Saturday, December 25, 2010

Induction cooktop installation




12/24/2010:
Went and got Granite sealer, cleaner, polisher, and epoxy from Lowes. Since the thickness of the countertop is much narrower that the metal mounting brackets, I had to be creative to make it work - made make-shift supports for the cooktop - glue (with the epoxy) two small wood pieces to the side of drawer cabinets and below the countertop to make more contact area for the cooktop support brackets. Clamps were used to assure a strong bond.

12/25/2010:
Secured the wood pieces glued with long screws to the cabinets. Add several screw holes to the mounting metal brackets so that they can be attached to the wood pieces added, now I have enough surface to glue the metal mounting brackets to the countertop cutout.
Clean the countertop with DuPont Granite and Marble Cleaner, applied DuPont Granite and Marble Sealer - waited 30 minutes before wiping off the excess. DuPont Granite and Marble Polisher made the countertop slippery but not really more shining than before.

Ran into a little problem with the electrical connection; The junction box was placed too close to the cooktop, and the cooktop flexible conduit was not really flexible and thus can't reach the junction box properly. It took me a long while to figure out but finally bent the conduit more so that it can reach the junction from a different angle (bottom instead of the right hand side).

12/26/2010:
Connect the cooktop electrical wires (red, black, and green) to the junction box, switch on the breaker and boiled some hot water - voila, it worked. It turned out the control is fairly easy to use, just need some getting used to - cleaning the ceramic top maybe more challenging.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Kitchen Countertop, sink, etc installation - 12/23/2010

12/23/2010:


The crew (5 in 2 trucks) arrived at 8:15 in the morning, after covering the floor with paper and cloths, they moved the larger piece (which houses the sink) into the kitchen carefully. Cements are used to secure the granite to the cabinets below. The window and back splash pieces were carefullt measured and made right outside of the garage, ot tookk a while to get use to the 8-inch back splash; the window piece was made so beautiful that it blended the window and the countertop nicely. The sink was first fitted to sit on top of the cabinet (with some trimming of the cabinet top) then glued and secured underneath the countertop.

After finishing the sink piece, the crew left to get the cooktop piece and would return the afternoon but didn't say when, we later found out (John from UMG called) that the cooktop piece was broken so they had to remake it. The crew returned at about 4:00 with the cooktop piece, it was about 1/3 of the sink piece and thus easier to handle. Jose (the head crew) measured carefully (with my input) where and how much to cutout for the cooktop, it took only 5 minutes to make the cut, the rest was gluing the back splash and caulking, they were very very focused on doing a good job, their attitude and workmanship absolutely surpass that of you know who. The cooktop was tested and it fitted well. Because of the thickness of the countertop was only 3/4" but the metal supports were 1", I had to find a way to make the supports fit well. Glue and additional wood pieces were needed.

The kitchen looks nice with the new countertop even though we still have the old cabinets.

They even hauled away our old sink (after getting OK from their boss) after we inquired the possiblity, the old sink was really heavy for me to handle, now I don't have to worry about how to get rid off it.


Need to get glue/epoxy to install the induction cooktop, also need to get Granite sealer as well cleaner to make the countertop last.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Fall 2010 Rebuilding Together Silicon Valley



Dates: Saturday, October 23, 2010

Your assigned time: 8am – 5pm or until the project is completed

House Address: 587 Water Witch Way, Winchester Ranch Mobile Home Park, San Jose, CA, 95117

The homeowner is 92 years old and has lived in San Jose since she was born. She has 2 children, one son and one daughter. Her son lives in San Jose, but her daughter does not; both are in their 70s. The house is about 33 years old and she moved here when her mobile home and the park were new. She was married twice. Her first husband, who was in the Air Force, passed away when he was 37 years old; her second husband passed away in his 60’s. The only source of income for this homeowner is Social Security and a small pension from her second husband. She has had a heart attack before, she also fell and broke her shoulder, and has severe arthritis in her back which causes pain in her arms and hands. She is in need of assistance in the kitchen, bathroom and some exterior repairs as well.

Parking: Parking is limited in the park. It is recommended that you park in the Century Theater parking lot on Olsen behind the Winchester Mystery House and walk into the park. This home is all the way back and to the left at the last street.

Clothing: Old clothes (may get dirt or paint on them). You will receive a t-shirt at the site to wear and take home. For the safety of our homeowners and volunteers, everyone on site must wear the Rebuilding Day t-shirt.

Recommended items to bring:

· Sunscreen, hat, sunglasses, and sensible, closed-toe shoes

· Water bottle (Water coolers will be available at every site for refills.)

· Tools that are helpful but not necessary:

Hammers Brooms Hand tools and saws

Small ladders Work and rubber gloves Etc…


From 8:00 - 1:30


Friday, December 10, 2010

High heartbeat rate - the longest experienced so far

Finishing yard waste cleanup in the street after the pickup;
Swept the leaves in the backyard;
Tried to wash up in the bathroom when my heart rate jumped again; thinking it would gradually level off after a while, I stood in the bathroom and wait, minutes past but no sign of recovering, I had to sit on the toilet to rest as I felt weak and sweating. Anita came to help and added towel and cloth on me. As it wasn't going away as before, Anita called 911, 6 firefighters came to the bedroom to help, after some questions, I was put on monitor and injected with some kind of medication - to slow down my heart rate - I leaned later that the injection was to stop my heart for a few seconds (4 to be exact) and restart it, much like reseting a device when it became non-responding, my heart rate gradually slowed down from over 200 to about 85. The ambulance took me to Regional Medical Hospital for observation; changing into hospital gown and lay in bed for the doctor. The doctor saw me briefly (not in grave danger) and said he will return after my blood test, the nurse drew 4 tubes of blood from me at 12:00 and the doctor returned to let me know that test results are ok and can go home, the nurse came a little later to give me the prescription and some info relating to the medication and my condition - I have the "Paroxysmal Atrial Tachycardia/Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia", also means "sudden onset of fast heart beating". The prescription was to prevent this from reoccurring but it does carry a number of side effects - see Wikipedia for more info. I need to check another possibility - overactive thyroid, common symptoms are excessive sweating, high heart rate (a form of Palpitation), diarrhea, weight loss, etc.

(IV on my right arm, blood was drew from the back of my left hand, a dozen vital sign monitoring stickers were placed on my chest and legs)

At the ER, an administrator (Sam) took my info and gave some valuable info when he found out I do not have insurance, Medi-Cal as well as other possible low income assists. A nice guy indeed.