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Editors of Cool Springs Press - Essential Home Skills Handbook: Everything You Need to Know as a New Homeowner

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BLACK+DECKER Essential Home Skills Handbookoffers 100+ beginner-friendly solutions for common household headaches, with achievable DIY projects and full-color step photos and illustrations.Whether youre moving from an apartment to yourfirst homeor youre inspired to tackle a particular home project, were glad youre here! If youve decided its time to fix that dripping faucetor a small gutter leak before it becomes a big problem, lets get to it.Written by the knowledgeable editors at Cool Springs Pressrecognized experts in DIY home improvement and maintenance with more than thirty years of experience in home improvement and hundreds of best-selling books under the BLACK+DECKER brandthis is DIY instruction you can trust. While we also publish expert-level guides on everything from plumbing to wiring, this book is designed to be different: its a plain-language resourcewith directions not for experts, but for anyone looking to learn more about their home and make it better.Inside, youll find directions for 100+ common home repairs and maintenance tasks, with an eye toward the most common issues people have in their home. Whether you need to fix a leaky faucet, cure garbage disposal odors, stop a door from squeaking, or bring a dead electrical outlet back to life, everything a budding DIYer needs is between the covers. A sample of the projects inside includes:Home Heating and Cooling: Install v-strip door weather stripping, install adhesive foam window weather stripping, seal air leaks, insulate an attic or crawl space, caulk windows and doors, install a smoke detector, replace a bathroom fan, clean and maintain a central AC unit, replace a furnace filter, seal and insulate ductwork, install a ceiling fan, replace an exterior dryer vent.Structural Openings:Hang a new door, install a lockset, install a screen or storm door, install bi-fold closet doors, maintain a sliding glass door, replace a window pane, patch a window screen.Plumbing:Install a touchless faucet, repair a pop-up drain stopper, repair the four most common types of faucets, repair a kitchen sink sprayer, install a pedestal sink, unclog a sink, adjust shower water temperature, repair a leaking shut off valve, replace a toilet o-ring or flush mechanism, drain your water heater, recaulk a tub, insulate water pipes.Electrical Issues: Install undercabinet lighting, install a dimmer switch, upgrade an outlet to GFCI, install a whole house surge protector, fix a dead outlet, replace a light fixture.Interior Surfaces:Fix a wall crack, install a backsplash, hang a floating shelf, fix damaged tile countertop, fix floor squeaks, repair water damage.Exterior Concerns: Fix a roof hole, replace shingles, patch a steel gutter, install gutter screens, repair or replace roof flashing, maintain a garage door, repair damaged siding, stiffen or reinforce an unstable deck, install a floodlight.Clear, easy-to-follow instructions with photos of each step lead the way. This is a book that gives you morepower and control over your home, saves frustration, and ideally, helps save some moneyas well.

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Contents
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Cover
Essential HOME SKILLS Handbook Everything You Need to Know as a New - photo 1
Essential HOME SKILLS Handbook Everything You Need to Know as a New - photo 2
Essential
HOME SKILLS
Handbook

Everything You Need
to Know as a
New Homeowner

CHRIS PETERSON

Contents Introduction This is not just a book It is an investment that offers - photo 3
Contents
Introduction

This is not just a book. It is an investment that offers handsome returns for any new or inexperienced homeowner. Armed with this reference, any aspiring DIYer can keep his or her house in great shape. This information can reasonably save homeowners hundreds of dollars on repairs they wont need to make, professional charges they avoid, and the increased longevity of expensive fixtures like furnaces and hot water heaters.

Money is just one reward. There is also the immeasurable satisfaction and pride of being master of your own castle. Doing what needs to be done rather than paying a handyman means never worrying about being overcharged or falling victim to substandard work. That control and peace of mind are satisfying bonuses.

A trusted resource close at hand is key for inexperienced homeowners who are often overwhelmed by the demands of a new house (or at least new to you). Fortunately, you are not alone. The Essential Home Skills Handbook provides time-tested advice, professional insight, money-saving tips, and guidance you can truly trust. Nobody is born with the skills and knowledge needed to maintain and repair a house. But that knowledge is easy to acquire and useful for a lifetime.

Skills arent much good without tools, and the beginning craftsperson is only as good as his or her gear. Thats why the following pages include a list of basic tools youll need before you jump into any project. You probably already own most of these, but its good to make sure you have what you need before tackling any taskespecially when mastering important new skills. Projects along the way will sometimes require special tools, but weve kept that to a minimum.

The skills youll develop in using this book are a foundation to build on. Where turning to a pro makes more sense, youll find White Flag features spelling out how to hire the best professional. Pro Tips offer insider advice and shortcuts to make any job easier and quicker. Money Wise boxes help you save money.

Before all that, you need to understand the basic structure of a house. All modern residential structures share certain features and standardized components. Learn to work with drywall in one house and youre equipped to tackle it anywhere. Heres a structural overview and where to find critical fixtures and features.

Anatomy of a House

Residential construction starts with the foundation. There are several different types; the best one depends on site geography, local climate, and house structure.

  • Post-and-pier. The most basic and least common. Also called post and beam or pile, it consists of concrete piers or screw-type metal piers on which support beams and the house rest. These are used in smaller homes or on unstable soil, such as coastal areas.
Screw piers are more tolerant of ground movement and stress than poured - photo 4

Screw piers are more tolerant of ground movement and stress than poured concrete is.

  • Crawl space. An option built of short, poured concrete or cinder block walls resting on poured concrete footings. Crawl spaces combine stability with less expense than a full basement. Services can be run under the house.
  • Slab. A basic poured-concrete platform. Inexpensive and easy to lay, slabs limit where services such as plumbing can be run. Ground movement can have serious repercussions for a slab foundation.
A slab can support even a large house but services must be contained - photo 5

A slab can support even a large house, but services must be contained elsewhere. Plumbing lines may be placed inside the slab, but that makes future repairs extremely difficult.

  • Full basement. Built fully or partially belowground, basements are the most expensive, longest-lasting, and most useful foundations. Poured-concrete walls sit on footings, with a poured-concrete floor. This leaves room for fixtures and services, as well as storage and potentially even a finished living space.

Houses are framed from the foundation up. Some are built of modular, pre-fab sections; but most are constructed with uniform wood structural members such as studs and beams in a process known as stick framing. Houses are designed to efficiently distribute loads (the weight of structure, occupants, possessions, fixtures, and appliances). The framing serves as the bones, while the skin is comprised of weather wrap, siding materials, and the roof structure. Thesealong with windows and doorscreate the energy envelope. The projects here include common repairs and projects to all those areas. Tackling any of them requires the correct tools.

Safe at Home

Any house contains dangers that can lead to injuries. The good news? Those perils are avoidable; safety is part of learning new skills. Here are general DIY safety guidelines to follow.

  • Assume every electrical circuit and fixture is live. Test for current before doing any electrical work, even if youve turned the power off at the breaker box.
  • Use the correct tool and keep tools in good working order. Frustration and impatience can lead DIYers to use whatevers at hand. Tools will last longer if you use them only for their intended purposes and clean them after each use.
  • Know what youre dealing with before you begin. Not sure whether that bottom layer of paint contains lead or the popcorn ceiling harbors asbestos? Test it or have it tested.
  • Never remove safety guards. This is basic common sense, but its something even experienced DIYers doand often regret.
  • Dress for success. Proper safety gear is not optional. That includes long pants and long-sleeve shirts when dealing with potential skin irritants like fiberglass insulation.
  • Know your limits. Attempting to do something for which you are unqualified is a recipe for disaster. Call in a pro when youre overwhelmed. Never attempt a DIY project when youre tired or rushed for time.
The Homeowners Basic Toolkit

Most home repairs dont call for exotic tools; the most common tools are versatile. Become proficient in using these and you can take on more difficult projects requiring specialized tools. Some projects in this book require the occasional inexpensive and widely available special tool.

Hand Tools
  • Screwdriver set. You should have a range of sizes of standard, Phillips head, and Torx (the emerging standard for replacement screws) screwdrivers. All-in-one (a handle with barrel slots containing swap-out heads) multibit tools are inexpensive alternatives.
Screwdriver set Hammer A basic claw hammer is essential Find one that feels - photo 6
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