Oh, nooooooo. So there is a potential fix for this: if you remove the next lower group of tiles, carefully, you should find an upwards-turned flange on the tub back, and you can use that along with something like schluter kerdi membrane to at least locally make sure water escaping through the tiles isn't also escaping into the walls and rotting the sill. But you might want to make sure of that now, because the front end of a tub is heavy and boy would you hate to have the floor fail from rotted joists when you have a person in a tub on top of it.
Heh. Well, if the tub spout and valve handle would come off, I could make a proper repair. Instead, I have in mind a particular kludge that, with a little luck, will last until the mid-century valve set dies completely, and I have to make it all go away with extreme prejudice. I had all the makings except for one 6" bolt, so I'll try again in the morning. I know what caused this particular problem, and it never affected the framing, so at least that scenario is averted.
Entremet Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh "“Like most people in the US, I grew up knowing the words to this carol and even (shudder) singing them occasionally (singing is not a strong point of mine), but never really thought about what they meant, how the carol originated, or what birds were involved”, says Dr Rasmussen in email. So she decided to figure it out. Dr Rasmussen, who’s tied for third for the most bird discoveries in the world, is probably also the world’s foremost avian sleuth, due to her meticulous detective work a few years ago that uncovered the many ornithological thefts and records frauds in museums that were committed by eminent British ornithologist, Richard Meinertzhagen. But who would ever have thought that an old Christmas carol might also hold an avian mystery? “After all, it’s just a Christmas carol!” Dr Rasmussen points out." https://medium.com/@GrrlScientist/meet-the-real-birds-of-the-twelve-days-of-christmas-fame-grrlscientist-5a8bc09350c9
Flushbunkingly Gloriumptious Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh "Renowned children's author and occasional spy, Roald Dahl spent the last years of his life in a home located in the small English village of Great Missenden, and now his beloved village is home to an attractive museum devoted to his life and works. [...] Today the museum holds all of Dahl's original manuscripts, as well as his "Idea Books" where he would jot down his nascent creations. In addition to celebrating his writing career, there are also displays covering his service in the RAF. However, the crown jewel of the museum is the recreation of Dahl's purpose built "Writing Hut," complete with the arm chair he had customized to write in." http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-roald-dahl-museum
Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh So Labradors tend to overeat. Now it has been traced to genetic differences. "Dr Eleanor Raffan, a veterinary surgeon and geneticist who studies how genes influence metabolism at the Institute of Metabolic Science at the University of Cambridge recently published a study that examines the genetics that underlie food motivation and obesity in Labrador retrievers. [...] When Dr Raffan and her team carefully examined this POMC gene variant, they found that a small 14-basepair section a little more than halfway down the gene’s length was missing. This deletion creates a frameshift mutation that results in the production of an abnormal protein where the last half is scrambled into a blob of nonsense [...]. Normally, the POMC is translated into the POMC pro-peptide, which is cleaved at precise sites to give rise to number of smaller peptides, including the appetite suppressing neuropeptides, ß-MSH & ß-endorphin, but the abnormal POMC pro-peptide do...
Beep beep!
ReplyDeleteOh, nooooooo.
ReplyDeleteSo there is a potential fix for this: if you remove the next lower group of tiles, carefully, you should find an upwards-turned flange on the tub back, and you can use that along with something like schluter kerdi membrane to at least locally make sure water escaping through the tiles isn't also escaping into the walls and rotting the sill. But you might want to make sure of that now, because the front end of a tub is heavy and boy would you hate to have the floor fail from rotted joists when you have a person in a tub on top of it.
Heh. Well, if the tub spout and valve handle would come off, I could make a proper repair.
ReplyDeleteInstead, I have in mind a particular kludge that, with a little luck, will last until the mid-century valve set dies completely, and I have to make it all go away with extreme prejudice.
I had all the makings except for one 6" bolt, so I'll try again in the morning.
I know what caused this particular problem, and it never affected the framing, so at least that scenario is averted.
My dear husband, hard at work, making his family happy!
ReplyDelete