Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Is this thing on?

Have I mentioned how loud my dishwasher is? I'm not talking about noise of water draining into the sink or a distracting but tolerable white noise of the motor running. I have no idea why, but it makes a grinding noise (there is no hard food grinder or disposer in it). The only thing I can liken it to is a garbage disposal that has been turned on...with a spoon in it! The odd part is that it doesn't make the noise for the entire cycle, nor does it make it every time for the same amount of time even when running the same cycle.

The first time I heard it was the first time the machine was run after we moved in. We cleaned the kitchen after making dinner in our single unpacked frying pan and half a dozen plates. Five minutes after the cycle started I realize DH had doubled the volume level on the TV and my children are screaming to be heard over it. I realized that the relatively quiet noise level of the dishwasher had gradually increased over that 5 minutes and now you couldn't be in the same room with it and think.  Worse, you couldn't be in a DIFFERENT room with it and still hear reasonable noise levels like the television or human speech from a 4 and 9 year old.  Honestly it felt like a kick in the teeth, just one more thing to add to the Great Big List of Fixits!

Our home is on a septic system so we have to be cognizant of how much water we are using at any given time.  This means that if I have run a couple loads of laundry before dinner and the kids are taking a bath after dinner I need to wait to run the dishwasher until the middle of the night so that the system has time to process all the wastewater.  Not a problem as most dishwashers these days have some kind of time delay.  A week or so after learning how loud the dishwasher was we discovered that the time delay feature didn't work.  Of course we would learn this after putting approximately half a load of dishes back in the kitchen cabinets thinking they had been washed.  We began looking for a new dishwasher the following weekend!

Now I should say that I am a "gadget junkie".  In most households this trait usually falls to the men but to be honest DH doesn't have time most days to keep up with important current events much less learn about the latest i-device or television to hit the world of technology.  I, on the other hand, love "bells and whistles", I've never owned a VCR (yes, I am that old) that had the time perpetually flashing 12:00, and as you can tell from my previous post, I know the difference between a power cord, coaxial cable and high definition multimedia interface (HDMI) cable.  This all means that going to the store to pick out a new kitchen appliance wasn't going to be easy as I have to temper my desire for the "latest and greatest" with my desire not to have to spend an arm and a leg to get it.  What makes the situation even harder is I do research....LOTS of research and read user reviews on virtually everything I buy.

I have come to the conclusion that when purchasing appliances (regardless of the appliance type) that research may not be as important as an extended warranty.  Every brand has their fan-boys, but no brands are made the way they were 20 years ago. Gone are they days that the washer and dryer set that you purchased when you got married would be the same set that you load up and move for your kid's to use for few years while renting a house with their friends while they are in college.  Now days you'll be lucky to get 4 or 5 years of use out of low-end machines and 10 out of the mac-daddy units.

I finally found the one I wanted, and placed an order for it online (because being willing to wait to have it ship from New York saved me $500 and I still got a 5 year onsite warranty).  Unfortunately I received an email indicating that the appliance was now on back-order from the manufacturer so would take longer that usual to arrive.  Fast forward one month and it finally arrived today!

My mother asked me when the installer was coming to put it in.  HA!  Seriously?! There are very few things I will pay someone to do around my house for me and they usually entail dealing with a gas line.  For anyone thinking they need to pay $199 to have someone install a dishwasher you should know that the hardest part is making sure you connect your water lines tight enough to not leak...but not so tight that they crack a connector and cause a leak.

The steps are pretty simple especially if you are just replacing an old dishwasher with the new.


First remove the old dishwasher (turn off the water line and power to it first!) so that you know if you have an outlet or direct wire coming from the wall.
Dishwasher space with direct wire from wall.

Connect the power.  (I find it easier to do the power before the unit is slid in if your cord will allow)

Connect 3 wires (hot, neutral and ground)
Slide the dishwasher into the provided space.  (Depending on your insulation this may be the most time consuming part as you don't want it bunching up and hanging out the front under the counter)


The insulation is the most challenging part of sliding the unit in under the counter top

Finally connect the water lines, secure unit to cabinets and install the handle if necessary!

Installed and ready for use!
Obviously this is an over-simplification as each unit is different.  But it isn't nearly as complicated as most installers and contractors would have you believe.  The nice thing is that now most companies make owners and installation manuals available for download so you can see what you are getting yourself into before the unit is delivered.  

We love the new unit.  Now the only thing we hear when it is running is the sound of our voices saying "Is this thing on?"

Friday, February 1, 2013

Hi-Def Headache

If you saw my last post I mentioned the need to replace a cable in our home theater. Judging from the giant snarl of cables, I am under the belief that when the PO was removing AV components he was not under contract to leave with the house he became very frustrated. This mess of cables was pretty tightly knotted up and by the time I sorted them all I I had found 3 cables that were not even connected to anything. I am assuming he finally threw up his hands in frustration and figured the grief spent untangling the mess wasn't worth his time and he decided to just purchase new cables when he set up in his next residence. Unfortunately another by-product of this frustration was a broken connector on the HDMI cable that ran from the receiver through the wall, up into the attic, down from the ceiling and plugged into the theater projector.

Damaged HDMI cable

I originally thought that this was "no big deal".  As with most any other cord, I figured I could slice the end off of it and attach a replacement.  Uhhh...NOPE!  turns out all of those little wires (19 in total) you see poking out are measured to EXACTLY the same length and though the new cable may actually transmit an image or sound with a new end is attached you run a risk of damaging your component.  

So now I have to run a new line inside the wall.  This realization did not make me happy as looking at the portion of cable I could actually pull out of the wall indicated that there was a good chance the cable was installed before the drywall went in (judging from the amount of mud on the cable) which meant it was possible that the cable could be stapled in along the wall somewhere or zig-zagged so many time that running a new one in the same location would be impossible without tearing out the wall.  With the other issues we have run across, I was prepared for the worst.

After 4 trips into the attic I FINALLY located where the wire came up the wall and across the ceiling to the projector.  I gave it a pretty good tug but it didn't want to budge.  But since we are talking about roughly 35 feet of cable it was possible it was just getting hung up on one turn or even a rough edge of drywall inside the wall.  Since HDMI cables are notoriously fragile on their connectors I decided my best bet was not to try to connect the old cable to the new cable and hope they pull through together but rather to use the old cable to pull a snake up to the attic.  If the snake managed to make its way up then the I could attached the new cable to it and pull it back down. 

After much pulling on my part at pushing on the part of my 9 year old darling daughter we finally managed to extract the old cable into the attic and out of the wall...with the snake taped to it.    Now we had to tape the new cable to the snake and pull it back down into the wall and out to connect to the home theater receiver.  But as I have stated...these connectors break pretty easily so I had to figure out how to pull it through the wall without damaging the new cord.

First we taped the new cable to the snake...and made sure that the protective cover was secure on the end of the cable so that any insulation it encountered wouldn't get inside the connector. As you can see though...this left a pretty blunt end to pull through the "unknown".  I needed something that would reduce the risk of the new cord snagging on something and becoming damaged.

New cable taped to snake


My brilliant solution came in the form of an empty paper towel roll!


Empty paper towel roll taped around connector end of new cable.
By wrapping the cardboard tube around the end of the new cable I could create a funnel shape and prevented the cable from snagging in the wall.  With a bit of tugging by DD and me feeding it down from the attic we finally managed to get the new cable installed...and without damage!

And once again, I got the chance to teach my girl that the only way she will ever know if she truly can't do something is to try it!  I could have easily paid to have someone come in and do this for us...but it is much more satisfying (and cheaper!) to know I did it myself...and my kids get to learn that lesson as well.  

My DIY assistant pulling the new cord through the wall.