Mick_VT wrote:Carriage bolts might be even more secure
if it is not a lag type thread but a regular thread, the head doesn't matter , just use two nuts on the inside and lock them together. they can turn it all they want because they can't get to the nuts and it will just spin.
I don't know if you see it as often in other other cities but here it seems there is a strange custom for many Chinese people to put Kleenex boxes on the dash of the rear window in their car. Often they are in those gold metal containers. I'm not sure if there is any meaning or it's just a funny custom.. or if it is like a code like the fish symbol.. I decided the redneck equivalent might be to put a empty shotgun shell box in the same place
We recently had our house repainted, and due to the lead exterior paint, the painters put up this caution tape all around with a sign that said “danger” and “poison” in big letters. We definitely got some questions from the neighbors...
We probably should have kept it all up—I didn’t even think about the extra burglar protection we were getting!
Yeah, I can definitely appreciate the need for caution in general and all that, but the sign just seemed to cause confusion among the neighbors. “Wait, you’re JUST painting? We thought something bad had happened!”
It was a bit amusing to live in the POISON house for a while.
The need for signage is one of my GREATEST pet peeves on this subject!!!! It's nobody's business what's going on next door....sign should only need to be 8x12" for the occupants of the subject home, and a yellow rope around the area to keep kids out...this raises questions with no answers, fear, maybe even some sort of 'inquiry' into what "danger" the neighbors may be facing!
Now, since (per our RRP training) not ANY dust or debris WHATSOEVER will be leaving our 10' work area...why the need to advertise about something that isn't "over there", but is "right here only"? We don't do this if we're using, say, propane in a gas grill, a more imminent hazard...
Since only like 1 in 10 painters actually DO RRP (no enforcement), this looks VERY odd to customers who see me in Tyvek with caution tape, plastic, signs and a significantly higher price...and a guy literally 200' away is pressure washing another old home, chips right into the neighbor's yard, no cleanup...net result? This:
"Which one is scr*wing whom? MY guy in tyvek, or THAT guy who is old school?" At least the pamphlet you hand out with EPA letterhead offers them some info to understand that the plastic is necessary....but it raises lots of questions. Eventually neighbors do talk, so hopefully the word will spread that painters SHOULD be catching their junk.