One of the projects I'm trying to get done while being stuck at home forever is cleaning, organizing, and fixing my garage.
My garage is a small detached one-car built in the 1940's when my house was built, and for lack of a better term, it's falling apart. Due to the laws in my area, I can't just knock it down and build a new one, because the neighbors' house is too close to it and it's right on the property line. I can, however, restore it completely, and there's barely enough of it left to do that, so that's the route I'm taking. The paint is peeling, the exterior trim is in bad shape, some spots have some severe wood rot, and the side door needs to be replaced big time. It's the cheap, rusty Miata of garages. What's good about it is that it's still a standing garage, it has a non-leaky roof, it has a concrete pad under it, and it has power.
A previous owner hung up a bunch of insulation, which is now falling off the roof and walls. Over the weekend, I started to staple it back up. And there was an incident.
While trying to hang this bit of insulation back up, I nicked this wire with the stapler while it was behind the insulation (hence the tape). I knew the wire was back there, but it slipped from where I thought it was and stupidity occurred. Immediately, I smelled burning insulation, so I shut down the circuit. After taping it up, it was not melty/hot/etc, and everything on the circuit still worked, but I don't trust it and I need to replace that run. This is the 15A circuit that runs the lights too. Stupid!!!
The fun part: that run goes right into the breaker box. There are actually 2 white wires that go in on the same spot on that breaker, going to opposite ends of the garage (it's the leftmost breaker).
It goes from the box, up through that stud to the left, and into a junction box. I've never dabbled in household wiring other than wiring a few lights and outlets, but it should be relatively easy, theoretically. I plan on shutting the main off, replacing the run, and calling it done. Makes sense right?
I'm making this a teachable moment. I need to pay better attention when working on things.
BONUS CONTENT #1!!!
While poking around, I found some wires that go to nothing! Great!
I assume this one went to a long-gone exterior light. I plan on removing it while the power's off, even though I suspect it's no longer hooked up to anything.
BONUS CONTENT #2!!!:
There seems to be some debate on how often you should drain the water in your air compressor tank. Draining it NEVER is probably not the recommended interval.
Sludgy chunks came out of this thing. I rarely use the compressor, but I don't think I've ever drained it. Again, stupid!!! I bought it probably 5-6 years ago used locally, and the guy recommended that I replace the drain when I bought it. I bought one, but lost it in the abyss that was my garage. I found the drain while cleaning so I installed it.
I also cleaned it up for probably the first time ever.
I do have another compressor project (a frankensteined 20 gallon Dayton Speedaire with a 25 gallon Craftsman auxiliary tank) but this one works great for most of the simple stuff I need it for.
Be careful out there, guys!