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Russell wrote:Anyone knows some good home centers in the Kinki area?
yanpa wrote:chokonen888 wrote:Wage Slave wrote:yanpa wrote:However the builders did skimp a bit on the number of outlets, especially upstairs.
It is easy and cheap to increase to number of sockets at each outlet to 3. Not perfect of course, but it might help.
I've seen those before, makes sense...but I'm guessing what Yanpa wants is the actual outlets in different locations.
Bingo.
Coligny wrote:Also, I wall socket supposed to be 1500W rated, pretty sure no matter the number of plugs provided...
While 2 distinct socket should give 2x 1500 W... at least with the english ring wiring system... now with the japanese daisy chaining crap... not so sure...
(bit fuzzy for me here... while the ring concept makes sense, it's a recipe for DIY disaster... much prefer a star distribution scheme)
Coligny wrote:Sidenote, I think it's a 1500w peak with 1200w continuous.
For a 20A fuse 2 sockets of 1200w sounds reasonable.
Also, in the bunker lights and former aircon fans are on their own fuse.
Coligny wrote:Timer switch on amazon:
http://goo.gl/hhjWPo
With 15/30/90 min selector, maybe more for cat shitter/kitchen fan...
But other models available in them related items list...
Wage Slave wrote:Russell wrote:Thanks Hammer, I'll keep that in mind.
I am currently in the process of doing some rewiring. Lights in staircase and lights in 2nd floor hallway are in different circuits. Trying to unify them, so that I can switch off the lights at the second floor from the bottom of the stairs (damn kids, for always keeping the 2nd floor lights on).
Two circuits means two power sources, which can conflict, so I must take out one. One circuit has two switches, and one has three. I roughly mapped out which wires go where; now I only have to locate the power sources.
Coligny's comment is well taken. Even though 100V is fairly safe and there will almost certainly be an earth leakage detector be extremely careful. Never assume something is not live. Always test it. The following is for your consideration and only represents my inexpert thoughts on the problem.
Are you going to wire it so that the lights upstairs can be turned off or on from either downstairs or up? If so, it seems to me you would need to get two, three way switches and fit one with the existing switches downstairs and one with the switches upstairs. As you said you will need to work out at which switch the supply enters the hall light circuit upstairs and disconnect that supply at the switch (and make safe of course). Then run a twin core cable between the two traveller connections of the new downstairs switch to the two on the new upstairs switch. Then connect the common of the upstairs 3 way switch to the hot side of an upstairs switch and finally connect the common of the downstairs switch to the hot side of any downstairs switch.
Now all the lights will be on one breaker and you will be able to turn off all the lights from downstairs with your new switch. If the kids then want to turn them back on they will either have to do so from downstairs or flick the new switch upstairs and then upstairs will work normally again. If there is anything in the way of sockets or other lights in the circuit after the hall lights then they will now be on the new circuit too which might might not be convenient and might start to raise questions about capacity. You could work out which switch has the supply running off to the rest of the circuit disconnect it and connect it to the supply you disconnected earlier. You might well get lucky and find that the hall lights are on their own string and don't affect anything else or the switch with supply in is also the host for supply out to the non hall light bits of the circuit. In that case just connect the disconnected supply to the supply out.
All that assumes that the hall light switches have been wired in a little string that might or might not then go off to feed other things. If not then it gets more difficult. Not in theory, but in practice.
It's time to move to a new city. You look at houses you might want to buy and finally settle on one that's in the right location and appeals to you. But in Japan, that appeal hardly matters: the average home only lasts for 30 years.
That's because, as the economists Richard Koo and Masaya Sasaki show in a report, 15 years after being built the average house is worth nothing. "It's a direct contrast to, for example, western Europe, where many of the most desirable buildings are 200 years old," notes Alastair Townsend, a British architect living and working in Japan. "It's not environmentally sustainable but also not financially sustainable. People work very hard to pay off a mortgage that's ultimately worth zero." ...
Jiro Yoshida, an assistant professor of business at Pennsylvania State University, specialises in the Japanese housing market. "Most structures in, for example, Tokyo were destroyed, so everything had to be rebuilt from scratch," he says. "The new buildings weren't very good, so after a while many had to be knocked down." ...
The irony is that unlike their post-war hastily erected forerunners, today's homes are sometimes well built and could easily last for several more decades. "Japan has a very efficient and sustainable way of mass-producing timber homes that are very good and can even withstand earthquakes,"
People work very hard to pay off a mortgage that's ultimately worth zero.
Wage Slave wrote:Judging by the building we had done I would say that the foundations (Massive steel reinforced formed concrete thing on a bed of hard core) and the timber frame were indeed high quality and produced efficiently.
The weakness was in the quality of the materials used to clad and finish
"It's not environmentally sustainable
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Judging by the building we had done I would say that the foundations (Massive steel reinforced formed concrete thing on a bed of hard core) and the timber frame were indeed high quality and produced efficiently.
The weakness was in the quality of the materials used to clad and finish
That's what I figured.
chokonen888 wrote:"It's not environmentally sustainable
But they are called "ECO" homes?!
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Judging by the building we had done I would say that the foundations (Massive steel reinforced formed concrete thing on a bed of hard core) and the timber frame were indeed high quality and produced efficiently.
The weakness was in the quality of the materials used to clad and finish
That's what I figured.
what do they have against paint....fucking wallpaper everywhere!!
Wage Slave wrote:chokonen888 wrote:"It's not environmentally sustainable
But they are called "ECO" homes?!
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Judging by the building we had done I would say that the foundations (Massive steel reinforced formed concrete thing on a bed of hard core) and the timber frame were indeed high quality and produced efficiently.
The weakness was in the quality of the materials used to clad and finish
That's what I figured.
what do they have against paint....fucking wallpaper everywhere!!
Agreed 100% on paint. It has got a bit better but I was deeply shocked when I saw what little was available in my local Komeri 8 years ago. And insanely expensive with it. Nippon Paint must have some seriously influential connections.
And yeah the wallpaper. We were given a huge book to choose from - Every single one was a shade of white and there were endless minor variations of the same dust collecting textures. I asked if I could just have lining paper suitable for painting and they thought I was crazy. In the end I just bought something plain and one day, if I can afford the paint, I'll paint it.
Wage Slave wrote:And then there's the plastic is better than paint policy. In a way a lot of paint is just a kind very thin layer of plastic I suppose but it can be stripped or painted over. Redecorated! What a weird idea! No, make everything or finish everything in plastic that yellows over time or peels off in the end leaving no choice but to rebuild.
chokonen888 wrote:The plastic walls in the shower rooms....they don't even use silicone in between the panels!! Wouldn't mind it so much if they were reasonably priced but they cost a fortune. Cheaper (and bett looking IMO) to tile that shit.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:chokonen888 wrote:The plastic walls in the shower rooms....they don't even use silicone in between the panels!! Wouldn't mind it so much if they were reasonably priced but they cost a fortune. Cheaper (and bett looking IMO) to tile that shit.
Plus, as I learned the hard way, if you punch them in a rage because your girlfriend is being a cunt and it's her or the wall, they will break and it's not cheap to replace the whole panel. I guess it's better than getting hanged for murder though. Picking fiberglass out of my knuckles wasn't very fun by the way.
chokonen888 wrote:Wage Slave wrote:chokonen888 wrote:"It's not environmentally sustainable
But they are called "ECO" homes?!
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Judging by the building we had done I would say that the foundations (Massive steel reinforced formed concrete thing on a bed of hard core) and the timber frame were indeed high quality and produced efficiently.
The weakness was in the quality of the materials used to clad and finish
That's what I figured.
what do they have against paint....fucking wallpaper everywhere!!
Agreed 100% on paint. It has got a bit better but I was deeply shocked when I saw what little was available in my local Komeri 8 years ago. And insanely expensive with it. Nippon Paint must have some seriously influential connections.
And yeah the wallpaper. We were given a huge book to choose from - Every single one was a shade of white and there were endless minor variations of the same dust collecting textures. I asked if I could just have lining paper suitable for painting and they thought I was crazy. In the end I just bought something plain and one day, if I can afford the paint, I'll paint it.
The ideal way to build a quality home here seems to be to have a team do the excavations,frame your place, and then sub out all the rest with materials and methods of your choosing. (and doing what work you can yourself) Hell, if you want a concrete box, you can probably save up to 60% of what they normally charge.Wage Slave wrote:And then there's the plastic is better than paint policy. In a way a lot of paint is just a kind very thin layer of plastic I suppose but it can be stripped or painted over. Redecorated! What a weird idea! No, make everything or finish everything in plastic that yellows over time or peels off in the end leaving no choice but to rebuild.
The plastic walls in the shower rooms....they don't even use silicone in between the panels!! Wouldn't mind it so much if they were reasonably priced but they cost a fortune. Cheaper (and bett looking IMO) to tile that shit.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:chokonen888 wrote:The plastic walls in the shower rooms....they don't even use silicone in between the panels!! Wouldn't mind it so much if they were reasonably priced but they cost a fortune. Cheaper (and bett looking IMO) to tile that shit.
Plus, as I learned the hard way, if you punch them in a rage because your girlfriend is being a cunt and it's her or the wall, they will break and it's not cheap to replace the whole panel. I guess it's better than getting hanged for murder though. Picking fiberglass out of my knuckles wasn't very fun by the way.
Wage Slave wrote:I have to admit I quite like the underfloor storage in the kitchen. And it doubles as an access hatch to the underfloor area. I am wondering about floor tiles for my kitchen floor. Did you go with the hard vinyl ones or the glazed earthenware type with grout?
wuchan wrote:we used outdoor creamic tiles with grout.
wuchan wrote:None of the big house builders will ever let you do anything yourself. I tried. and tried... and tried.... All met with dame.
wuchan wrote:The whole planning process was a total fucking battle. Our first architect spoke English, built houses in the USA and totally loved all our ideas. Two months later we were told "he was moved" and we were presented with a new cunt who had redone the entire plan without consulting us. Six months of eight hour weekly meetings at their office followed. In the end we figured out that the first guy got fired because he didn't try to force all the junk we didn't need or want.
Rubber floors in the kitchen and bathrooms? Fuck no, tile.
A trap door in the middle of the kitchen? Fuck that.
Particle board windowsills? Um.. Rain? Nah, not a problem because Japanese people don't leave the windows open.
Gas for cooking and water? No one has that in Japan!
What's all that stuff out side on the plan? We are going to spend half the budget on landscaping! Um, we live on a farm and have all the equipment to do it ourselves. But how will you know where to put the plants?
and the list goes on.
In the end Mrs. Wu told the cunt that we were more than happy to walk away and terminate the contract due to their unwillingness to build our house our way. This was after five or so requests for a new "architect". Magically the cunt stopped trying to change things and stopped talking to me all together. He just stomped around like a baby for the rest of the project.
Russell wrote:
And wall paper on the ceilings: who the fuck could think up something like that?!?
wuchan wrote:Wage Slave wrote:I have to admit I quite like the underfloor storage in the kitchen. And it doubles as an access hatch to the underfloor area. I am wondering about floor tiles for my kitchen floor. Did you go with the hard vinyl ones or the glazed earthenware type with grout?
we used outdoor creamic tiles with grout. They thought I was nuts until they saw them in the house.
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