sink cabinet? actionjackson fucked around with this message at 05:55 on Oct 8, 2020 |
# ? Oct 8, 2020 05:11 |
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Deviant posted:let's talk about light bulbs. Halogen on dimmers (preferably sine wave dimmers tho idk if they exist outside of theaters). Looks great super bright, even better dimmed down.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 05:31 |
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I have the absolute lowest light possible, but I have an issue related to large pupil size. Having dimmers on stuff is always nice though.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 05:53 |
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Deviant posted:let's talk about light bulbs. Phillips hue. (You can thank me later) Enos Cabell posted:We replaced the 4 bulbs in our living room ceiling fan fixture with Philips Hue bulbs and absolutely love it. We actually use different color schemes quite a bit more than I figured we would, it makes a pretty huge difference. This guy gets it! Honestly the white ambiance hues are good enough, I never touch the colors in the rooms I put them in. They are stupidly fun to play with at first though!
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 06:02 |
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actionjackson posted:I have the absolute lowest light possible, but I have an issue related to large pupil size. Having dimmers on stuff is always nice though. The best apartment I lived in had dimmers on all lights. Even the shitter, which was glorious when I was hungover
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 06:27 |
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I did 3000k in all bedrooms, bathroom. and the living room lights in my great room. 3500k for the kitchen, with 3000k for the pendants. The brightness helps with cooking and makes the kitchen lively. 2700k indeed is too warm for me.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 07:05 |
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luminalflux posted:The best apartment I lived in had dimmers on all lights. Even the shitter, which was glorious when I was hungover
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 07:57 |
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BonoMan posted:We hired Certa Pro to paint ONE room in my house. Our living room. It is about 300-400 sq ft but has a vaulted ceiling that was hard for us to get to. Wow, I was afraid of something like that happening, but thankfully they did a great job. It was 3 guys, yes they are contractors (that's how CertaPro works) but they did come wearing CertaPro gear/ truck said CertaPro. It took the 3 guys only 6 days to spackle/sand/paint my entire house and kitchen cabinets. Very friendly guys who even gave me their personal phone number in case there were issues I found later (there weren't). CertaPro was 1k more expensive than a 1 of the local companies and almost 7k less than the other local company. I guess the best thing to do is read reviews and see if you can get references for any contractor.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 13:01 |
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5000k everywhere for everything, as is proper. I don't understand how people can stand everything being yellow all the time.Deviant posted:...then i found out my ceiling fan glass won't go over a standard A19 shape bulb and it only accomodates CFLs What do you mean it only accommodates CFLs? The bulb bases are standardized and you can get a 60w equivalent LED that should be small enough to fit pretty easily, e.g. these are a standard E26 base but the bulb is an A15.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 13:11 |
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Wallet posted:5000k everywhere for everything, as is proper. I don't understand how people can stand everything being yellow all the time. I mean there isn't physically room to put the fan diffused glass back on when globe style led bulbs are installed.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 13:38 |
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Some Guy From NY posted:Wow, I was afraid of something like that happening, but thankfully they did a great job. It was 3 guys, yes they are contractors (that's how CertaPro works) but they did come wearing CertaPro gear/ truck said CertaPro. It took the 3 guys only 6 days to spackle/sand/paint my entire house and kitchen cabinets. Very friendly guys who even gave me their personal phone number in case there were issues I found later (there weren't). CertaPro was 1k more expensive than a 1 of the local companies and almost 7k less than the other local company. Yeah my guy, who was totally nice, was just some dude in an altima that showed up. At the end I realized he was the CP guys bestie so he was probably just throwing a friend a job instead of going through any real contractors
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 13:45 |
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Wallet posted:5000k everywhere for everything, as is proper. I don't understand how people can stand everything being yellow all the time. The research on blue light keeping you up at night is pretty conclusive. I can understand wanting white, daylight style colour temperature in the day, in areas where you’re doing work like the kitchen. Naturally though, when the sun starts to set (most of the day this time of year) it gets more yellow, and so it’s natural for people to want more yellow lighting, especially at night. I have hue bulbs in most rooms, dimmers in others, with special Philips dimmable LED bulbs which become more yellow when dimmed (like at night). This seems a good balance to me. With hue bulbs it’s pretty easy to setup to use a different colour profile for the time of day in your region, so it matches what the sun is doing.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 13:48 |
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wooger posted:The research on blue light keeping you up at night is pretty conclusive. 5000k is pretty neutral, but I also don't leave strong lighting on late in the day. A lot of the bulbs in my living areas are full spectrum (for plants).
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 14:01 |
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Deviant posted:I mean there isn't physically room to put the fan diffused glass back on when globe style led bulbs are installed. Here ya go. Found these at HD awhile back and they work great for your exact problem. There’s also different color temps available as well. wooger posted:The research on blue light keeping you up at night is pretty conclusive. Neat, I’m going to have to explore this feature! I hadn’t considered using them like this. I just really like being able to change a color temperature for a given room because sometimes things will look better in one light or another, and it largely feels arbitrary. I just really like hue far more than any other smart bulb I’ve tried tying into my home automation controller because they’re nearly instantaneous as they respond to a local controller. Hue has been far more reliable for me, and the excellent color optimization is just icing on the cake. Worth the extra couple of bucks upfront imho.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 14:02 |
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5000k would drive me insane. I have a coworker that does this at her house and almost all walls and cabinets and whatnot are white too. It looks.. 'crisp' but holy poo poo I'd go insane. I mentioned earlier that my interall lighting is all 2300k or whatever but neglected to mention that the most window-ey area of my house faces south so I get a ton of natural daylight and tend to not have lights on at all during the day. So the 2300k is mostly for darker times such as night and morning, when that would be more natural to a human anyway (candle light, sunrise, sunset).
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 19:49 |
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Are there any posts in this massive thread about the first year of first home ownership? We decided to build a home for our first and the builder believes it should be completed by Thanksgiving. While my wife is finding services that can offer room designs so we can buy furniture and such (we decided to just donate all of our furniture when our rental lease ended), I'm trying to take note of any first timer advice I can find. I notice a lot of it is geared towards "first home" resale properties. Not only will our home be new, we will also be new to home ownership. We've been in apartments this whole time. Anyway, if there have been posts that seem to fit what I'm talking about, I'd love to check them out. Also, I do have a few questions off the top of my head, if I may: * My parents recently moved to an area with hard water and insisted on getting a whole-house water softener system to avoid damaging the pipes. We are building in a state that also has hard water, but the builder didn't offer a water softener as an option. The builder said he lived in the area for decades and never bothered with one. Is a whole-house water softener system a must-have in a new home build? Are the modern pipes susceptible to build up? * How are wires snaked through a house with a slab foundation? We're pre-wiring most rooms with ethernet, but I'd like to know about this for the future. I've seen videos about basements and crawl spaces, but we will have neither. * Garage floor coating/sealing? Is it worth the cost/trouble? We didn't have the builder do it, but it's something I'm wondering about. I wonder also if this is an easy DIY thing? * Ryobi. I know people who swear by them. I'm considering their electric brushless mower, as our yard is super super small (0.14 acres). Is this a junk brand or worth it for small jobs? * Any clever garage storage options? With no basement, we're looking at the garage for storage... with two cars in there. Macintosh HD fucked around with this message at 21:22 on Oct 8, 2020 |
# ? Oct 8, 2020 20:54 |
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Macintosh HD posted:* Ryobi. I know people who swear by them. I'm considering their electric brushless mower, as our yard is super super small. Is this a junk brand or worth it for small jobs? Can’t speak to any new home stuff, but depending on your definition of super small yard, I’d heartily suggest looking into a push/reel mower. Easy, quiet, cheap, and imo they lower the energy required to get started on the mowing chore. Storage (for reference, we have a basement but no garage at all or usable attic space, one closet in each bedroom and that’s basically it)- number 1 rule is be thoughtful of what you bring in your home and where you’ll put it. Limit junk and have a home for things. That said, one big advantage to owning rather than renting is being able to make careful use of wall and overhead storage systems. Inventory what you need to store, what you plan to need to store, and the space you have to do it in. Pare down, and sort through the different systems out there. A lot of people jump into buying a system but don’t examine *what* they need to store and end up with wasted (or carelessly filled) space. Give yourself some time to figure out what you need before throwing up shelves.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 21:11 |
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I suppose it's super small. 0.14 acres, lol. This seems to be pretty standard for new homes, I'm finding, but it's significantly smaller than my childhood home, for instance.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 21:22 |
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Ryobi is a good enough brand.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 21:34 |
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I figure a 0.14 acre lot is fine for "good enough". There's an HOA so it has to stay neat and tidy, but buying some fancy gas mower seemed dumb.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 21:42 |
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Macintosh HD posted:Are there any posts in this massive thread about the first year of first home ownership? We decided to build a home for our first and the builder believes it should be completed by Thanksgiving. While my wife is finding services that can offer room designs so we can buy furniture and such (we decided to just donate all of our furniture when our rental lease ended), I'm trying to take note of any first timer advice I can find. I notice a lot of it is geared towards "first home" resale properties. Not only will our home be new, we will also be new to home ownership. We've been in apartments this whole time. * I wish I'd had our garage floor epoxy coated before we moved in, now I probably won't hassle with it but I might go with a garage flooring tile system that can be laid without having to take everything out of the garage at the same time. * Another vote for a reel mower with an electric trimmer for edging work. I have a lot that's 50% larger than yours but the HOA cuts the front part. Reel works great and is significantly cheaper and stores in a smaller footprint. I do everything including edging in 15 minutes. * Depends a bit on your actual garage dimensions but metal shelving that stands on the floor is probably some of the easiest you can do. If you have a high ceiling the ceiling mount metal storage shelves are great. I like the geartrack system for hanging garden tools but honestly I'm probably going to get a small shed for the backyard to put yard stuff in to get more garage space for other stuff.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 22:23 |
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tangy yet delightful posted:fake edit: might come back later with some more thoughts on a first year in a new build but gotta run right now Something like this: https://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky-18-4-in-x-18-4-in-Gray-PVC-Garage-Flooring-Tile-6-Pack-HDTRP6DG/312535726 ? That seems to be a pretty good compromise.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 22:30 |
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How’s that saying go, projects beget projects? I was up on the ladder this afternoon working on replacing the caulking on the front window header boards, look over, and spot this: I swear I’m gonna end up spending $200+ in caulk alone by the time I’m done with all the exterior crack TLC that needs to happen.
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# ? Oct 8, 2020 22:53 |
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We just bought a house but haven't moved in yet, though we've mowed the yard a couple times. Nthing reel mower with electric trimmer. We have the Fiskar's max reel mower which works fine (some reviews say it's a little heavy & the Scott I think is lighter) and a Ryobi cordless trimmer. It's so nice not having to screw around with oil and fuel and fighting the drat thing to start just to mow the lawn. devmd01 posted:How’s that saying go, projects beget projects? I was up on the ladder this afternoon working on replacing the caulking on the front window header boards, look over, and spot this: Uh I'm no brick expert but I don't think you're supposed to caulk that? E: I forgot I have my own problem(s)! The walls in my house are comically thin. It's framed by 2x4s. Including drywall and cladding, the walls are only 6" thick. As far as I can tell, there's no sort of vapor/moisture barrier. I have the drywall off one of the exterior walls, and the sheathing in one of the stud bays is almost completely rotten. There isn't a clear pattern where I can identify water intrusion, so I'm worried this might be condensation caused by filling the bay with insulation. Is there any way to go about preventing this without rewrapping the entire house? BonerGhost fucked around with this message at 00:55 on Oct 9, 2020 |
# ? Oct 9, 2020 00:47 |
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Caulk, mortar repair, whatever you wanna call it. It all gets squeezed out by the same drat tool lol.
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# ? Oct 9, 2020 00:50 |
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They make “mortar repair” caulk that’s designed for stuff like that. It’s super gritty and a pain in the rear end to smooth out but it blends in ok.
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# ? Oct 9, 2020 01:16 |
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Aren't most walls framed with 2x4? Mine are just drywall>2x4>hardboard>brick. No insulation even.
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# ? Oct 9, 2020 02:04 |
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NomNomNom posted:Aren't most walls framed with 2x4? Mine are just drywall>2x4>hardboard>brick. No insulation even. Exterior walls in places that actually require insulation based on the regional climate are at least 2x6.
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# ? Oct 9, 2020 02:09 |
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The Dave posted:Ryobi is a good enough brand. And cheap enough that I bought a fan and a light on a lark and they are basically life changing. Not sure if there is much more decadent than working in the back yard on a muggy August day with a cordless fan blowing on you to keep you cool.
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# ? Oct 9, 2020 02:33 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 07:26 |
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I fukken love my sack of Ryobi tools. I only had to add a hedge trimmer to cover all my household needs for 3 years I really appreciate that it came with a legit battery tender and 2 batteries
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# ? Oct 9, 2020 02:36 |