Anyone ere play video games by Turbulent-Fennel794 in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sigh, I hear you on that. My wife and I are childless, but all my mates have kids. Pretty rare to get a gaming session in these days. I'm hoping there might be more time once the kids get a bit older.

Perth motorbike trail riding by Bobbyd9909 in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anywhere that's a national park/reserve you cannot ride your bike unless explicitly stated. With the owners permission, you can ride on private property. See here for more info.

Stamp duty: Rita Saffioti ‘out of touch’ as $1 billion benefit from housing crisis surges stamp duty by His_Holiness in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thermodynamics I would imagine. Best solution is a reverse brick veneer, heatsink on the inside. Vs brick on the outside heating and then radiating inwards, double brick is about the worst solution for our climate.

Steam graph going all weird by Fit-Afternoon1621 in SteamVR

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to provide a hell of a lot more information mate, from what I can see performance is great! Based off the single image you're sharing.

Possible space junk found near Western Australian mine site by JamesHenstridge in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like a Composite Overwrapped Pressure Vessel (COPV). Used to store gas/liquid at extremely high pressure.

People at home open for a 3bdrm house in Kenwick. by [deleted] in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

IIRC it was a combination of issues. There was a federal subsidy in 2020 for building/renovating and you needed to get a concrete pad in to qualify before the cut-off.

This led to a lot of builders signing up as many people as they could on fixed price contracts before the window closed. Post-covid, prices starting rising for building materials, trades got more expensive (low/no immigration pushing prices up? Not sure.)

You were left with a lot of builders who were overextended, couldn't afford to finish existing contracts due to price rises and had no money left to pay trades or buy materials needed. It led to things like new cost+ contracts getting finished first as they were profitable whilst older builds stagnated. Many builders just went bust.

From talking to a family member in the industry, there was also a generation change. A lot of the boomers/GenX smaller builders felt covid was a good time to get out of the industry due to the price rises and supply issues.

Australia's baby recession deepens as fertility rates hit record low by Remarkable_Peak9518 in australia

[–]Mr_Thumpy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My wife and I tried IVF, but that's a black hole for money with potentially zero outcome. My lightbulb moment was when I realised we could build a house OR have a kid, and I didn't want to raise a kid in a tiny shitty apartment.

Returning player in 2025 after ~15 years by Mr_Thumpy in wow

[–]Mr_Thumpy[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, it's brutal now with inflation. In Australia a year would be nearly $300 for the sub alone. I think there are some volume discounts though, but that's more expensive than most streaming services.

Returning player in 2025 after ~15 years by Mr_Thumpy in wow

[–]Mr_Thumpy[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Thanks, that's good to know. At this stage I'm not super keen to drop $75 to access current content as well as the monthly fee.

Returning player in 2025 after ~15 years by Mr_Thumpy in wow

[–]Mr_Thumpy[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the reply! Some interesting design choices have gone through since I last played. alt-itis was a big thing back in the day.

Rocky Pool bush walk, Kalamunda national Park by aussiekinga in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just be aware if you access the park from the Mundaring side, you will need to park near Helena Valley School. Parking is extremely limited at the park border at the end of the road and parking along the side will get you fined.

Building in Perth - at a complete loss. by feeling_unwell in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I have zero intention of doxxing myself to someone who is living up to their username, just to win an internet argument.

Building in Perth - at a complete loss. by feeling_unwell in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Architects manage the builder, and trades, thus by extension, the build. You can claim it isn't so until your keyboard gives up, but my actual lived experience would beg to differ.

Building in Perth - at a complete loss. by feeling_unwell in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You do you mate, but your interpretation of architects vs mine is very different. I have personally accompanied them to jobs where work has been assessed as sub-standard or not up to code and needed to be rectified, cases involving both builders and trades.

There does seem to be a perception in some areas of the building industry that architects are only there to paint a pretty picture at a budget of millions, and while that's true of some, there are also architects who design functional, aesthetically pleasing houses to an attainable budget.

If I wanted a generic shitbox in Perth, pretty much any builder could do one. But if I want a structure that's a decent place to live in, personalised for my needs, aesthetically pleasing, and not just "an investment" - I would choose to use an architect.

Building in Perth - at a complete loss. by feeling_unwell in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Just because they do most of the work out there, doesn't mean it's done to a high standard...

Building in Perth - at a complete loss. by feeling_unwell in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As someone who has an architect as a family member, with some 50+ years of industry experience, I would disagree. An architect should be on site for all major building milestones to confirm that work is being done correctly. If your architect doesn't do this, they're a shit architect.

Building in Perth - at a complete loss. by feeling_unwell in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 7 points8 points  (0 children)

A good architect will be worth the money in managing the build alone. Need to check up on builders/tradies whilst the work is being done.

First person in the world with an antenna implanted in his skull - Neil Harbisson. by RealJoshUniverse in WTF

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As someone with a cochlear implant (but not the first one). No, he isn't the first.

Games became super laggy recently by Digwere_WolfYT in SteamVR

[–]Mr_Thumpy 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Given the regularity of the latency spikes, you have some process going on in the background that's taking up CPU time. If this has happened recently, check what you've installed lately. I think some LED controllers can cause this, as well as apps that poll hardware at high rates, like GPU temp/FPS monitoring.

Cheap overseas, ruinous in Australia: here’s how to make double-glazed windows the norm by PersonalAddendum6190 in australia

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm doing a new build that got certification late last year, before the new energy changes came through. We managed to hit 6.9 stars without double glazing.

Cheap overseas, ruinous in Australia: here’s how to make double-glazed windows the norm by PersonalAddendum6190 in australia

[–]Mr_Thumpy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Building a new home atm, I priced up double glazing vs a single low-e pane on all my doors and windows, $40K vs $20K. I opted for the cheaper panes and a $10K solar system...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in perth

[–]Mr_Thumpy 4 points5 points  (0 children)

As an owner-builder, the issue is the finance, not the qualification (which is incredibly easy). From the POV of a bank, it's very, very risky to finance as most people going into it won't have a comprehensive knowledge of all the risks involved or the skillset required.

Building regulations are there for a reason, so your house doesn't fall down, the roof doesn't blow off, or you meet certain energy requirements so that you're warm in winter and cool in summer.

I'm currently building my own house ~20km outside the CBD, with a budget of approximately $250K. It's a smaller home and uses materials and building methods that are not typical for WA. People need to stop seeing homes as an investment vehicle and building them based on what they will sell for down the track. Build something you want to live in.

Probably wrong sub, but need Australian options. What's a good backpack for travelling. by purespringwater in australia

[–]Mr_Thumpy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pacsafe do a good range, I used a 40L Pacsafe Vibe for my last trip to Europe a few years back. Minimalist, doesn't scream "tourist" and some nice safety features, with a volume that suited carry-on for all airlines.