14:23 Wow! There's about 4 inches between that pipe and that box
@ClarissaValerie-h9rКүн бұрын
Wilson Jennifer Thompson Gary Taylor Nancy
@ClarissaValerie-h9r2 күн бұрын
Hall Ruth Martin Scott Johnson Carol
@thewatchdogs11094 күн бұрын
Dry pour at your own risk. The chances of getting the same result as a wet pour are near 0.
@darealyungcorey172 күн бұрын
So
@slimbaby91376 күн бұрын
NOW YOU CAN BUY A HOIST TO GET THE ENGINE OFF THE FLOOR! 🙄 MY GOODNESS 2024
@chrisbuildsitall6 күн бұрын
Nope. Just lifted it up with my son. Holst are for quitters . Lol..🤣
@rafaarroyo32289 күн бұрын
mine dnt crank at all jus the light when i press the bottom no codes on scanner jus won’t start or started nothin like dead the said maybe fuel pressure sensore or starter 😢😢
@chrisbuildsitall7 күн бұрын
Sounds like a starter. Try testing for power at the small wire on the starter while you have someone try to start it and see if you’re actually getting a signal to start.
@regenadaniels884713 күн бұрын
Wilson Paul Jones Daniel Gonzalez Frank
@davidkuehn7114 күн бұрын
Dude, what an Awesome video! Thank you for taking the time to make this. My blendoor went out last winter and I was livid. Thanks to this video, I will be replacing my actuator and be warm this winter.
@chrisbuildsitall13 күн бұрын
Awesome. Good luck!
@michaeltammaro48215 күн бұрын
Looks GOOD, but it's NOW 11 months and I presume other than your shed itself, you've added stuff on top and inside the shed. How is the slab doing?
@chrisbuildsitall14 күн бұрын
Yes it’s been completely full the whole time with storage totes and lawnmowers. Still looks perfect. Have had no issues at all!
@thx1138guy16 күн бұрын
Why didn't you use piston ring expander pliers when you installed the upper and lower compression rings? You should never twist the compression rings when installing them. I'm really surprised you didn't break the 'black' ring which is made from cast iron when you were installing it.
@chrisbuildsitall15 күн бұрын
Hm. I’ve never used those pliers and never broke a ring before either.
@NoizyBearBearOfficial16 күн бұрын
I get dry pour is supposed to be simple but with how much time you spent getting the bags emptied and top all smooth you could’ve just mixed each bag and poured it in. I think dry pour should only be for small 4-6ft projects since it’s so time consuming.
@TheUmaricanDream17 күн бұрын
what did you end up doing to the emblem at the front
@chrisbuildsitall17 күн бұрын
Still nothing. Have thought about getting an LED one. Just never got around to messing with it.
@wonton898319 күн бұрын
I glued PVC electrical pipe for years without using a pre glue primer and it worked OK, but I recently had to glue some PVC mat together and tried the primer, boy what a difference. A piece without primer I could pull apart, but a piece with primer the mat would tear before the joint failed.
@chrisbuildsitall18 күн бұрын
The primer def makes a difference.
@wonton898319 күн бұрын
In NZ we have black sand on the West Coast beaches (Titanomagnetite which is about 80% iron and 8-9% titanium.) In summer it can melt the skin off your feet. I wonder if filling the voids and covering the polypipe with something similar would increase the heat output.
@chrisbuildsitall18 күн бұрын
It could but you would want something that is more temp resistant than landscape pipe.
@nicodesmidt403419 күн бұрын
But WHY a dry pour ?
@chrisbuildsitall19 күн бұрын
Because it’s easy for 1 person to do it.
@nicodesmidt403419 күн бұрын
@@chrisbuildsitall makes sense
@nicodesmidt403419 күн бұрын
Is this a mix including sand ?
@chrisbuildsitall19 күн бұрын
It’s just a normal bag of concrete. There’s a little sand in them as far as I know.
@alankozachenko148320 күн бұрын
When i was a kid the next door neighbor did a similar set up but with i believe 3/8 copper coil piping. The big difference he had a wind mill thingie that pumped the water up to the coils seperate from the pool equipment. He boasted 78° water temp year round. And i was in it as a so cal kid. Awsome
@chrisbuildsitall20 күн бұрын
Copper would be really cool to do. Maybe when this one eventually breaks.
@russ1123 күн бұрын
Thanks for this! You answered a lot of questions I had that other videos seem to skip over
@TheDJWiz24 күн бұрын
2 inches short 😩
@chrisbuildsitall23 күн бұрын
Story of my life. 🤣
@monsterscary8624 күн бұрын
Is primer recommended?
@chrisbuildsitall24 күн бұрын
Depends on what your trying to do. If being professional then yes.
@OneHauteShot24 күн бұрын
Excellent video and walkthrough. Helped with my diy pump replacement
@a.b.k198325 күн бұрын
I always love scrolling through the comments to see what all the “experts” have to say 🙄.
@peterwysocki201125 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for documenting the whole removal and install of the engine on the ground. You literally made my engine replacement so much smoother vs guessing how I'd get the engine out from under the car and back in while getting the car up high enough. People thought I was crazy and doing as your title says "sketchy" stuff for doing it this way, but it all worked out as planned to a T. And "mechanics fingers" def for the win. Thank you again.
@lassei465925 күн бұрын
6:25 why didn't you seperate the frame from the bare concrete? Moist from the concrete will migrate up into your construction and create a enviroment for mold!?
@chrisbuildsitall25 күн бұрын
I used treated lumber for the bottoms of the frame, and if there is no moisture there really is t a worry for mold. The siding over laps the concrete a couple inches making it almost impossible for water to travel up hill to the actual level of the floor.
@VooDooV626 күн бұрын
Please tell me you weren't on the ladder on the table....
@chrisbuildsitall24 күн бұрын
Gotta do what you gotta do. Got a real ladder now though
@Wentz78928 күн бұрын
Thanks for showing this dry pour. I think I will do that
@robertpdxusaАй бұрын
The problem with plastics is that they keep heat out rather than in as opposed to- say - copper. Thus, just because the outside of PVC pipe “melts” does not necessarily mean that the water inside gets heated that much, that efficiently. To heat up the pool efficiently, all elements must be acceptable if not perfect: air temperature, rate of water flow (how long it takes for all the water in the pool to go thru the heating set-up, and the water temperature coming out of after re-heating. Most folks focus on the water temperature, the higher the better, but essentially the water flow is key. If you can have a pump strong enough to go one full cycle in 90 min. at the pool temperature you want or slightly higher it’s going to be okay. If you have crazy hot “boiling” water trickling into the pool for seven hours in colder weather, you’d be better off in a shower or a hot tub, not a big pool (of water). My trick? Put filter piping in very warm water (a small plastic container, kiddy tiny pool, etc, put an electric water heater in it and just run the pump as usual. The water flow is strong, as strong as your pump is, the filter tubing is plastic but fairly thin and it warms up the WATER inside well. The water coming out of the pool inlet element is considerably warmer than the pool water at the outlet side thus constantly warming up your pool. It DOES work well. 😊
@MylifeMBАй бұрын
Don't do this guys, you are supposed to replace the whole control arm, the control arm comes with the ball joint already installed, it is much easier and less expensive. and you don't have to even remove the axle.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Come on, where’s the fun in that. Lol.
@anthonya5613Ай бұрын
Where did you purchase relay harness? Any specific one?
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
I made the relay harness myself.
@TheNiradulovicАй бұрын
thank you sir. May I ask which type of copper pipe you use for potable water. I guess it does have to have some kind of certified seal or something.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Just the copper pipe from big box stores.
@jamesgleeson6538Ай бұрын
Sry bit off topic but for a spa i boiled water from the kettle using rooftop solar...worked a hoot😊. I do like the engineering inventiveness . Keep it going.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Thank you.
@SUPERIMIAINIАй бұрын
Smoothest dry pour I’ve seen yet, came out good!
@rogerulisesanchiraicobal-qs4biАй бұрын
Master
@JR-px9gpАй бұрын
Wheres the part where you hanged up the cabinet on the wall
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Unfortunately because the cabinet was so big and the room was so small and I had 2 other people helping me hang it there was no way to film the process. It took a few minutes because we had to hold it perfectly square and level in order to slide it into place without tearing up the walls on both sides.
@mikeshinkan7088Ай бұрын
2005 le crew cab w/no nav, I replaced it from glovebox area but it was a nightmare and miracle because it was mostly by feel
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Yeah the older models without the screen I’ve heard you can get to it without taking out the dash.
@VooDooV6Ай бұрын
Great job...but please never say intake again...its supply amd return...
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
True true.
@StevenChishamАй бұрын
Does the pvc stand that kind of temperature and pressure?
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
It held up fine. They really only had to hold the seal in place until the sealant setup. But it’s right at the temp where pvc will get soft.
@tilemarblegraniteАй бұрын
Old School Shower speaking: Oatey showers. Question who is responsible for the pre slope, builder/plumber or the tiler?
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Typically the person that is doing the tiling will do the preslope. Builder usually just does rough in.
@BrandonPowers-z3tАй бұрын
Omg you didn’t plasti the crank journals! Your very trusting huh?
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
That was all done at the machine shop.
@BrandonPowers-z3tАй бұрын
(Balanced everything) still vibrates like a bitch.Took 2j 8 months to deck a block? Not too surprising I guess. Can’t believe your putting that weak ass crank back in instead of using a fully weighted knife one.
@jcberbАй бұрын
Did a small dry poor for a heat pump pad. Came out well. For something small with little or no traffic dry poor is okay. Anything larger than just a hand full of bags im calling a truck.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
I’m with you. Anything with no traffic dry pour all day.
@BrandonPowers-z3tАй бұрын
Why the heck would you use a paper head gasket? Why was that motor tore down?
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Got torn down because it had blown and head gasket twice in the past. I used all Nissan seals and gaskets to reseal motor.
@philjenkins2320Ай бұрын
I'm adding this to my list of things to do. This pile of junk sucks the way it is!
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Yeah they are pretty bad right out of the box.
@NoyPhouthavongАй бұрын
Help? I have a 06 is250 been parked for 8 months now trying to get it going again check all the fuse all good new fuel pump,battery, junkyard starter and alternator it would crank but won’t start.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Go back to basics, check for fuel and spark. If you’re getting that then you may be out of time. Also it could be an issue with the car just not cranking fast enough. Maybe try jumping it off another car too. If no spark you probably have a bad cam or crank position sensor. Best to get a scanner on it to confirm.
@NoyPhouthavong25 күн бұрын
@@chrisbuildsitall ok I’ll try what you said and see if it’ll work thank you for your help
@WalkingbytheSpiritAlwaysАй бұрын
Thank you! I haven't ever cleaned mine, and the first Hayward lasted 6 years. This one is five years old, and it's starting to read 2400 when it's at 3000 salt according to the pool store. So I tried to clean it yesterday, but I couldn't get the cord side union to turn (I know it's supposed to go in the opposite direction). Do you know how I can get it loosened? It was also running some water out while everything is turned off out of the side I did get disconnected. I couldn't figure out if there is a valve to shut off, but maybe opening the filter basket like you did would help? I am a 64 year old woman who isn't the strongest, but I did install the new one myself five years ago. I also had trouble getting the plug to come out of the panel. Is it okay to use WD40? Probably not. Any help is appreciated.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
No Wd40 for sure. You can use electrical grease once you get the cord out. Sometimes over time the unions get really hard to undo. I use a big pair of pliers, but you can also try twisting the cell its self to get that union loose.
@WalkingbytheSpiritAlways22 күн бұрын
@@chrisbuildsitall Thank you. I got it loose with a strap wrench. Blessings.
@alexg5513Ай бұрын
Damn, how much is your electricity bills with that pump working constantly.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
It doesn’t cost much to run the little pump.
@kailumgg7736Ай бұрын
I would also recommend heat pumps they are amazing very erngy efficiency compared to electric heaters and they can heat up very quickly
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Heat pumps are great in the right environment. They use a lot of electricity though so it depends on your prices of gas vs electricity if they would make sense.
@kailumgg773625 күн бұрын
@@chrisbuildsitall yea we only have a small pool with a small heat pump it works brilliantly
@grovershipman9649Ай бұрын
I'd be a little concerned about shed proximity to the house. Looks like a 1x12 debris collection chasm. How do you maintain that wall, window(s), etc. I think a prefab shed on skids would be cheaper and better for the property. Slab looks good though.
@chrisbuildsitall26 күн бұрын
Skids would have been a great idea. I placed it there because there are no windows or anything to maintain except a gutter towards the back.
@mrbing70Ай бұрын
What an asshole. He took the time to do everything beautifully. He's an asshole because instead of using a mixer or having a cement truck, he's doing that dry pour bullshit. That pad won't have any structural integrity and will crumble. Dry pouring is nonsense
@boywonder2799Ай бұрын
Ring has Rain Gutter Adapter. It will hold both soloar panel and camera.