- Joined
- Jul 13, 2015
- Messages
- 14,695
- Location
- Realms of chaos
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
I pulled down the section of wall and the draft went away. So I felt around to figure where it was and found a different area was very cold. So I kept pulling sections of wall down trying to figure out where it was coming from and with each section it seemed to move again.
Finally I found it. Whatever knucklehead put the side porch on supported a stonking great wooden beam with the wall of the house. They knocked a hole in the wall and figured they didn't need to fill the gaps around the wood. Needless to say there was a horrendous cold wind coming through the gap. This one is big enough that I'll want to fill the whole thing with building foam and cover it front and back with mortar, but the builders foam wants to be at least 30 degrees (ideally 60) to cure properly. That means it has to wait a while. In the meantime I've stuffed a load of fiberglass into the space.
Funny to think that was was happening was a horrendous cold wind was coming in and essentially blowing over all the wads of fiberglass I was using to try and block it, eventually finding the bit that wasn't stuffed and blowing down through it.
While I was up on the ladder at the top of the wall pulling everything down I found a couple more gaps, which are now filled. There's a gap I can see on the outer face but I don't feel like climbing a ladder outside in the freezing cold to fix it. For now it will have to wait. Next day we get that is even marginally sunny and isn't perishingly cold, I'll be out on my ladder.
Now I have 21 bags of rubble waiting to go to landfill and two big piles of laths waiting to be burned. At this rate I may need to borrow my friend's truck to haul it all away... The laths will burn but the rest of it probably weighs 6-700 pounds. Hauling that lot will be fun...
Finally I found it. Whatever knucklehead put the side porch on supported a stonking great wooden beam with the wall of the house. They knocked a hole in the wall and figured they didn't need to fill the gaps around the wood. Needless to say there was a horrendous cold wind coming through the gap. This one is big enough that I'll want to fill the whole thing with building foam and cover it front and back with mortar, but the builders foam wants to be at least 30 degrees (ideally 60) to cure properly. That means it has to wait a while. In the meantime I've stuffed a load of fiberglass into the space.
Funny to think that was was happening was a horrendous cold wind was coming in and essentially blowing over all the wads of fiberglass I was using to try and block it, eventually finding the bit that wasn't stuffed and blowing down through it.
While I was up on the ladder at the top of the wall pulling everything down I found a couple more gaps, which are now filled. There's a gap I can see on the outer face but I don't feel like climbing a ladder outside in the freezing cold to fix it. For now it will have to wait. Next day we get that is even marginally sunny and isn't perishingly cold, I'll be out on my ladder.
Now I have 21 bags of rubble waiting to go to landfill and two big piles of laths waiting to be burned. At this rate I may need to borrow my friend's truck to haul it all away... The laths will burn but the rest of it probably weighs 6-700 pounds. Hauling that lot will be fun...