Are LG Appliances Reliable?
2:42
3 ай бұрын
Is Kohler Still Worth it?
3:57
5 ай бұрын
Пікірлер
@dimcha78
@dimcha78 3 күн бұрын
Glass doors are better in terms of marketing because it looks better on magazine pictures and that translates to sales
@adkjfasldkf
@adkjfasldkf 3 күн бұрын
Is your answer that it looks better without glass (or purely aesthetic reasons)? You didn't directly answer the question.
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 3 күн бұрын
Towards the end of the video I said “And that’s the reason. The old world beauty of a range like this is more important than that one modern feature” I’m not really how I could have been more direct.
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 3 күн бұрын
Watch from 3:41 timestamp
@sleptiq
@sleptiq 4 күн бұрын
Reminder: don'"t pee in this shower.
@markhenry6486
@markhenry6486 4 күн бұрын
4 toilets in our place ..... the toto will swallow ANY challenge.
@sloprun
@sloprun 5 күн бұрын
We just installed the Zephyr Typhoon 30 inch, configured for rear exhaust to the outside (about 10 inches to the outside). It only needs to operate at moderate speed to suck out all of the odors, smoke, and moisture. Fit and finish is excellent. It looks more attractive in person than in videos.
@pibblesnbits
@pibblesnbits 5 күн бұрын
How often do you need to change the filter? What is the cost of the filter? May just be cheaper to pay for the water.
@rumhound5903
@rumhound5903 9 күн бұрын
Great information, as always.
@ladeannickels7396
@ladeannickels7396 9 күн бұрын
Good information - I need to research who carries this product!
@dobromirkraychev
@dobromirkraychev 10 күн бұрын
Kohler is not a Bulgarian name 100% . Bulgarians, Germans we all are EU based 😄. Good video 👍
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 10 күн бұрын
I just looked it up, I got that detail wrong, actually he was Austrian. Oops. Good catch.
@82MLPGTS
@82MLPGTS 14 күн бұрын
Limited potential, surely. I wouldn't use it as a food surface.
@canIsingornothehe
@canIsingornothehe 14 күн бұрын
Wtf is the point of not putting glass on the door to look inside??
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 5 күн бұрын
Why High-End French Ranges Ditch Glass Doors: A Chef's Perspective kzbin.info/www/bejne/qn6xdpWEdqajpKs
@canIsingornothehe
@canIsingornothehe 4 күн бұрын
@ wow a whole video reply. Thank you
@spencermorrow2899
@spencermorrow2899 15 күн бұрын
Can you still use toilet bowl cleaner
@Dont_buy_lefty_lies
@Dont_buy_lefty_lies 16 күн бұрын
I have had several call backs for sharkbite pressfittings (many for jobs we didn't do). When i use them its either an open area that can get an occasional quick visual inspection or a temporary repair. They have a time and a place. They are more expensive than other fittings as well. I'll use the best fitting for the circumstance. Typically propress as its the fastest fitting inhave used.
@30minutesLess
@30minutesLess 16 күн бұрын
I did the exact opposite. I ran pex b pipe with pex a fitting and bands…. And its already in the ground
@cheese22
@cheese22 18 күн бұрын
as a real estate photographer, I love leathered finish on stone. looks so good. it always looks so good on photos because it doesn’t distort light like the polished finishes do. btw you may wanna wipe your camera lens off before shooting 😂❤
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 16 күн бұрын
Thanks for the heads up, I’ll do a better job with the lens next time 😂.
@Lionel-alfredaPlett-edwards
@Lionel-alfredaPlett-edwards 19 күн бұрын
Very informative
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 16 күн бұрын
Glad it helped you! 👍
@Lionel-alfredaPlett-edwards
@Lionel-alfredaPlett-edwards 19 күн бұрын
You forgot to ask how high you want to sit
@beniyolaviola
@beniyolaviola 24 күн бұрын
super helpful video thanks!
@david7472
@david7472 25 күн бұрын
Very helpful advice well presented - Thank you
@Aldocello1
@Aldocello1 27 күн бұрын
You look like an idiot with the mic in a whisk , turned me right off from this stove
@squirrel1179
@squirrel1179 29 күн бұрын
There are booster pumps that you can put in place after the RO to increase the pressure for your ice machines.
@sillysphinx2330
@sillysphinx2330 Ай бұрын
That's such a cool opportunity, I hope it works out for you!!
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia 29 күн бұрын
Me too 🤞🏻
@dantove963
@dantove963 Ай бұрын
I have copper in my water. What works to filter it out?
@mikemcginnis9237
@mikemcginnis9237 Ай бұрын
Copper?
@mokdadus
@mokdadus Ай бұрын
What do you think about the Sterling by Kohler Vikrell tub ? Is that acrylic or should I stay away it ?
@mokdadus
@mokdadus Ай бұрын
Thank you for the explanation. I was specifically researching this sterling by Kohler Vikrel tub… now I understand that Vikrel is not really acrylic as they try to advertise it as.
@rizvi921
@rizvi921 Ай бұрын
Hello Sir, i am hoping you would answer before i may make a purchase, i bought this new house with a "insert hood" under fully concealed beautiful wood cabinet.. depth available is maximum of 13 inches and width could be 34 inches, we want something very powerful with respect to cfm for asian cooking..limitation here is the depth and we dont wanna sacrify the front of woodwork, can you suggest something befitting our need?
@ShayeForTheDay
@ShayeForTheDay Ай бұрын
nobody cares about what you are saying and climate change is a hoax. fresh water is not an issue unless you are stupid
@sandythompson8388
@sandythompson8388 Ай бұрын
Show us the fans longer time frame
@SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
@SweetStuffOnMonarchLane Ай бұрын
It's all about the cookie sheets for me, but more importantly, how well it bakes the cookies! 😋
@ZacharyDimas
@ZacharyDimas Ай бұрын
So people only buy ovens to cook on Thanksgiving? Great logic there.
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia Ай бұрын
People aren’t logical. They’re emotional.
@hannahjoy8623
@hannahjoy8623 Ай бұрын
LOL the cookie sheet thing is spot on. I want all my cookies on one big ass tray!
@mikeymullins5305
@mikeymullins5305 Ай бұрын
That's just the American obsession with taking up waaay too much room on display. But I think I get your point
@dr.mcstuffins5977
@dr.mcstuffins5977 Ай бұрын
Ive had it for a year. Cleaned it exactly the way they say to in tge manual and there is a hidden vent that got completely clogged with hardened lint and my clotges wouldn't dry. This is a non servicable spot on the machine. I had to cut a spot on the back so i can clean this spot withiut having to take it apart every week. Do not buy this piece of garbage.
@jkwfo
@jkwfo Ай бұрын
what about hard water ring in that toto , what to do, I've tried dish soap and a plastic brush
@celiafedeandada2771
@celiafedeandada2771 Ай бұрын
Gonzalez Sharon Jackson Jose Johnson Melissa
@xuser9980
@xuser9980 Ай бұрын
I just sweated-on two PEX fittings and noticed they looked slightly different. Apollo needs to mark their shit better on the front. Someone must've threw a PEX B fitting in the PEX A. Thankfully, I'm using PEX A pipe, so I'll just leave it.
@michaelwilday9836
@michaelwilday9836 Ай бұрын
09:03 - Haunted Plumbing Store... them toilet seats lower themselves!!! 👻👻👻
@SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
@SweetStuffOnMonarchLane Ай бұрын
Hmm. Wouldn’t put one in my bathroom, but may put one in my kitchen/dining room. Thank you for explaining the difference between a mini fridge and built-in. Good to know!
@Benmeglei1
@Benmeglei1 Ай бұрын
This is classless American garbage. Make no mistake.
@cheamericana
@cheamericana Ай бұрын
This video was soooo helpful. Thank you
@watchme3962
@watchme3962 Ай бұрын
My cast iron was installed in ‘78. I’m in the process of installing new delta everedge and the sides are dropping away from the the back. So when placed back to level it leaves a sizable gap in the front of the tub sides. The tub is level and the back wall is level. Is this a normal issues?
@martinruel6375
@martinruel6375 Ай бұрын
I have the same tupperware whisk!
@oghaki5097
@oghaki5097 Ай бұрын
*TLDR* : The main reasons they electroplate stuff like this are: │ (𝑎) Fine finishing, especially high polish, of metals is expensive and time consuming for complex shapes, and even if it can be automated, it wears through tooling. │ (𝑏) Corrosion-resistant stainless steels, like 304 or 316, are extremely hard and cannot be heat treated; thus, even though, e.g. high carbon spring steels can be made harder than stainless, they can be annealed to a much softer state for the vast majority of machining work, while stainless steel is inherently hard, requiring expensive carbide tooling for industrial machining and taking much longer and many more steps to grind, sand, and polish. │ (𝑐) Electroplating automatically produces a finish resembling a full polish, even on fairly rough substrate. Widespread use of electroplating has rendered the appearance of polished metal, mundane, and, though inferior, the public is almost entirely ignorant of the difference, so no significant market forces incentivize production of it. This is misleading-unfortunately, it is pretty common for things made of stainless steel to still get electroplating, and this is because mechanical finishing in general is a relatively expensive process, but stainless steel is inherently a hard metal⁰ and naturally much harder than mild steels and harder than higher carbon steels that have not undergone heat treatment. Hardness can vary between alloys, and some stainless alloy steels can actually be hardened using heat treatment¹, though not to the extent that high carbon steel alloys like spring steels, HSS and other tool steel, etc. can. However, steels that are susceptible to heat treatment can be worked when soft and hardened afterwards, thus limiting machining after hardening to only what is necessary (e.g. final bevel and sharpening of a blade). In contrast, common stainless steel like 304 and 316 are always pretty hard, plus machining work-hardens them, so more expensive machines and tooling is required to efficiently machine it, more time and expertise, needed, and tooling wears out much quicker than with even the hardest steels which can be heat treated. A likely cause of this misunderstanding stems from the fact that, in the modern world, shiny metal surfaces which appear to have been polished are ubiquitous and relatively inexpensive-this is because electroplating is cheap to perform and it will produce shiny smooth surfaces automatically as long as the substrate material is reasonably smooth (or the electroplating layer is sufficiently deep). Before that, shiny smooth metal surfaces were uniquely the result of actually polishing. Anyone who has done any cabinet making or finish work with wood knows how much of a pain in the ass sanding is, requiring you to repeat the sanding process sequentially through smaller grits, with extremely fine finishes often finishing with wet sanding or ultra-fine pumice (e.g. French polish), and after that, you’ll need to apply coats of finish, possibly involving more sanding and then burnishing. Mild steel is much, much harder than wood, and stainless is a lot harder than that. Further, even a brushed finish on metal is going to require you to sequence down to a pretty fine grit, much finer than a normal woodworking project. Finally, very few people have any idea that this is the case, so the market doesn’t pressure large fixture manufacturers to offer expensive self finishes. I even regularly see brass fixtures that are electroplated with brass, despite it being much softer than steel, and this is far inferior in the long run to actually finishing the brass directly, because it will chip and expose the underlying rough substrate brass. The reason I noticed this issue initially was while restoring old planes-I was confused in a number of cases where rust was patchy, some noncorroded regions were very rough steel, and other areas of the tool looked like they’d been finely polished-oddly, the parts that seemed to be in best condition were the parts flaking off as I was polishing and cleaning things up, so I looked things up and realized it was nickel-electroplated. The good news is that electroplating, at least to deposit a lot of common metals, isn’t too complex, it’s just that the bath for some is hazardous if I recall correctly. ────────────── 0. The development of stainless steels began with a Frenchman at the very end of the 18ᵗʰ century, with consistent advancement and the creation of various stainless proto-alloys progressing throughout the 19ᵗʰ, primarily in Germany, England, France, and the United States, and it would blossom at the turn of the 20ᵗʰ century, the benefactors of which would continue to hail from the same relatively concentrated geographic region, with those same four nations continuing to contribute (it seems Germany was contributing a bit more than the others and leading the way, at least in terms of research and discovery, until after the second war), in overwhelming disproportion, to the universal endowment of mankind. *_Note_* , the nature of the topic narrowly circumscribes the contributions to that endowment that are properly included in this expo, i.e. _stainless steel_ , but I’d be doing a disservice to the legions of men from that civilization, of which those nations are members, who contributed to this endowment in other fields if I didn’t remark on the share of contributions, and of the total endowment, i.e. all knowledge, discovery, art, and human achievement generally, which were bestowed on all of us today by the peoples who comprise that civilization, up to today and back to a time that predates any historical record (famously, despite a total lack of historical record, we know from archeology, linguistics, genetics, _et c._ , that they (𝑖) domesticated and spread husbandry of the horse and are responsible for equestrianism, they invented (𝑖𝑖) the composite bow, (𝑖𝑖𝑖) the spoked wheel (a stylized depiction of which was a symbol appearing ubiquitously wherever they are known to have migrated or conquered, and which was still commonly featured in the iconography of their modern descendants until it was forbidden after the second war), (𝑖𝑣) the chariot, (𝑣) the family of languages with the most native speakers by far and spoken by nearly 50% of the world’s population, (𝑣𝑖) lactase persistence, (𝑣𝑖𝑖) the most advanced stone tools, which were state-of-the-art and relied on for survival for thousands of years ( _note_ , the stone tools and methods of their manufacture of the Clovis people of N. America were just as advanced as their Solutrean counterparts found in Europe, and, despite the end of the Solutrean period being roughly five millennia before the earliest evidence of the Clovis culture appearing in N. America, the forms and manufacture of the two are very similar, which noteworthy, since the forms and methods of creating them are unique and far more sophisticated than the stone tools of any other civilization or culture ever found anywhere on Earth for all of human history. Also, roughly 25% of yDNA haplotypes of Native Americans who lived in the N.E. of modern U.S. and Canada are in the 𝑋 clade, specifically, 𝑋2𝑎, which is otherwise found almost exclusively in the Middle East, N. Africa, and Europe. The idea that Solutrean Europeans migrating to N. America from the Atlantic side were the progenitors of the Clovis peoples is a minority position, originally proposed in the 1970s, called _The Solutrean Hypothesis_ .), and possibly (𝑣𝑖𝑖𝑖) the various mining, smelting, and metalworking technologies associated with copper, bronze, and iron. As a proxy how universal, continuous, and disproportionate the contributions of this civilization are, a detailed, possibly controversial book on the topic, _ Human Accomplishment: The Pursuit of Excellence in the Arts and Sciences, 800 B.C. to 1950_ , estimates that the peoples of this civilization are responsible for roughly 97% of human achievement in all of human history. Further, if we split that civilization into two time frames, _modern_ being 1400 AD → 1950 AD and _ancient_ , pre-1400 AD, _modern_ is responsible for about 90%, and _ancient_ , 7%, and the _ancient_ portion of this civilization is responsible for over twice as much as all other civilizations for all of human history, combined. Finally, just looking at human accomplishment since 1400, the top 19 countries based on contribution are all from this civilization, with the 19ᵗʰ-ranked, Iceland, contributing more than any other country outside of this civilization, despite having a population size that is multiple orders of magnitude smaller than many of these countries. 1. Much progress has been made with stainless alloy steels to this end, but harder stainless alloys still exchange increasing concessions in toughness and corrosion resistance for marginal improved hardenability, so that the utility of increased hardness, at least as to edge retention, is self-limited by the accompany losses of toughness, eventually becoming deleterious towards that end. Similarly, incident decreases in corrosion resistance eventually undermine the goal motivating the endeavor in the first place, i.e. the creation of an alloy having both (𝑖) the mechanical properties of a high-performance spring steel and (𝑖𝑖) the excellent corrosion resistance of alloys like 304 or 316.
@PapaBPoppin
@PapaBPoppin Ай бұрын
Bathroom tile? Perry the Bathroom Tile?! Love it!
@DFWHoppe
@DFWHoppe Ай бұрын
@aplatypuss may be interested
@kdavidsmith1
@kdavidsmith1 Ай бұрын
@danprovenmire
@jonathanmoore82
@jonathanmoore82 Ай бұрын
Just use your existing toilet and get the Toto S550e, which has almost all of the same features and costs about $19k less. Also that magic wand button on the remote is to clean the wand. It is not a deodorizer as this man states. The deodorizer turns off and on automatically on all Toto bidets that have this feature.
@HerOwnKnife
@HerOwnKnife Ай бұрын
Love it
@lorileo4319
@lorileo4319 Ай бұрын
Well that is a shifty way to think, go ahead and install something that is only going to last a year to a family who bought your home. Karma is a bitch!
@RemodelMedia
@RemodelMedia Ай бұрын
I mean, you’re not wrong. Unfortunately that is the way most of them think. I’m not saying it’s right, just that it’s true.