I'm not into the cold.

2

Comments

  • sucks2beme
    sucks2beme Posts: 5,681
    TEAforONE wrote: »
    I retired 2 years ago from being a letter carrier for the USPS. 28 1/2 years of Rochester NY winters. Not a big fan of the cold weather anymore. Not so much a big fan of the heat either. That’s why I try to stay indoors. I control the climate.

    Rochester is great, other than that long winter. Not as much snow as Buffalo, but
    the sky was always cloudy for months. That and the car rust. Don't miss that at all.
    "The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." --Thomas Jefferson
  • Willow
    Willow Posts: 11,218
    Right now feels like -24c or -11f.
    Sucks massive donkey nuts 🥜
  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,318
    Jstas wrote: »
    He hasn't been on the forum in years. I think he wrote us off.

    Besides that, I think he was near Juneau which might actually be south of where Willow is.

    We did have a member here from Yellowknife, janmike I think was his name? That's probably the guy who was farthest north in North America.

    I could have froze his account LOL

    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • invalid
    invalid Posts: 1,443
    I have a 125 square new house to roof starting later this month on a lake that channels into lake Michigan. I wouldn't mind doing it in the summer, even if it was hot, because there is always a cool breeze by lake Michigan, but this time of year it's a bitter cold strong wind.
  • pitdogg2
    pitdogg2 Posts: 26,941
    One would think it's too cold to roof unless it was a metal roof.
  • aprazer402
    aprazer402 Posts: 3,353
    As long as I'm not out in the cold all day, I can handle it. The deep snow and blizzard winds in sub-zero are the nasty stuff. I love summer but the high humidity just gets brutal at times. Like my dad always said, when it's cold you just put more clothes on, but in the heat you can only take off so much. Hoping for a mild winter.
  • invalid
    invalid Posts: 1,443
    pitdogg2 wrote: »
    One would think it's too cold to roof unless it was a metal roof.

    It's not ideal, but I've never had a problem with an asphalt shingle roof that was installed in winter. I have some curved copper accent roofs on this project as well.
  • Willow
    Willow Posts: 11,218
    Houses up here are built all year round. Told my son one day, if you get into a trade, try to do one once the walls and roofs are done so you can work comfortably.
  • motorstereo
    motorstereo Posts: 2,316
    I worked on the back of pavers for decades and the heat never really bothered me as you learn to deal with it. But the cold and especially windy and cold days that would do me in. I always tried to have a fire on the job during the cold and if I couldn't I'd try harder to have one.
    3rd shift was especially brutal late in the year. If you ever drove by a paving machine on the highway working after dark late in the year and you could see a fire burning in a metal pail chances are that was me.
  • motorstereo
    motorstereo Posts: 2,316
    invalid wrote: »
    I have a 125 square new house to roof starting later this month on a lake that channels into lake Michigan. I wouldn't mind doing it in the summer, even if it was hot, because there is always a cool breeze by lake Michigan, but this time of year it's a bitter cold strong wind.

    125 square!!! That is one gigantic house! I remember doing a 90 square roof on a church one winter. Stripping off several layers of shingles during the cold was great as we were moving enough to keep warm. Nailing the shingles down though that was no fun at all as you barely get to move.
  • skipshot12
    skipshot12 Posts: 1,815
    dromunds....
    Where do you live, Alaska?
  • Jstas
    Jstas Posts: 14,973
    Asphalt shingles aren't a big deal, they are made to flex with expansion and contraction as they heat up and cool down.

    What I was referring to is stuff like trim work or laying down sheathing on a roof or a wall. Tight joints done in cold weather can lead to buckling, splitting and cracking in warm weather. Once you get below 40 degrees F, natural building products like lumber, OSB or high density particle board that aren't stabilized like plywood can change enough dimension to be as much as 1/8th of an inch off. Doesn't seem like a lot but if you are building something to 1/16th tolerances like most carpenters and framers do when making things "square", an 1/8th inch of expansion can create noticeable issues in the finished product over time. Either buckling and splitting/cracking or opening up joints significantly.

    In framing, it's not such a big deal because framed structures flex by design. But trimming out windows or railings or porch columns or doors or even hanging doors where clean, tight, even, mitered joints are the name of the game, material expansion and contraction can create noticeable problems when warmer weather hits. You can have similar problems if you didn't do your finish work with tight enough tolerances because joints can open up in severely cold weather as well and that causes problems too.

    I've seen the results of that from Captain Halfassery first hand. I have several drafty windows due to poorly trimmed casing and sills and even had a water problem from a poorly trimmed exterior door opening. Measured gaps increase by 1/16th of an inch or more on those problem spots when the weather gets below freezing. Captain Halfass tried to remedy the problem by boogering it up with expensive, color-matched caulking that separates in the joints/gaps it's supposed to seal every winter. I haven't even trimmed out the new porch columns yet because I ran out of warm weather. The project got delayed because I found a sewer leak behind a poorly finished wall in the basement that took priority in addressing. At the rate the weather is going right now, even though I'm planning on using vinyl trim boards, I'm probably not going to tackle it until spring unless I can get a stretch of mid-40 degree weather.
    Expert Moron Extraordinaire

    You're just jealous 'cause the voices don't talk to you!
  • dromunds
    dromunds Posts: 10,100
    skipshot12 wrote: »
    dromunds....
    Where do you live, Alaska?

    Wisconsin. lol
  • Jstas
    Jstas Posts: 14,973
    dromunds wrote: »
    skipshot12 wrote: »
    dromunds....
    Where do you live, Alaska?

    Wisconsin. lol

    Close enough!

    At least close enough you can smell Canaderp!
    Expert Moron Extraordinaire

    You're just jealous 'cause the voices don't talk to you!
  • pitdogg2
    pitdogg2 Posts: 26,941
    Jstas wrote: »
    dromunds wrote: »
    skipshot12 wrote: »
    dromunds....
    Where do you live, Alaska?

    Wisconsin. lol

    Close enough!

    At least close enough you can smell Canaderp!

    I don't know, the smell of cheese my overwhelm your sense of Canaderp smell....
  • invalid
    invalid Posts: 1,443
    The cold doesn't have much effect on framing, it's moisture that does. There are ways to dry out the house once it's framed and the roof is on.
  • agfrost
    agfrost Posts: 2,463
    invalid wrote: »
    The cold doesn't have much effect on framing, it's moisture that does. There are ways to dry out the house once it's framed and the roof is on.

    40wdhcy283zd.png
    Jay
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  • invalid
    invalid Posts: 1,443
    agfrost wrote: »
    invalid wrote: »
    The cold doesn't have much effect on framing, it's moisture that does. There are ways to dry out the house once it's framed and the roof is on.

    40wdhcy283zd.png

    That would definitely dry it out.
  • skipshot12
    skipshot12 Posts: 1,815
    Bahahaaaaa.... Canaderp.
    Never heard that one.
  • Jetmaker737
    Jetmaker737 Posts: 1,105
    @Jstas your prior homeowner sounds like a real award winner. In my prior home I spent 18 years cursing "the Olsons". Every time I got into a project it's like what bogus nonsense did these morons leave for me here. My son bought his first home a couple months ago. He's called me regarding some issues that have cropped up already. I told him you'll be cursing those idiots until the day you move outta there.
    SystemLuxman L-590AXII Integrated Amplifier|KEF Reference 1 Loudspeakers|PS Audio Directream Jr|Sansui TU-9900 Tuner|TEAC A-6100 RtR|REL T/9X SE Sub
  • ken brydson
    ken brydson Posts: 8,986
    edited December 11
    Not into the cold either but I'd take it over the atmospheric river weather we're having now in the PNW.

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  • F1nut
    F1nut Posts: 51,683
    Yikes
    Political Correctness'.........defined

    "A doctrine fostered by a delusional, illogical minority and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a t-u-r-d by the clean end."


    President of Club Polk

  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,318
    Geez!!!
    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • ken brydson
    ken brydson Posts: 8,986
    We're lucky to be on high ground with no major flooding but some of the side streets are impassable. The valley areas are being decimated.
  • dromunds
    dromunds Posts: 10,100
    They’re forecasting minus 35 wind chill Friday and Saturday nights here in Wisconsin. Saturday will never get above zero regular temperature. Fer fox sake, it’s not even the middle of December.
  • motorstereo
    motorstereo Posts: 2,316
    We actually were into the cold earlier this week. 5 below, had to shovel out my car and drove through a white out coming home. It didn't stop my wife from shopping at Zebs but it did a lot of other not so dedicated shoppers in North Conway.
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  • Not into the cold either but I'd take it over the atmospheric river weather we're having now in the PNW.

    wdu4jehfujo4.jpg



    yj324m99xira.jpg


    Snoqualmie Falls

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    – Kevin Alfred Strom
  • mrloren
    mrloren Posts: 2,473
    Hmmm San Diego no snow a little rain but we pay for it.
    When I was a kid my parents told me to turn it down. Now I'm an adult and my kids tell me to turn it down.
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  • la2vegas
    la2vegas Posts: 763
    It's been in the 80's in Los Angeles over the last few days. Thankfully we'll drop into the 70's starting today. B)
  • Jetmaker737
    Jetmaker737 Posts: 1,105
    la2vegas wrote: »
    It's been in the 80's in Los Angeles over the last few days. Thankfully we'll drop into the 70's starting today. B)

    Yeah, it's been awesome. But today was foggy all day and cold! Bring back the heat, man.
    SystemLuxman L-590AXII Integrated Amplifier|KEF Reference 1 Loudspeakers|PS Audio Directream Jr|Sansui TU-9900 Tuner|TEAC A-6100 RtR|REL T/9X SE Sub