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Hackety Hacks
Nick,
Paying subs invoices within 30 days when I have to wait 60 to 120 is why we always get trucks when we call. The brokers flat tell my foremen. Derrick pays his bills, you come first. As for pool contractors. They all suck. I built a 3,500 gallon Koi pond. Basically a small pool. City made me permit it like a pool. I did all the work but Gunite and plaster myself. Gunite guy was horrible. I asked if he had done ponds; oh, yea, all the time. He gave me a deal to do it on a Saturday, but we had a race that day. I met him early and had to leave. Came home to three big steps down into the pond. WTF! I ran to Home Depot to rent an electric breaker and chiseled those dam things out that night while they were green. Landscaping by Deez hands. Whole backyard too 13 months to do myself. ![]() ![]() Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Derrick |
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Not sure if the laws in all states are the same but putting a stop on a check is illegal in NJ for services rendered. Either don't pay and never pay the final payment until all permits have been closed.
My good friend is one of the best landscapers I have known. A true Porsche enthusiast and is on these forums. He is more passionate about trees and stones than most of us are about our cars. Without his help intervening with the pool guy who he has done work for I would never had my pool done. I through one of the pool guys employees off the job after he mouthed off to me. After receiving his initial check my pool guy informed me in his exact words he doesn't give a ****. He explained that during desert storm his buddy and he were in a helicopter and the next thing he knew his buddies head was in his lap and body obliterated as the helicopter crash landed. ![]() ![]() Even after spending a fortune on surveys and pool design and drawings when they went to mark out the pool it was in the wrong place because they used the old survey to overlay the pool on. Eventually I said screw it and went outside with a can of marking paint and drew out the pool how I wanted it and where. Luckily the City was OK with it and it came out OK but being the perfectionist I am so many things were wrong when done. The pool was actually dug to coping height instead of 3" lower setting the pool to high which cost me additional money in landscaping. Luckily we unearthed a lot of boulders from stone and retaining walls when the property was a farm 100 years ago. It saved me a fortune in rocks needed to fix the pool guys mistakes and make the yard work. The hot tub was plumbed improperly so some of the jets won't work when combined with air so after a year of negotiations we agreed to drop the cost of the spa from the bill vs breaking it up and doing it over. I could only imagine what a nightmare it would have been to break it up and if it would be worse or not. No doubt it would have taken forever to fix. Funny thing is I drew up the plans and GC'd a 3000 sq foot addition (right side of house) which I thought was a piece of cake to do. When monitoring the pool install I nearly went into business with my friend who is the landscaper since it is such an easy thing to build. The potential profit margins are huge if you just manage your employees and materials. I don't understand how they can leave so much $$ on the table and not care. I am happy enough with the end result. My friend meticulous and passionate approach to landscaping made up for the pool issues and the result is now being used for advertising for an awning company who took this photo for their website. I can go on for pages of all the little things done incorrectly that you don't pick up until long after they are gone and the work is completed. I think the average homeowner doesn't know enough to understand when things are done improperly or poorly and think they are getting a better job than it is. You have to be your own GC, Dr and lawyer these days otherwise you get screwed. I do all my own work if I can otherwise I am rarely happy with any professionals work. Don''t get me started on some of the work I had done at reputable well known Porsche Independent shops years ago. ![]()
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Anthony PCA affiliate '77 member '83 '90 3.8 RS tribute, 91 C4 converted to C2,'93 964 C2, '93 928 GTS M '94 Turbo 3.6, '15 Boxster GTS M,16 GT4,23 Macan GTS, Gone worth mentioning '71 E '79 SC, '79 built to '74 3.0 RS tribute (2390 # 270 hp), '80 928 euro 5 speed, '74 2.0l 914, '89 944 S2,'04 Cayenne TT '14 boxster, '14 Cayenne GTS 14 Cayman S, 18 Macan GTS many others Last edited by Cobalt; 06-14-2020 at 03:51 AM.. |
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I gotta tell you guys, all this is why I'm such a DIY'er. I know just enough to be dangerous, but enough to know when I'm getting hosed. It's important to be somewhat knowledgeable when talking with your subs.
It all started 40 years ago when I GC'd my own house. It grew from that to cars to plumbing to electric to tiling, yada yada yada. It's definitely the reason I do some of the work on my own cars. That, and I'm New England "thrifty", or just plain cheap. But I discovered over the years that I enjoy working with my hands. I've made my fair share of dumb mistakes and completed crappy jobs, but that's how I learned. Now, youtube makes stuff a breeze. My 150 year old grandfather clock started gonging poorly Friday. One youtube video later, I was down at the shoe repair shop getting a piece of leather to fix the hammer. Bingo. Anthony, your house and pool are gorgeous.
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Couldn't resist after reading all this. I too am a forced DIY guy. Across the world it is still the same i.e. you get 60% cost on labor but wtf you can't get a job done properly? Been there and done that enough times that I won't trust a pro as far as I can throw them.
I do admit that I'm a perfectionist and I take pride in any job I do. All I want is a good job, but time and time again I've realized the problem. The contractors, or even the single guy just want to get onto the next job to increase their profits. They don't see your job any different. It's just a numbers game to them and they will do what they are programmed to do in any culture. Therefore, I do anything I can do myself out of distrust and fear of less well done. It's my house and so I do feel the passion to do it right. I realize one can't do everything alone, yet one can learn to do it with a little advice or a youtube search. Ultimately, if it is done properly, with less the 60% labor, minus the shoddy job, one comes out on top with a satisfied feeling and some longevity in the end. Hire a pro may just be the the pretense to get one professionally screwed!! Just my experience, and so I do things myself and with precision and pride no matter how long it takes me. It's the most peaceful and satisfying strategy in my opinion, if one can do exactly that.
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I have to agree you have to enjoy working with your hands to do this work yourself. Although as I am getting up there in years I can't do half the jobs I was able to do just 10 years ago. Between just getting older and my arthritis it is getting tougher each day.
Sometimes the most satisfying feeling is cracking a cold one while sitting back and admiring the completed project. My honey do list will never end as there is always something needing repair or upgrading. Being retired it saves me a boat load of money doing these things myself and or not having to redo what I paid others to. Weeding my property is a 3 hour a week job. But there are just some jobs I pay people to do like roofing and chimney repairs. I had a leak in the new roof from the addition and although the flashing around the visible side is all new copper which was specified the backside which can only be seen from above was never reflashed and they just layered silicone on it to make it work. Of course 7 or so years later it became a problem. Just another way to save a buck and there seems to be no remorse. I do have to admit Google has become my friend although I find the youth of today think it is the answer and can do anything by just searching without any experience and I have learned experience is worth its weight in gold.
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Anthony PCA affiliate '77 member '83 '90 3.8 RS tribute, 91 C4 converted to C2,'93 964 C2, '93 928 GTS M '94 Turbo 3.6, '15 Boxster GTS M,16 GT4,23 Macan GTS, Gone worth mentioning '71 E '79 SC, '79 built to '74 3.0 RS tribute (2390 # 270 hp), '80 928 euro 5 speed, '74 2.0l 914, '89 944 S2,'04 Cayenne TT '14 boxster, '14 Cayenne GTS 14 Cayman S, 18 Macan GTS many others Last edited by Cobalt; 06-15-2020 at 04:21 AM.. |
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that is what both my buddy and I have learned during his ordeal. thankfully for him it was finally plastered yesterday and will be filled today by water truck from local hydrant sources cause like me he is on a well that would not fill it at a fast enough clip.
dam shame due to covid that the salons up here are slammed after having just opened a couple weeks back cause I can't get a waxing at my speedo line! ![]()
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78SC PRC Spec911 (sold 12/15) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7I6HCCKrVQ Now gone: 03 996TT/75 slicklid 3.oL carb'd hotrod 15 Rubicon JK/07.5 LMM Duramax 4x/86 Ski Nautique Correct Craft |
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gearhead
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Loverland, CO
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Tobs,
Based on that pic of you and pops yesterday, gonna need a pruner to get through that thicket of a beard you got going on. I’d love to have a pool. I would never add one to a property, ever.
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1974 914 Bumble Bee 2009 Outback XT 2008 Cayman S shop test Mule 1996 WRX V-limited 450/1000 |
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Please be specific.
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1986 Bosch Icon Wipers coupe. |
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that was no beard, this is a beard... my bobby munson stage.. ![]() ![]()
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78SC PRC Spec911 (sold 12/15) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7I6HCCKrVQ Now gone: 03 996TT/75 slicklid 3.oL carb'd hotrod 15 Rubicon JK/07.5 LMM Duramax 4x/86 Ski Nautique Correct Craft |
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My theory: Treat your good suppliers, contractors like employees with respect. Never use a bad ones twice.
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63 356 2.1 Rally Coupe 75 911M 2.7 MFI 86 Sports Purpose Carrera "O4" 19 991.2 S |
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No offense but this is a boring trope. |
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Just because you can rebuild an engine or tune a car doesn't mean you can run a business. The wealth of info in these forums has helped many rebuild engines and work on cars without any formal training and in many case I find is a mistake. I have worked on cars fixed by shade tree mechanics that should leave things to the professionals. They got the general idea down but without experience make mistakes unknowingly. I find little is retained and or learned and everything is instant gratification or don't bother me attitude. If there is nothing posted about the problem they come across on google or youtube they shut down and the job sits idle vs jumping in and figuring it out putting their experiences to work. I find what they consider a hard weeks work is by my standards less than a days. 60% of their day is on youtube or google. By the time I was 30 I was running a complicated business doing work as a first tier supplier for just about every major defense and aerospace business. No resting on my laurels and when a hard job was completed it was onto the next. Not saying it was the best way to live but today I am retired at a young age and have the means to enjoy all my projects and live as I wish without financial concerns. No doubt living on a retired persons salary is not as easy as it was when working but I am doing what I love building and working on cars and driving on tracks when open. Nearly every one of these 30 somethings or younger today seem to be picky about everything vs grateful for the freebie and feel they can do anything without experience. Some can but most end up getting in way over their heads. I learned by taking things apart and fixing them. Sometimes I broke things but I learned what not to do. No doubt there is merit to having a textbook (google for those who forgot what books are) of what to do at your fingertips. Similar to our Chiltons or Haynes manuals I guess. I know of a lot of well known instagram shops that I see the work first hand and as being done vs what they show and IMO it is a lot of Hack Work that the court of public opinion seems to like. Just like watching RWB builds that people go crazy over. Watching him cut apart a 3.2 carrera my friend slaved over refinishing made me sick to my stomach and was a compendium of what not to do in my book. But this is what the internet has made of our world. I digress but this video IMO a satire but touches upon so much of what I see with the average youth today. Some suffer more than others but all are lost in their phones and have 0 social graces putting the phone and internet ahead of personal interaction and getting things accomplished. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzXBFM0aurg
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Anthony PCA affiliate '77 member '83 '90 3.8 RS tribute, 91 C4 converted to C2,'93 964 C2, '93 928 GTS M '94 Turbo 3.6, '15 Boxster GTS M,16 GT4,23 Macan GTS, Gone worth mentioning '71 E '79 SC, '79 built to '74 3.0 RS tribute (2390 # 270 hp), '80 928 euro 5 speed, '74 2.0l 914, '89 944 S2,'04 Cayenne TT '14 boxster, '14 Cayenne GTS 14 Cayman S, 18 Macan GTS many others |
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[QUOTE=Cobalt;10907548]
"I spend a lot of time directly with a number of brilliant 30 somethings." I have three 30 something kids with their 30 something spouses and a large and extensive mixed bag of their 30 something friends and I disagree, at least conditionally. This just seems like too broad a brush. My kids are special (haha) so I won't talk about their work ethic or success, but I will talk about their friends. I'd say about half of them are doing well, with the other half not so well. Compare this to the idiots I went to college with decades ago and it's about the same. It always surprised me how privileged friends of mine from nice northeast communities, who were lucky enough to go to good colleges back in the day, could grow up to be lackluster dopes. DOPES! But I see it with some of my kids' friends too. Still living at home, still dependent on Mom and Dad, still expecting a high standard of living when they aren't earning it. When I talk to these parents, they shake their head and complain but they continue to enable their kids, pay the car loans and feed and house them. I'm guessing your parents weren't like that. Certainly mine weren't. Parenting has changed in our entitled world. Your success is because of you. You did it. You're responsible. There are plenty of 30 somethings out their succeeding and plenty that aren't. It's the way of the world. Good for you, but don't deride the majority of a generation. They're not that bad. Now those 40 somethings.... ![]()
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1978 SC Coupe, Gris Argent Metallic Silver 1988 FJ62 Blue/Gray 2020 M2 CS Last edited by NYNick; 06-17-2020 at 10:05 AM.. |
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Can you be more specific? How does a retired guy puttering around his garage spend a lot of time directly with 30 somethings? Do you hire them to work at your home? Are you retired or working full time? And who are these people you are around? Is this a random sample? Do you think Harvard graduates are going to work in a retired guy's garage? 60% of whose day is on YouTube? Do you spend entire workdays with 30 somethings?
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gearhead
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Mighty Meatlocker Turbo
Join Date: Apr 2016
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You have a feminine streak, Deez!
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Old man yells at the internet that young people are lazy and stubborn. Yawn. Get over yourself, plenty of lazy people young and old, plenty of successful and hard working people young and old. Your generation is not special, no generation is special. Sorry if this is news to you. All generations youth have had these traits forever into the past. Last edited by ShopCat; 06-16-2020 at 04:45 PM.. |
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gearhead
Join Date: Nov 2007
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Kids today.
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1974 914 Bumble Bee 2009 Outback XT 2008 Cayman S shop test Mule 1996 WRX V-limited 450/1000 |
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so now that buddy paid a ton to have potable hydrasnt water trucked to the site to fill the pool post the frosting of the gunite cake it's gotten muddy AF... when the pump for the cuzzi and pool lines were fired all the dirt the lines collected over the last 20 months were pumped into the pool!
looks like thin, poorly prepared gravy. my waxing appointment will now happen before it's fit to swim in.... yep, contractor II did not flush the lines prior to the filling... muddy like the Mississippi..
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78SC PRC Spec911 (sold 12/15) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7I6HCCKrVQ Now gone: 03 996TT/75 slicklid 3.oL carb'd hotrod 15 Rubicon JK/07.5 LMM Duramax 4x/86 Ski Nautique Correct Craft |
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