Tearing Out A Wall: Kitchen Remodel E14

Hey guys! In this episode we tear out the kitchen wall so we can finally expand!

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  1. Wrong on one point, the ceiling heating system DID NOT work well. My parents had it in their home and 2 issues. 1) Very expensive to operate. 2) your head could roast and your feet were frozen. Sitting at their dinner table, you needed a blanket on your legs since the heat radiated down from the ceiling. Radiant ceiling heat was a horrible idea, especially for the Piedmont area of the Carolina's.

  2. I did the same thing when I opened my kitchen. The T-wall had 4 blocks in it already so I didn't have to scab in a stud. Had plenty of space to screw down my drywall. My ceiling joint was ugly as sin though. I think of it like "accent popcorn".

  3. Do you have a link to the ZipWall Door? In a SHTF situation (of even now with people that have the flu, etc), I'm thinking that it would also work well to quarantine a sick person and if I got a clearer plastic (Hobby Lobby has it), I could then see thru it enough to keep an eye on the sick person, hence only entering the room if I need to. Thanks

  4. Dear Terry,
    I thought your fine fellows like to go & go faster. Well what's the Kubota sleeping in the shed doing with it's shiny new teeth??? On a more realistic note, it's a very clean way of working which sadly is non existent over here. In fact I can remember when those baboons came in our house to cut a wall with large angle grinder, we were still cleaning dust a fortnight later. They had no dust extractor just very basic tools which I swore must have been bought at a local boot sale. Very well done. Kind regards.

  5. My dad's house had that kind of heat in it. The wires were placed close together near all the windows, t the first layer of sheetrock had a foil face to reflect the heat downward. All of the ceiling had lots of blown in insulation above the heat source. after the wires were installed, the interior ceiling and walls were plastered. One thing about that heat, the floors were not cold, due to a foil sheet between the subfloor and hardwood flooring.

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