Last week the Flexzilla air hose I use with my portable compressor developed an internal bulge for no apparent reason I could ascertain. The hose, manufactured by Legacy Manufacturing, carries a 5-year warranty and naturally, I purchased it nearly 6 years ago. The fact is that I have used the hose more in the last month than since I acquired it. I decided to file a warranty claim given how little use the hose has seen and was pleasantly surprised when I received a prompt reply stating that they were sending me a replacement. This is an example of a company doing the right thing for its customers. They can now count on my business for life and I can highly recommend Legacy products to others.
Let There Be Light (Switches)
Jeanine assisted me today as we installed 36 smart light switches throughout the River House. Each switch is a programmable dimmer with an occupancy sensor that can be accessed over the Wi-Fi network for home automation functions. She prepped them while I installed them which made the job go twice as fast as it would have had I been doing the work alone. Towards the end, the skin on my fingers was starting to blister from tightening so many twist-on wire nuts (4 per switch) and she took over that job as well. Next, I taught her how to apply the hard wax oil we will be using on all the cabinetry and she finished one of the panels that will surround our freezer. We wrapped up the day by making a catalog containing the QR code for each light switch to facilitate future programming once we have Wi-Fi enabled. It is really the first time we have worked on the new house together and I really enjoyed working with her.
Happy Bird
Jeanine returned today from a week-long visit with her sister Susan who lives in Burlington, Vermont. They had all kinds of fun including a visit to the Happy Bird Poultry Farm. I have been so busy working on the River House that time has passed quickly. Even so, I missed her and am glad she is back. I guess that would make me the happy bird.
Not So Smoothie
Kyle shared this photo of his blender which was not up to the task of making his morning smoothie. Fortunately, the company has offered to replace it for free.
Double Trouble
I completed the tall kitchen cabinet carcass for the double oven today. So far it has been the most time-consuming to build. All but one of the front faces required veneering, the “shelf” which supports the ovens had to be designed to support a 350-pound load, and the cavity had to be dead plumb, level, and square. It is also the heaviest single item I have built so far which made it difficult to move and install. There will be a drawer below the ovens and a cabinet with two doors above it. Still needed is a filler strip on the left to close the gap to the wall which is one of the few in the entire house that is not perfectly plumb; argh. Even though it fought me almost every step of the way, I am extremely happy with the finished product.
Perfect Squeeze Out
It is said that woodworkers basically take big pieces of wood, cut them into smaller pieces, and then glue them back together. Therefore, if you want to make fine things out of wood you need to master the art of gluing. Apply too little and your joint will fail. Apply too much and you will have a time-consuming gooey mess to clean up. After 40 years of practice, I am prepared to say that the glue lines pictured above are as close to perfection as you can get. You are actually looking at two plywood panels, each with a 1/8″ veneer glued to the edge. The veneers are placed back to back and the pair of panels are clamped together as cauls for each other. If you apply exactly the right amount of glue, distribute it evenly, and apply uniform clamping pressure you will be rewarded with the tiniest bead of squeeze-out confirming full coverage. The shims placed under the bar clamps keep them out of the glue preventing rusting of the clamps and staining of the wood.
Kitchen Island
I completed the base for the kitchen island today. When the countertop is added it will create a seating area on one side and have the induction cooktop placed on the other. Unlike the other cabinets in the kitchen, the island will sit on top of the finished floor. Therefore, I have not yet fastened the end caps or the back panel to the drawer carcass to keep the weight manageable; it would be very difficult to move fully assembled. The end cap on the kitchen-facing side includes open shelving for frequently used spices and cooking oils. Should we be so lucky to entertain toddlers at some point, I am sure this will be a favorite point of interest and I already have some child-proofing ideas in mind.
We deliberately pulled our electrical permit in the final week of 2022 so that we would not be subject to new 2023 code requirements that do not allow for kitchen island-mounted outlets. The new regulations only allow for outlets mounted on island countertops which is the last place I would pick to put an outlet, pop-up, or otherwise. The outlet within the seating area will include 2 USB-C charging ports and will not be visible from the dining and living areas. The other outlet will be for cooking-related appliances that are temporarily used on the island.
With these choices, we have a single island with two personalities. Viewed from the dining/living space, it presents clean lines and no clutter. while the kitchen end is all about the business of cooking.
Measure of Progress?
If sawdust production is any measure of my cabinet making progress, I am 30 gallons in, closer to 50 if you include the contents of my dust collection system bin. Most of this was generated from my router table while machining lock miter joints. It is the only major piece of equipment I have that is not yet connected to my dust collector. I plan to rectify this before doing any further routing and hope to have the necessary parts within the week.
Tiny Tour
The kids joined us at the Road House for dinner to celebrate Kyle’s 31st birthday. Jeanine cooked up a feast including a peach-tomato-basil salad, fresh corn risotto, and beef tips. Maya was here for most of the day doing upkeep on her tiny house which she was proud to show off after dinner. I spent most of the day at the River House continuing with cabinetry work. Busy schedules have prevented us from gathering as a family for several weeks and it was nice to catch up with everyone. Kyle has been promised a promotion to manager within the year at his job and is now renting out his basement to a couple and their two puppies. He is planning to take a week-long vacation in Montana after attending a wedding there. Nico is in training for his upcoming climb of the 19,000 ft Cayambe Volcano in Ecuador and for the Amp Futbol Cup in Warsaw, Poland as a member of the US National Team. Maya will be climbing in Vermont next weekend and is planning a trip to Olympic National Park later this month. The shoulder injury she sustained mountain biking will require arthroscopic surgery and she is looking into the best options for having that procedure.
Lock Miter Joint
The kitchen island in the River House will be supported by four 5″x5″ columns. I am making them out of 3/4″ thick bamboo plywood using a lock miter joint at each corner. Pictured above is a cross-section of the joint taken from a thin slice I trimmed to square up the end. It looks rather complicated but can be made with a specialized router bit. Setup is a little tricky but once bit height and fence depth are properly adjusted things move along with little additional fuss. The only negative side to working with bamboo is that it dulls cutting tools very quickly. By the time I machined the 16 panels I needed, my once very sharp miter bit was groaning at the prospect of more bamboo. I must say, I am very pleased with the way the columns turned out and am now planning on using this joint for the construction of the stair treads and possibly for all drawer boxes as well.
Ongoing Plywood Woes
The bamboo plywood I am using to construct all of the cabinets and built-ins for the new house has been a pleasure to work with save for the fact that it wears out carbide-tipped tools very quickly. Not so pleasant have been all of the mistakes made by the supplier. (1) Selected a carrier that did not have the right equipment to provide the contracted delivery method. (2) The second “rescue” carrier had the right equipment but arrived on site with the wrong kind of truck on their first delivery attempt. (3) When it was finally delivered (several weeks late), every single one of the 36 sheets had some form of water damage. (4) We ordered the carbonized color (darker one above) and received several that are of the natural color). We even received some sheets that are carbonized on one side and natural on the other, which is not even a product that the company sells. The photo above is of two sides of the same board! Thus far the company seems prepared to make things right so I am just rolling with the punches for now. I have been cutting off and scrapping water damaged sections or using them in non-visible locations. The mixed color challenge will be the most time consuming to address as it will required staining the natural boards to match the carbonized.
500 Boylston
Twenty years ago, I enjoyed watching a television series called Boston Legal. The show was about the fictional law firm Crane, Poole & Schmidt whose Boston office was located at 500 Boylston St. Today, I had a meeting there with the founder of a venture capital firm and made the connection as I approached the building.
Construction Casualty
I found this little fellow lifeless on a window sill in the River House. All of the operable windows there are in their venting position to allow the house to dry out. The plaster, paint, concrete, and many other construction materials have a great deal of latent moisture that needs to be shed. We cannot begin laying the floor until the indoor humidity has stabilized at a reasonable level. The vented windows let in a lot of insects but they do not seem to be able to find their way out again. Fortunately, we should have our AC up and running in the next week or two which will allow us to close all the windows. As I am typing this, I just realized that we have screens for all the windows and there is no reason not to install them now.
Tight Squeeze
The front door assembly was the final missing element of our new home’s exterior. It was installed today but not without challenges. Due to the way it must be tipped into position because of its extreme weight the opening height has to be larger than the published rough opening. Mathematically speaking, the space needs to be sized to equal the hypotenuse of a triangle with a base equal to the width of the door assembly and a height equal to the height of the door assembly. When the foreman of the five-man installation crew found me in my shop to inform me that the door would not fit, I simply grabbed one of my battery-operated saws and followed him upstairs. I have learned to roll with the punches through the course of our build. In less than 20 minutes, I was able to increase the size of the rough opening and the door assembly was placed into postion. Even though it is fully functional as-is, the crew will return on Friday to remove and reinstall the assembly so that it can be anchored more securely and raised up higher so that the door will have more clearance above the finished interior floor (to accommodate a rug).
Router Table
When we sold our home on Mattison Drive, I left my old table saw with an attached router table for the new owner. I was not interested in trying to move that 20-year-old behemoth out of the basement. I replaced the table saw shortly after moving into the original River House, but the router table has been a low priority until I decided I would be fabricating our stair treads using a lock miter joint for which it is essential. Router tables are invariably a DIY construction project as I have yet to find a decent one fully configured. Mine uses a cast iron table top and mobility stand from Harvey. The router is a Bosch 2-1/4 horsepower unit and the router plate and lift are made by Jessum and sold under the Kreg brand. The Harvey fence I ordered will not arrive for another several weeks so I will be using my old Incra fence until them. My 40 year old Craftsman machinists tool chest proved the perfect solution for organizing and storing all my router bits and tools. Assembling and aligning all of the components took the better part of 4 hours after which I returned to cabinet making.
Miter Saw Station
Having completed most of the base cabinets for the kitchen, pantry, and laundry last week, I decided to treat my shop to some cabinets as well. They will do double duty as a miter saw station. Consistent with other choices in the design of the basement, I decided on a floating design so that there would be no damage in the event of flooding. Our foundation waterproofing has lived up to expectations for a bone-dry basement but the risk of flooding from the river is one we cannot ignore. The cabinets did not budge with me sitting on the edge but I will probably add some feet to ensure they do not deflect when I load them up. Each cavity will get a set of full extension drawers which is a project I will defer until after we have moved in. I still need to apply a finish and add some trim to the edges but I was quite happy with the amount of progress I made in one day.
Oysters and Wine
We are enjoying a visit from Kris Earle, Jeanine’s childhood friend and bestie. We all gathered at Kyle’s house for lunch where Maya and her boyfriend joined us. Later the pair went out for appetizers and wine at Woods Hill Table. I helped Kyle with the last bit of his basement renovation project, adding a door to the top of the stairs so that his new tenants have a more significant measure of privacy.
On either side of my project with Kyle, I completed the last of the base cabinet carcasses for the kitchen, pantry, and laundry. Rarely does work go substantially faster than I would have expected. The combination of a very easy-to-execute design and having a fully functional shop has made this phase of the work go remarkably fast. Next, I plan to begin work on the custom cabinetry for the walk-in closets.
Quartz Tetris
With cabinet bases nearing completion, I turned my attention to the River House countertops which will be fabricated from Quartz. The man-made product is available in panels that are 120″x55″. The shapes on the left-hand side of the drawing above represent the shapes and sizes we need. The rectangles on the right show how the needed shapes can be most efficiently cut from the raw blanks.
Poland Bound
Nico stopped by the house yesterday and assisted me with the construction of kitchen base cabinets. Having an extra set of hands was especially helpful for the assembly process and offered Nico a good learning opportunity. In the hours we spent together, he did not think to mention that he would be traveling to Poland with the US National Amputee Soccer Team to compete in the Amp Futbol Cup. I have curtailed all travel until the River House is completed but may have to make an exception for this trip.
Thru Holes
The last bit of work needed to complete our underground utility installation was getting the conduits into the house. This necessitated drilling 5 holes through the concrete foundation, two large ones for electricity, two medium ones for fiber optic and cable, and one small one for an emergency-off circuit required to take the battery storage system offline in the event firefighters ever have to kill the power when battling a blaze.
Buried Service
The conduit for our buried utility services was laid today. The two larger ones are for electricity. Each one can support wires for a 200 amp service. We only require one but decided to install a spare should we ever need to increase power to the house or run some future service from the street. The incremental cost of the extra conduit is small compared to the rest of the project. One of the smaller conduits is for fiber optic and the other is for cable. Jeanine has been coordinating with Concord Municipal Light and Power, Comcast, and Verizon to have all the wires on our old utility pole transferred to the new one that was placed a few weeks ago. Talk about an exercise in herding cats.
Oversized
One of the key design features of my shop is the oversized exterior door which will allow me to bring in or remove large items like sheet goods and machines as well as to remove completed cabinetry and furniture. The base cabinet carcass for our laundry room pictured above is a perfect example of the need for this capability. I was able to complete it in half a day including the separate base (not pictured). As I drove back to the Road House feeling quite pleased with my progress, I started mentally envisioning how I would move it into the laundry room. No problem getting it out of the shop, no problem getting it back into the house on the first floor. Then it hit me. There is no way this base cabinet will fit through the laundry room door. Not even close. Fortunately, in the five minutes it took to complete my commute, I had developed a plan to cut it into two sections and am confident this will address the challenge.
Blum Movento
When we decided to build our forever house, there were four things that I wanted to be bulletproof. The roof, the windows, the doors, and the cabinetry hardware. By bulletproof, I mean of such high quality that they would never become a maintenance issue or the source of aggravation. I have had to repair or replace drawer slides in every house we have ever lived in or worse yet, resigned myself to living with a sub standard user experience. This will not be the case at the River House. The drawer slides I have selected are manufactured by Blum and I put a sample set through my torture testing and have determined they will stand the test of time. They also support a push-to-open capability that will be used on all the drawers throughout the house. At $60 a set, they are not cheap but I much prefer this solution to a lower quality $40 slide and a $20 handle. Another important benefit is the ease of and degrees of freedom when adjusting for proper alignment. Not a big deal when you are installing a couple of drawers and can spend time tweaking each one. When you will be installing more than 100, every bit of time saving pays big dividends.
Tony Bennet: 1926-2023
I met Tony Bennet at the funeral of my uncle Ernie, pictured above with his wife, Barbara. Instead of speaking about his long-time friend and occasional guitar accompanist, Tony delivered an acapella tribute that reverberated through the small church. I do not remember the story of how they met, but both had parents who were born in the Calabria region of Italy and immigrated to the United States. I think I remember reading in my father’s autobiography that Tony would often join the family for dinner at my grandparent’s house in Brooklyn. Unfortunately, that book is packed in a box somewhere and will not go back on a shelf until we move into the new house. Also in storage is a painting that Tony made as a gift to my uncle who left it for my father. I found it when cleaning out my childhood home before we sold it. At the time, I did not realize that Tony was the painter because it was signed Benedetto. Only later did I learn that was the way he signed all of his art work. I am looking forward to rediscovering it when we get settled.
Tony Bennet started life with next to nothing and worked his way to stardom. As is often the story, his success led him to excesses that nearly cost him his life and career. When he hit rock bottom, he reached out to his sons who helped him to reinvent himself and went on to recapture and even extend his former glory.
Utility Trench
The trench that will carry power, fiber optic, and cable to our new house was completed today and the bottom was filled with sand. We are hoping to lay the conduits starting on Monday when our electrician returns from vacation. The backhoe operator managed to very neatly pile the excavated material in such a way that a car can still navigate the driveway. I was expecting the work to block all traffic so this is very helpful. Once this trench is backfilled, work moves to the other side of the driveway where a much deeper trench will be made for the water main.
Stumps and Roots
In preparation for trenching which is scheduled to start tomorrow, the stumps and roots for the recently felled trees that directly border the driveway were removed. To leave them would have created a future problem as they decay leaving behind a sunken area in the ground. Given their proximity to the driveway, we deemed it necessary to have them removed.
Vanities
I completed carcass construction for the floating vanities that will go in bathrooms 2 and 3. They are actually stacked one on top of the other in the photo above. The indented shelf on the side is where the toilet paper holder will go as well as two spare rolls. The vanity on the bottom has the indented shelf on the opposite side and has yet to receive the counter top with sink basin. I will install the drawer hardware next and then apply a hard wax oil finish to the outside surfaces before mounting it to the wall. Building (or possibly buying) the drawer boxes and attaching the drawer fronts will be the final step.
Hardware Collection
Jeanine is now able to bear weight on her foot again, at least for short periods of time and limited distances. She has quite an impressive array of pins and screws that were used to align her bones. The surgery went so well that she is considering having her other foot done after Thanksgiving. It is a lot to go through in a single year but this type of procedure is best done sooner rather than later.
Strongest Sib
My baby sister likes showing off her guns. Not too shabby for a 58-year-old. My brother and I used to tussle all the time as kids. The thought of doing so with my sisters never entered my mind. Good thing, because now despite my considerable experience as a wrestler, I would not want to tangle with Mayela. I am fairly confident I can still take my other two sibs, however.
I finally got down to some cabinet construction at the River House. I cut all the carcass components and glued up the edge banding for the vanities that will go in bathrooms 2 & 3. I also devoted considerable time in the evening to ordering components for a router table. I have decided to use lock miter joints for stair tread construction and really need a proper router table to make them. Surprisingly, it is the one piece of common shop equipment that you can not purchase as a fully assembled machine of any substance. Instead, you need to source all of the components and build your own. Normally, I would enjoy such a project, but given my other priorities, I would happily just have a completed unit delivered.
Great Point Lighthouse
At the northernmost point of Nantucket within the Coskata-Coatue Wildlife Reserve, you’ll find the most powerful light in New England! Officially named the Nantucket Light, it was first erected in 1784 as a wooden tower. A fire destroyed the little wooden lighthouse in 1816, and so a second tower – this time made of stone – was built in 1818. The stone tower fell over in 1984 and was replaced by the existing lighthouse, a 60-foot replica of the original. Jeanine is staying on Nantucket for the weekend with friends from her book group. They visited the site by way of a 7-mile drive along the beach after having reduced the air pressure in their tires to facilitate traction on the sand.
Bamboo Finally
After weeks of delay, the bamboo plywood I have been waiting for finally arrived. Unfortunately, the convoluted journey it was subjected to because of the failure to arrange for the agreed delivery method in the first place, took its toll. A close look at the photo reveals that the shipping pallet was damaged leaving one corner of the stack unsupported. As a result, the core of the bottom sheet was fractured. The top sheet bears the scars of a forklift suggesting that something was carelessly stacked on top at some point during the transit. Finally, the entire load was left in the rain at some point resulting in water staining on every sheet. Even though each sheet was individually wrapped in plastic, at some point the plastic was sliced along one edge leaving an opening to every panel. It is possible that I will be able to remove some of these stains by sanding them out but that remains to be seen. At $300 a sheet, this damage represent a costly issue. I have started to work with the vendor to make things right. Part of the process was careful documentation. Over the course of 5 hours, I unwrapped each sheet one at a time, photographed the water stains on both sides and placed it onto a new stack. At nearly 40 pounds a piece this was quite the workout. The good news, is that even if I have to cut off the damaged ends, I still have enough material to get started with cabinet making.