- Joined
- May 15, 2020
- Messages
- 4,154
- Points
- 601
- Age
- 70
- City
- Atlanta
- State - Country
- GA - USA
- Other
- Manufacturers factory tour, maybe big dealership tour
- Vehicle Year
- 1997 1987
- Engine
- 4.0 V6
- Transmission
- Manual
- Total Lift
- 97 stock, 3” on 87
- Total Drop
- N/A
- Tire Size
- 235/75-15
- My credo
- Never put off ‘til tomorrow what you can put off indefinitely
A little not really an emergency emergency home maintenance. I have Dish for my TV service, and I love them. AT&T or Comcast might have better electronic service, but their customer service so hateful the one time a year you have to talk to them that I’d rather have Dish which I may lose in a thunderstorm, but the people are great to work with.
Well, we had thunder showers all last week, but on Thursday, it just about went dead even after the showers. So I sat there with the remote and I reprogrammed this and I reset that and I rebooted it with little luck. Then on a whim when I was walking Lincoln, I just happened to look up.
Where’s Waldo?
So I got my little electric chainsaw and the extension ladder, and I wacked off about all of that tree/bush that you can see in the picture. 90% of that picture is on the side of the second floor. Miraculous. I now have all my TV again. Hardest part was moving the extension ladder and setting it up with my worn out legs.
The other thing, that actually was a borderline emergency, was that my upstairs AC was kind of wimpy. I don’t have a picture, but it was basically the same problem. I don’t think I cleaned the interior screens in a year, but the biggest problem was when I took the covers off the outside unit, the coils were just about plugged with leaves and grass clippings.
I took the fan off the top, and used the $70 Harbor Freight pressure washer to blow out the coils from the inside. Shortly after I got the pressure washer, which has unusual 14 mm fittings on the pressure hose, I got the 14/15 adapters and another 50 feet of pressure hose from eBay. I usually leave it outside behind my deck, and it will reach 99% of whatever I want to spray without moving it.
I also checked my pressure on both units, and both units were off just a hair, so I put a can of propane/butane in both of them. Now they’ll freeze your whatever off, and they’re running 1/3 of the amount of time.
Then I went upstairs to see if the recliner was working properly. I’m still working on that.
Well, we had thunder showers all last week, but on Thursday, it just about went dead even after the showers. So I sat there with the remote and I reprogrammed this and I reset that and I rebooted it with little luck. Then on a whim when I was walking Lincoln, I just happened to look up.
Where’s Waldo?
So I got my little electric chainsaw and the extension ladder, and I wacked off about all of that tree/bush that you can see in the picture. 90% of that picture is on the side of the second floor. Miraculous. I now have all my TV again. Hardest part was moving the extension ladder and setting it up with my worn out legs.
The other thing, that actually was a borderline emergency, was that my upstairs AC was kind of wimpy. I don’t have a picture, but it was basically the same problem. I don’t think I cleaned the interior screens in a year, but the biggest problem was when I took the covers off the outside unit, the coils were just about plugged with leaves and grass clippings.
I took the fan off the top, and used the $70 Harbor Freight pressure washer to blow out the coils from the inside. Shortly after I got the pressure washer, which has unusual 14 mm fittings on the pressure hose, I got the 14/15 adapters and another 50 feet of pressure hose from eBay. I usually leave it outside behind my deck, and it will reach 99% of whatever I want to spray without moving it.
I also checked my pressure on both units, and both units were off just a hair, so I put a can of propane/butane in both of them. Now they’ll freeze your whatever off, and they’re running 1/3 of the amount of time.
Then I went upstairs to see if the recliner was working properly. I’m still working on that.