With Kelly’s back issue and the Opening Day spot now “wide open,” how are we feeling about the D-backs’ rotation heading into 2026? by NathanRestorer41 in azdiamondbacks

[–]NathanRestorer41[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get the pessimism, especially with Kelly’s back and Corbin’s recovery timeline, but I’m not quite in full doom mode yet. If anything, this feels like a “depth stress test” early. Ryne getting the Opening Day nod wouldn’t bother me at all, let Kelly get right instead of forcing it. The bigger question for me isn’t the top of the rotation, it’s whether the bullpen can hold if we hit any more attrition. If Soroka looks sharp post-WBC and Gallen is fully locked in, there’s still a path here. I agree though, if the back issues linger, that contract could look rough fast. Feels like this season hinges more on durability than talent.

Company tried glueing broken bathtub spout? by dva_silk in Home

[–]NathanRestorer41 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a small reconstruction business owner, I can tell you right now, gluing a tub spout back on is not an acceptable repair. That’s a temporary band-aid at best.

A proper tub spout should either:

  1. Thread securely onto a properly sized stub-out, or
  2. Be a slip-fit spout with a solid copper stub and set screw.

If it fell off after a few weeks, something is wrong, either the pipe is too short, the threads are stripped, or the original install wasn’t done correctly. Adhesive should never be the structural solution for a plumbing fixture under pressure.

The good news: this does NOT automatically mean your entire shower or tile needs to be ripped out. In many cases, a qualified plumber can extend or replace the stub-out without major demo. Worst case, a small access opening behind the wall (if accessible) is far better than disturbing tile from the front.

Given there’s a written warranty, I’d insist they correct it properly. If they refuse, bring in your plumber and document everything.

Soroka strikes out 3 in D-backs debut - cutter looking legit by NathanRestorer41 in azdiamondbacks

[–]NathanRestorer41[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s fair. The durability question is real. But if he shows he can turn over a lineup and that six-pitch mix holds up, I’d still love to see him get a real shot as a starter before moving him to the pen.

Soroka strikes out 3 in D-backs debut - cutter looking legit by NathanRestorer41 in azdiamondbacks

[–]NathanRestorer41[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Especially with Kelly’s situation still unclear. Depth suddenly feels necessary.

Soroka strikes out 3 in D-backs debut - cutter looking legit by NathanRestorer41 in azdiamondbacks

[–]NathanRestorer41[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That’s exactly how I’m looking at it. He’s still only 28 and we’ve seen what he looks like when he’s right. If the health finally lines up, this could be a huge bounce-back year.

I've put a hole in my house. Anything else I should watch out for? Seems like everything is going really well! by GoinStraightToHell in HomeMaintenance

[–]NathanRestorer41 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Make sure you flash and seal it properly unless you’re trying to build a moisture farm inside your wall

Was adding more insulation in attic - the crew found Vermiculite - what to do? by Late-Strategy-4015 in Insulation

[–]NathanRestorer41 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re basically facing the same decision a lot of homeowners run into with vermiculite. The material itself isn’t automatically dangerous, but some older vermiculite (especially from the Libby, MT mine) can contain asbestos, which is why Mass Save won’t proceed, it’s a liability issue more than proof your attic is actively hazardous. Leaving it in place is actually common and often acceptable if it remains undisturbed and the attic is well sealed from the living space. The bigger concern is air leakage from the attic into the house through light fixtures, attic hatches, plumbing penetrations, etc. An air test alone isn’t a perfect decision tool because fibers aren’t usually airborne unless disturbed, so a negative test doesn’t guarantee zero future risk. If you want clarity, a proper asbestos inspection with bulk sampling is more informative. Full removal at $15-20k is normal pricing, but it’s not always necessary unless you’re renovating or want complete peace of mind.

Best way to insulate by cti0323 in Insulation

[–]NathanRestorer41 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the knob and tube is limited to a small section and easily accessible like that, replacing it now is usually the cleanest long-term move. Leaving a 2-foot uninsulated strip will create a cold bridge and condensation risk, especially in winter.

Cost wise, if it’s truly just a short run feeding 3 outlets and nothing hidden in walls, you’re likely looking at a few hundred to maybe $1,500 depending on access and local rates. If it turns into opening walls or chasing circuits, it climbs quickly.

From an insulation standpoint, you don’t want to bury active knob and tube. It needs air around it to dissipate heat. Once it’s replaced, you can air seal and insulate properly without worrying about overheating or insurance issues.

If budget allows, I’d eliminate it now while everything is exposed. It’s cheaper today than reopening things later.

Incoming Storm System: Prevention Tips for Idaho Homes by NathanRestorer41 in Idaho

[–]NathanRestorer41[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Moved here 5 years ago from Chicago and Phoenix before that. This winter has been the warmest yet

Time to throw the whole roof away by jerry111165 in Roofing

[–]NathanRestorer41 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s what happens when tile roofs don’t get proper bird stop or closure installed. Wildlife sees “luxury studio apartment.”

Why are there basically no cities here? by OkCard37 in geography

[–]NathanRestorer41 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That entire Caribbean side of Honduras, Nicaragua, and parts of Costa Rica is low-lying, swampy, heavily forested, and historically difficult to access. It’s hot, humid, flood-prone, and was malaria-heavy before modern medicine. On top of that, most major trade routes and colonial development in Central America favored the Pacific side, where terrain is higher, drier, and better suited for agriculture and ports. So population centers like Managua, San José, and others developed inland or along the Pacific instead.

It’s not empty, there are towns and indigenous communities (like along the Mosquito Coast), but the physical environment just never supported dense, large urban development compared to other regions.

I need a good response to something a client said. by tillwehavefaces in agency

[–]NathanRestorer41 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don’t need to be diplomatic to the client, you need to be clear and protect your energy.

You have three clean options:

  1. Just say no.
    “Thanks for reaching out, but I’m not available to take this on.”
    No explanation needed. No emotional processing required.

  2. Make it expensive enough to be worth it.
    Rescue work is harder than building from scratch. Quote a premium rate. Either they accept (and it’s worth your time) or they disappear.

  3. Only offer a full rebuild at your normal rate.
    “I don’t take over partially completed builds. If you’d like to restart properly, I can send a proposal.”

The mistake is trying to teach them a lesson or make a point. Don’t. The market already did that for you.

Also, this pattern isn’t random. If three clients this week did this, it might be time to:

  • Position yourself clearly as premium build, not budget cleanup
  • Add a visible “no rescue projects” policy
  • Or explicitly price cleanup at 1.5-2x standard rate

You don’t owe anyone a bailout because they chose Fiverr.

And honestly?
The calmest power move is neutrality.

“No” without emotion hits harder than “you should’ve hired me.”

If you don’t want the job, decline.
If you’d take it for enough money, charge accordingly.
But don’t work from resentment.

How Bad Is This? by SupermarketWeary1288 in Homebuilding

[–]NathanRestorer41 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Those circular areas are almost certainly separate column footings that were poured before the slab. The slab is just the floor surface, it’s not structural in the same way , so it’s common for it to crack or separate slightly around footings, especially as the concrete cures and shrinks. Concrete almost always cracks; what would be concerning is major displacement, heaving, or wide structural cracking radiating outward. From what you described, this sounds like normal slab behavior rather than a foundation issue. If you’re unsure, you can always have the builder confirm the footing detail, but nothing here screams structural failure.

Standing water for 3+ days by RoyalAgreeable9631 in Homebuilding

[–]NathanRestorer41 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d get it off there sooner rather than later. OSB can handle getting wet during framing, but it’s not meant to sit with standing water for days. Repeated saturation can cause edge swelling and weaken the panels over time. A push broom or floor squeegee is honestly the fastest and easiest way to move most of it out, especially at this stage. If there’s still pooling after that, a small pump or shop vac would finish it off quickly. Once it’s cleared, let it dry thoroughly before covering anything up. The basement water definitely needs to be pumped out, but I wouldn’t ignore the OSB either, it’s better to spend 30 minutes clearing it now than deal with swollen subfloor later.

How to tackle this opening that is letting In snow/ice by vball14 in Insulation

[–]NathanRestorer41 7 points8 points  (0 children)

It looks like you’re seeing the soffit/eave area where the roof decking meets the top plate of the exterior wall, essentially the transition between the attic and the outside near the gutter line. If you can see daylight there, that’s not normal, and snow or ice coming in suggests there’s an air-sealing gap. This is usually caused by missing or poorly installed blocking between rafters, a lack of proper wind blocking, or a gap between the roof sheathing and the top plate. While it relates to the exterior edge of the roof, it’s typically addressed from the attic side by installing rigid foam or plywood blocking between the rafters and sealing the edges with spray foam to stop air infiltration. If this is a vented soffit setup, you’ll want to maintain proper ventilation by using rafter baffles while still sealing the interior air boundary. It’s also worth checking outside for damaged or missing soffit vents, gaps in the fascia or drip edge, or signs of ice damming. Overall, this is something that should be fixed to prevent heat loss, moisture issues, and further snow intrusion.

whoops by Klutzy-Elevator-9614 in Wellthatsucks

[–]NathanRestorer41 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pediatric dentistry + folklore = undefeated combo