exterior fire sheetrock
exterior fire sheetrock

I dropped by the house last weekend on the way home from Lake Tahoe to check on work after the rough inspection. The guys finished installed the exterior sheetrock for fire protection on the south wall. The inspector came by this past Tuesday and signed it off, allowing us to put up siding, which proceeded apace for the past week.

Kitchen window
Kitchen window

We shrank the kitchen window so that it does not cut below the counter line anymore, and are moving the sink to be beneath the window. This should really improve the kitchen layout and functionality. I’m really looking forward to the new kitchen.

south wall with siding
south wall with siding

What a difference a week makes. The siding is up on the entire house now, except for a few small pieces next to the garage door. Actually, I bet those are up now too. Steve is working on putting up the trim around the windows and on the corners of house as well.

service panel
service panel

I spent Saturday running back and forth between the house and Home Depot, buying the wrong items or forgetting to buy items and feeling like I got nowhere. Feeling extremely frustrated, I regrouped at the end of the day. After sitting and thinking methodically about what I needed, I made a decent shopping list and made one last Home Depot stop on my way to work for a late night. Sunday was far more productive. I got an earlier start and arrived with supplies in hand. I wired up the new service panel, which still required a couple of supply runs in the afternoon, and finished up on a long ladder, running the EMT conduit and 1/0 supply wires up for PG&E. That was a precarious and nerve wracking ordeal, I must say. I’m really not sure what the best way to do that is, but I’m pretty sure that the way I did it was the best. After completing wiring of the service panel, I mounted a 10′ length of EMT onto the top of the panel. Then I assembled the masthead, consisting of a 2′ length, a corner, a 2.5′ length and the service entrance thingy whose name escapes me at the moment. Through those, I ran the three strands of 1/0 stranded copper. Lifting the assembly by the long ends of the cables, I fed the cable down into the top of the 10′ EMT conduit previously mentioned. Each time I pushed the cable down into the EMT, my ladder would inch away from the top of the conduit. By the time I had fed about 8-9′ down and finally had the conduit L in my hand, I saw nervous and trapped. As I tried to lift the beast over my head and turn it point toward the front of the house, its mass was pulling me off the ladder and the resistance in the cables still pushed the ladder away from the conduit. Fortunately, Reuben came out of his apartment to play with his nephew, and I was able to enlist his help in holding the ladder and pulling down on the cables once they peeked into the top of the service panel. Without his help at that crucial point, I would have been stuck up on the ladder all night. I was exhausted after that ordeal and called it a night. I wanted to accomplish a bit more this past weekend. However, I am thrilled with what I did complete. I just need to tie the water and gas lines onto the ground and I’ll be ready for PG&E to hook up the power. :-)

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