Ask This Old House | Garage Heat, DIY Security System (S17 E4) | FULL EPISODE

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 29. 09. 2019
  • Richard travels to Akron, Ohio to install a garage heater; Tom teaches the basics of sanding; Ross installs a DIY security system; Mark investigates a strange issue happening to foundations in the Northeast.
    SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse
    Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: bit.ly/2GPiYbH
    Plus, download our app for streaming full episodes to your connected TV, phone or tablet: bit.ly/34RYEP5
    Follow This Old House:
    Facebook: bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB
    Twitter: bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter
    Pinterest: bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest
    Instagram: bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG
    For more This Old House, visit us at: bit.ly/ThisOldHouseWebsite
    Ask This Old House | Garage Heat, DIY Security System (S17 E4) | FULL EPISODE
    / thisoldhouse
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 198

  • @Jeff-vt5bq
    @Jeff-vt5bq Před 2 lety +13

    The guy from Akron was a great guest. His rapport with Richard was good, an obvious seasoned handyman who needed little instruction. TOH has found it's next member!

  • @jon27d
    @jon27d Před 4 lety +19

    I love the segments with Tom and Kevin together. The dynamic reminds me of all the projects I've done with my dad and grandpas over the years. Tom is a master teacher.

  • @MikeStolarchuk
    @MikeStolarchuk Před 4 lety +53

    To prevent loss of connection to the security system when the power goes out you can also add a UPS backup battery to power the modem/router and security hub when the power goes out and avoid cellular subscription fees.

    • @lal12
      @lal12 Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah that's correct. However how often do you have a power loss just in your house? It is probably more like the whole street or area. In which case there is a good chance that your internet connection is down too. There is a chance of a cellular connection being down in this case too, but at least it is lower.

    • @MikeStolarchuk
      @MikeStolarchuk Před 4 lety +9

      @@lal12 no, highly rare, all ISP's have every system on backup power sources because they provide critical emergency services to many different clients like Voip as a 911 service, or critical data to companies and emergency services, aslong as you can keep your system's up, when the power goes out. If you have cellular also then that is just a bonus, cell towers have generator backups also.

    • @bradhaines3142
      @bradhaines3142 Před 4 lety +2

      @@lal12 the internet very rarely has issues on the back end, its typically just loss of power at your place that causes issues. also itd save time with router reboots and all that

    • @lal12
      @lal12 Před 4 lety

      @@bradhaines3142 the internet Backend is not the problem. The problem are your local hops, the question is if they are on power backup

    • @bradhaines3142
      @bradhaines3142 Před 4 lety

      @@lal12 if theyre not on backup im sure they get power from farther down the line, there are more than a few neighborhoods served by each one so its power would be fed way behind yours or your streets.

  • @khaledalarabiyat390
    @khaledalarabiyat390 Před 4 lety +8

    Tom Silva is the man. He's the best from the East to the West!

  • @chibbyylol
    @chibbyylol Před 4 lety +58

    Love how everyone at the end was listening lol. They should have included the camera crew and the producers as well.

    • @GreentopLandscapes
      @GreentopLandscapes Před 4 lety

      funny

    • @bhstone1
      @bhstone1 Před 4 lety +9

      They should have started including random people walking down the street as well.

    • @MyKonaRC
      @MyKonaRC Před 3 lety +6

      "Hey you homeless man, have you heard about this foundation issue?" "Yes I have. That problem is what put me on the streets! :( "

  • @probuilder961
    @probuilder961 Před 4 lety +16

    I really feel for the folks with the crumbling foundations. I live in North Central CT and it's happening all around me. They've traced it back to one company and quarry. The co. is no longer in business and would never have been able to come up with a fraction of the $ needed to help at all regarding compensation. I built my house in 2001 and used the concrete co. from my town, and yes, I have proof. I also have proof of where the concrete came from for all the additions I have done over the last 18 years building in this area and have been called upon to show it when my former clients went to sell their house, to show that at least the addition concrete was from a sound supplier. This whole thing is quite a tragedy for so many homeowners.

    • @monkey314159
      @monkey314159 Před 2 lety +1

      Privatize the profit, socialize the losses. Such beautiful capitalism.

    • @Snarkbar
      @Snarkbar Před 4 měsíci

      @@monkey314159 The fundamental problem here is that their eff-up was so bad that it has caused 10X more damage than the entire cost of all of the work they *ever* did over the years.

  • @politicalpartyagnostic268

    I really really love you guys!!!

  • @GreentopLandscapes
    @GreentopLandscapes Před 4 lety +2

    Great video.. enjoyed it.

  • @honhivlog1341
    @honhivlog1341 Před 2 lety

    Just love your shows. Really interesting!

  • @DanielStaggs
    @DanielStaggs Před 3 lety +2

    Instead of a camera in your house, for those that aren't comfortable with it, you could add a nest speaker. It has an option to listen for glass breaking, much like the glass break sensor from other vendors.

  • @kiwdwks
    @kiwdwks Před 4 lety +1

    Always great content/information! Thank you. Devastating news for thousands with the foundation issue. Keep us apprised of this story...

  • @scottkailey1
    @scottkailey1 Před 4 lety +5

    I'm with you Tommy I like sanding aswell!

  • @ahmad26861
    @ahmad26861 Před rokem

    The first guy from Akron, Ohio was a great guest.

  • @SilverCymbal
    @SilverCymbal Před 4 lety +1

    Very cool upgrades

  • @georgeriverasr.6298
    @georgeriverasr.6298 Před 4 lety +1

    TOM SILVA IS AWESOME!!! GREAT JOB. TO ALL OF Y'ALL!!

  • @shahboy68
    @shahboy68 Před 4 lety +6

    why not a mini split ? you don’t have to worry about combustibles and you can cool the shop as well when you get those hot summer days. you do have to clean filters is the only downside

    • @Robyrob7771
      @Robyrob7771 Před 4 lety +2

      Richard Powers
      Then you have an excuse to install dust collection👍🏻

    • @nonobrochacho240
      @nonobrochacho240 Před 3 lety

      I put a mini split in my last garage and I’m fairly sure it sold my house way quicker. We had a half dozen offers in a day.

  • @Freestila
    @Freestila Před 4 lety +3

    Oh yeah, this all seems kinda bad...
    For the heating:
    1. Direkt heat via "flame" means co2 or even co gas, which is not good. And add light saw or wood dust, and that could get really dangerous. Why not a water heating system with independent air from outside? Pretty standard here in Germany.
    2. The heater seems to point to the floor, shouldnt that aperture be higher? I dont think it will heat nearly half the garage.
    3. Wouldnt it be betterto use a flexible hose to the heater and a possibility to adjust or change the heater direction?
    Comming to the security system.
    1. Cloud dependent is a no go in my opinion. There was last year a phase when i think nest servers were down for a couple of days and e.g. Thermostats didnt work at all. Possibly this adds another security hole.
    2. Same for ki like cameras learning who is allowed to be inside and who not. Also they sould have to send video data to their cloud server to learn this... Yeah, do you want this company to get your private videos?
    3. Cameras with internet connection are bad, there are most of the times some security flaws and holes, and nearly no company fixes these.
    So overall,diy security is possible way cheaper without these cloud connection thing, just using 433 mhz radio. Also this will work without any wifi.

  • @gregglouis2969
    @gregglouis2969 Před 4 lety +11

    Oh man Richard you were less than 10 mins from me! I also need heat out in my workshop. I would have died if I saw the TOH trailer out on I76 and I77

  • @hassanal-mosawi6049
    @hassanal-mosawi6049 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks

  • @3joewj
    @3joewj Před 4 lety +4

    No way that's keeping him warm in the winter...total joke.😁😃

  • @christophernogas5032
    @christophernogas5032 Před rokem

    I’m in Connecticut and I’ve been in a few of the houses that were lifted up and had new foundations poured, we had to disassemble and then reassemble the heating and cooling systems, my old boos is friends with a contractor doing the work, this work will go on for years

  • @duckpond-studio
    @duckpond-studio Před 2 lety

    I love sanding as I am a sanding OCD type.

  • @ronevans852
    @ronevans852 Před rokem

    Nice security system.

  • @Jml-oz1vj
    @Jml-oz1vj Před 3 lety

    I feel the pain with the weather especially since I live in akron Ohio too

  • @richl5663
    @richl5663 Před rokem

    You could plug your wifi router into an uninterruptible power supply, and still get alerts during power outages (as long as your ISP is unaffected).

  • @PatrickPoet
    @PatrickPoet Před 4 lety +2

    On jewelry, I use 240 grit, then 400, 600, 1200, then usually to polishing, although at times I might use finer grits before polishing. The idea is that a grit has to remove all the marks made by a coarser grit. If it doesn't, you jumped too far through the grits. In my jewelry making, a 240 grit makes big marks, a 400 grit will remove all of those mark while leaving its own marks, then the 600 removes the 400 grit marks, the 1200 grit removes the 600 grit marks and then polishing through several stages removes finer and finer marks until the piece is as shiny as glass. If you jump too far through the grits, you'll just shine/polish the marks left by the lower grit, but you won't remove them. That's how you know you jumped too far.
    As a science and tech geek it's always driven me crazy to hear _random orbital sander_ since it isn't random. It's repeatable. They really mean that they swirl a lot and move in small ellipses, but it is all predictable. I love the sanders. They do something wonderful. I just don't like the name because it's deceptive marketing name, not a real description of why they are wonderful. The name should tell you something about why you want this, and this is just a weak meaningless marketing name.

  • @demagab
    @demagab Před 4 lety +1

    That backpack is even better than Mary Poppins' handbag

  • @Akerfeldtfan
    @Akerfeldtfan Před 4 lety +12

    Poor Michael, my parents just sold their house in CT and the real estate market is really uneasy for exactly that reason. That concrete company needs to be sued into the ground.

    • @m3528i
      @m3528i Před 4 lety +8

      Was there a test or method they should have used that they failed to employ? Was there a part I missed about how the company was irresponsible or devious? Why would you sue them ? So because someone is out money, sue the closest entity regardless of fault? It should be the insurance company that pays. That’s what insurance should actually pay for.

    • @mae2759
      @mae2759 Před 4 lety +1

      Heard the company went out of business, so there's nobody to sue.

  • @Z-Ack
    @Z-Ack Před 4 lety +5

    Always hated how they waste everybodies time like showing how to plug something in to the wall but yet fail to show any of the parts the average person woukd have questions about.. like here they should have gone over all the specific options, different systems. Or the plumbing of the gas line, showing dude screw the fitting into the plate but didnt show the actual plate which would be the hard to find item at the ole home store.. or how they ran the line from the attic to the garage. Did they fish it through, was it a two story drop and the dude up top just dangle the line down until he happened to find the hole? The foundation issue.. couldve gone over different types of soil, different stresses on the foundation, when to worry, sill plate movement, dangers of diy, mold entrapment, cinder block corrosion compared to a brick or stone foundation. How to remove stains like the ones shown, different hydristatic compounds to seal, paints and hydrophobic coatings, laminates, what not to do like cover it up, wood framing members against the concrete to cover up, what happens when just using latex or acrylic paints do in that situation, maybe improper prep if the area before painting..
    Ya know the stuff bob vila would have gone over.. lol... ahh.. thats funny right there... but content could be more in depth and directed towards a topic rather than touching multiple and leaving holes.. just saying.. still watch em though.. one thing they dont do on this show is give their audience bad or incorrect advice and thats a plus for the contractor that may have to go behind mr diy.. ya know, the dude or dudette thats holding a screw with all 5 fingers against drywall, one eye closed, tongue hanging out, no ppe, holding a 5 lb sledge all choked up next to the top, standing on a fully extended ladder propped up on a screwdriver to level it out, on the top rung leaning over to the side, while their four 7 year old boys are playing with their friends and toys on the floor below after dinner time unfed and sleepy, phone ringing in back pocket, and the 2 full grown huskies running with leashes on to the front door under the ladder and doorbell ringing with pizza delivery at the door... ( the cover of the osha handbook.. or should be)

  • @stevendeatley4878
    @stevendeatley4878 Před 4 lety +6

    I have a fenced yard and a English Setter for home security ,he tells me when anyone walks up my street anytime .man or beast he always lets me know in plenty of time. he knows all my family and friends the only regular visitor he don't like is a young Black Bear that likes to raid the neighborhood trash cans.he always sounds the alarm when she comes by.LOL

  • @billb.2673
    @billb.2673 Před 4 lety +21

    Those infrared heaters are great....if your standing under one of them...otherwise worthless.

    • @benjohnson4449
      @benjohnson4449 Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah I think in practice that's going to be undersize for the garage. It probably needs a forced air for normal temp control and the infared during wood working.

    • @billb.2673
      @billb.2673 Před 4 lety

      @@benjohnson4449 Agreed. You definitely need forced hot air in a garage environment.

    • @Yophillips3272
      @Yophillips3272 Před 4 lety +1

      Even if it only brings temp from 0 degrees to 40 degrees it'll probably feel great.

    • @billb.2673
      @billb.2673 Před 4 lety +2

      Toad Phillips Zero chance that raises the temp 40 degrees.

    • @davec.3198
      @davec.3198 Před 4 lety

      @@billb.2673 It will not...but it will feel warmer..and thats the point.
      He does that much wood working...id have a woodstove.

  • @davidgagnon2849
    @davidgagnon2849 Před 4 lety +1

    In regard to the defective concrete foundations, is testing NOW being done to the aggregate to ensure that this never happens again, anywhere? I've heard of problems with concrete made from sand in coastal areas because on the salt content in the sand, so now hopefully THAT is a thing of the past as well.

  • @mvogelmeier1
    @mvogelmeier1 Před 4 lety +1

    Come to Ohio again!
    : )

  • @5sugarpicker
    @5sugarpicker Před 2 lety

    This Old House needs to go to Atlanta & look at a lot of Old Houses that were Remodeled _ Without bringing them up to Current Code - Horrendous

  • @Star_Dust___
    @Star_Dust___ Před 3 lety

    Sectional Replacement or concrete walls. treat it as SECTIONAL UNDERPINNING (at 4’ sections) to fix that foundation.

  • @gaylonrose6713
    @gaylonrose6713 Před 3 lety

    I didn't read through the comments but a UPS could be added to the alarm system install to keep the system hub powered thru a power outage to keep the property protected

  • @theedrstrangelove
    @theedrstrangelove Před 2 lety +1

    You could spend all the money you earn on a security system and you would be no more secure than not having one at all. 82 percent of all burglaries involved unlocked doors and/or windows. Good locks, automatic lighting.....that's all you need.

    • @rupe53
      @rupe53 Před 2 lety

      I would bet that 50% of break in / burglaries are done by people who have already been to the home for another reason. That's yet another reason my home doesn't have a big flat screen TV or fancy new stereo in the living room. A casual visitor would note there's nothing worth stealing. Crooks also keep an eye out for small items with street value. If your coffee table is always cluttered with cell phones, cameras, lap tops, etc they will have a field day.

  • @bigbeef8935
    @bigbeef8935 Před 4 lety +1

    Wanna know security, 120lb German Shepherd and a gun

    • @Marthastewart209.
      @Marthastewart209. Před 3 lety

      this is true. Security cameras allow you to watch strangers stealing your stuff while your on vacation. A good dog and a firearm will actually save you.

  • @bm4122
    @bm4122 Před 3 lety

    FYI Nest secure is no longer supported or sold by google. Do not buy a product that won’t be supported in a few years

  • @crewboy23
    @crewboy23 Před 2 lety

    My guy about the security system, good info. As a former employee of one of those wireless security system companies, you actually made it known about cellular vs wifi as well as the central monitoring station. A ton of people don’t know about that stuff. Another thing people should know is initial setup differences. For the system shown, you literally had to stand there with your phone and program the sensors to the system. They are some companies like the one i used to work for that setup the sensors for you before they are shipped to you so all you have to do is mount them. Of course that usually means the initial cost can be more expensive but it saves a ton of time.

  • @ecogiful
    @ecogiful Před 4 lety

    Tommy trolling is so dope

  • @rootbear75
    @rootbear75 Před rokem

    re: Power outage for the nest system ----- Or.... Just put a UPS on your wifi router and modem. ta-da --- you still have internet.

  • @georgebartholemew8444
    @georgebartholemew8444 Před 4 lety +2

    Of course, I don''t now anything.

  • @georgebartholemew8444
    @georgebartholemew8444 Před 4 lety +3

    You can then once the substrate has become stable go in surgically to fix local problems.

  • @JustinFrost302
    @JustinFrost302 Před 4 lety +12

    I think this episode is a old one, want more "What is it"

  • @titanrage83
    @titanrage83 Před 4 lety +3

    Hope that gas line was bonded. Lightning strike can blow flex lines apart

  • @austinpalmer2527
    @austinpalmer2527 Před 2 lety

    FYI for people watching, less than a year after this video google killed the Nest Secure system they show being installed

  • @edmirk5498
    @edmirk5498 Před 3 lety

    Just pour new foundation walls within the old walls, although basement will be smaller and shorter. Think outside the box.

  • @mlc4050
    @mlc4050 Před 4 lety +6

    7:23 why would they put the thermostat directly next to the heater?

    • @Wild_Bill57
      @Wild_Bill57 Před 4 lety +12

      mlc4050 Actually it’s better there because of the way this system works. Think of it as a heat ray. The items that are hit by the ray heat up. The thermostat would be heated by the ray if it were across the room. By being next to the heater it’s out of the path. Like standing next to a fire hose instead of in front of it. The results is that now the thermostat is measuring the temperature of the room.

    • @gustavorodarte1802
      @gustavorodarte1802 Před 4 lety +1

      Good question

  • @nova31337
    @nova31337 Před 3 lety

    About that bad foundation, what about home owner's insurance?

  • @anca3028
    @anca3028 Před 4 lety +1

    this old house . can you please try and help the common home buyer when it comes to the concrete issue? what to look fir when looking for that house and how do i establish how to test it? you also mentioned that CT has a fund but you never mentioned where we can get the information on it. hope to get a response from you.

    • @tubeonline629
      @tubeonline629 Před 4 lety

      Info can be found at CT.gov from that page search bad concrete mix. Hope this helps.

  • @georgebartholemew8444
    @georgebartholemew8444 Před 4 lety +4

    Why don't you use a barrier to stop all moisture from entering the foundation?

    • @PeterPetrakis
      @PeterPetrakis Před 4 lety +3

      You have to apply it from the outside to be effective. Which requires digging out around the entire house to the footer. Then you either roll or spray on the membrane and install a drainage system. Might as well insulate the foundation too while you're there.
      It's about a 20k job. And you're right, it would dramatically slow down the problem. However once you're seeing cracks from the inside you're pretty much done.
      Even if you were to pin the foundation cracks from the outside (best way), the concrete itself is garbage. It could fail while you pin it or after, negating all the waterproofing work you did.

  • @tjbrower
    @tjbrower Před 4 lety +14

    Class action lawsuit for the concrete?

    • @stevewebb7318
      @stevewebb7318 Před 4 lety

      20 years good luck with that

    • @Woody-777
      @Woody-777 Před 4 lety +1

      @@stevewebb7318 yeah, my friend mentioned it to me a few weeks back. He said the government got rid of class action lawsuits earlier this year. To cut down on frivolous lawsuits.

    • @williamjackson5942
      @williamjackson5942 Před 4 lety

      @@Woody-777 So now we have with our current "leader" a frivolous government!

    • @jordansdad1221
      @jordansdad1221 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Woody-777 no they haven't.

    • @mae2759
      @mae2759 Před 4 lety

      Heard the company went out of business years ago, so nobody to sue.

  • @djr3008
    @djr3008 Před 2 lety

    Why can't they cut a slot into the concrete about every 4' then replace it with a steel beams/ Jacks maybe then re-concrete every section 1 at a time pulling out the steel beams as you go. Yes, I realize this will be costly and a lot of work, My question is would it work? I have foundations problems at my place and I find myself doing a ton of thinking and talking out loud to myself, just no answers yet. Has there been an update to this video?

  • @k8kzhradiotipsandreviews31

    I know Akron as want to be Cleveland. Its half way from Cleveland to Columbus

  • @chrissimon8403
    @chrissimon8403 Před 4 lety +2

    Why wasn't pipe doap used on the yellow gas line connection that came through the ceiling??

    • @wetrock2766
      @wetrock2766 Před 4 lety +4

      This connection is of a different type, it's a compression fitting that self seals. Pipe dope is used on threaded iron pipes where the bottom of the thread needs to be filled with gaz proof paste (dope). Pipe dope was used on all iron pipe threads in this installation.

  • @answernotfound5278
    @answernotfound5278 Před 4 lety

    This is a nest security system and the detect sensor should be on the door not the trim around the door

  • @rzu7120
    @rzu7120 Před 2 lety

    He didn't say how often those door sensors need to be charged, or if they use a disposable battery.

  • @deeeznuuuts
    @deeeznuuuts Před 3 lety

    Mr Heater belongs next to Mr. Coffee and Mr. Radar

  • @kronk358
    @kronk358 Před 3 lety

    Couldnt you do some temporary load bearing walls in the basement, knock out one wall, pour a footing, and build a cinder block wall, then once its done move to the next wall? I mean, still not an easy or cheap fix, but not as expensive as moving the whole house. And I'm guessing they still have a decade before the houses become terribly dangerous. So you could do it in steps. One wall every couple years to spread the cost out. Hell, what if you just said screw the basement and fill the whole thing in with gravel? Maybe just a slab on the very top.

  • @nighthawkj30A4
    @nighthawkj30A4 Před 4 lety +2

    Good thing there putting full episodes here again guess they realized there getting double the money Through views.

    • @nighthawkj30A4
      @nighthawkj30A4 Před 4 lety

      AstronomyToday trump is the worse president I can’t take him seriously. But anyways good information to know

    • @cpad007
      @cpad007 Před 4 lety

      *they're x2

  • @kegankirby1460
    @kegankirby1460 Před 3 lety

    What about an injection seal on that last one

  • @Bobherry
    @Bobherry Před 4 lety

    Richard sort of found his look alike in his story lol

  • @steve_main
    @steve_main Před 4 lety +3

    They installed that thermostat right beside that heater... I wonder why it keeps turning off.. Maybe install it behind where heater is pointed?

    • @ksarnelli
      @ksarnelli Před 4 lety +4

      It's a radiant heater so you actually don't want the thermostat anywhere in front of it.

  • @jamesfox8930
    @jamesfox8930 Před 3 lety

    _Your anagrams are showing, doctor. 'Louis Friend?' Iron Sulfide. also known as fool's gold._

  • @samtmarques7419
    @samtmarques7419 Před 4 lety +8

    I wish I wach this episode before now I stock with adt and the service sucks and I want to cancel but I have a 3 years contract 😠😡

    • @tinysand3517
      @tinysand3517 Před 4 lety +3

      I hate long contract, that's how they get people now a day

    • @MrEljavi84
      @MrEljavi84 Před 4 lety +1

      Simplisafe is another good security system very similar to this one and no contract and low monthly fees. ATOH has done an episode in the past and is very DIY....

  • @romansreef6192
    @romansreef6192 Před 4 lety +3

    I rather go old school with Security hard wire system is best

    • @scotttovey
      @scotttovey Před 4 lety +1

      This system is good for those that need to temper their spending.
      You could add a bit hear and there over the months until your fully protected.

    • @waynekerr2472
      @waynekerr2472 Před 4 lety

      Way old school a couple dogs and a shotgun

    • @scotttovey
      @scotttovey Před 4 lety

      @@waynekerr2472
      That's a good prevention policy, but the purpose of the camera is more for catching the thieves after the fact.
      I heard about a break in in which the thieves, in addition to stealing the belongings, stole the dog as well.

    • @waynekerr2472
      @waynekerr2472 Před 4 lety +1

      @@scotttovey it's not a perfect plan it counts on me being there. My dog is always with me but my stuff is replaceable I mostly worry about life not property.

    • @scotttovey
      @scotttovey Před 4 lety

      @@waynekerr2472 👍😎

  • @bmay8818
    @bmay8818 Před 4 lety

    Aside from hacking concerns, what's to stop a burglar from coming in that door and cutting the power cord to the security system hub that's right next to the front door? Or one could just cut the cable TV line outside and disable the system by killing internet access.

    • @MrEljavi84
      @MrEljavi84 Před 4 lety

      B May Everything in the system is battery operated so if the cord is cut the system is still functional and is they are paying the monthly fee it doesn’t matter if there is no internet, the hub will notify 911....

    • @bmay8818
      @bmay8818 Před 4 lety

      @@MrEljavi84 I did the dumb thing and commented before I got to the very end. I do like the idea of a cell system, which is the only truly burglar proof (ish) way to go. But I'm sure it isn't inexpensive.

  • @davcot3675
    @davcot3675 Před 4 lety +7

    Why does guy keep punching the plywood? Ok

    • @johnames6430
      @johnames6430 Před 4 lety +1

      I was wondering the same thing. Just a bad habit, like "oh is it in place" of course it is! You just screwed it in.

  • @tahoetom9932
    @tahoetom9932 Před 2 lety

    Thermostats right under heater

  • @GDanielCho
    @GDanielCho Před 4 lety +7

    5:00 he missed the stud ):

    • @matthansen736
      @matthansen736 Před 4 lety

      He did miss the stud but it had a plywood backing. But he did strip the plywood more than once he also did it too the gusset bracket

    • @jasonjayalap
      @jasonjayalap Před 4 lety

      “It will even run when the power is off'” “Hand tools in the dark?”

    • @wetrock2766
      @wetrock2766 Před 4 lety

      He stripped two screws: "over enthusiastic" power screwdriver usage.

    • @Yophillips3272
      @Yophillips3272 Před 4 lety

      @@jasonjayalap ☉ Sunlight.

  • @georgebartholemew8444
    @georgebartholemew8444 Před 4 lety +1

    You can dig down outside of the foundation and waterproof it then the problem becomes minor.

    • @billsmith9249
      @billsmith9249 Před 4 lety +2

      I did that to my entire back wall. It was a crawl but it was about 5' deep. I rented my own small back hoe (smallest they had), it even fit through my 26" wide gate! I dug up the whole back, shoveled out the remaining, used a wire brush on the cinder block, waited for any moisture to dry (didn't really have to according to the products instructions I was using), and then applied Blackjack. I should have put at least a 5 mil vapor barrier on the outside of that (while still wet) but since I am not keeping the house I just back filled it back up. Took a few days of only working a few hours each day

    • @probuilder961
      @probuilder961 Před 4 lety +2

      Regarding the crumbling foundation issue, concrete always has some moisture in it, that's why even above ground, any wood that is in contact with concrete must be pressure treated to avoid rot. The moisture, however little, will wick up from the ground and into the concrete walls and cause the reaction with that pyrotite mineral aggregate causing it to expand (think frozen can of soda) and crack anything around it, ruining the wall. That aggregate then turns to dust which looks like rusty powder. It happened to my neighbor here in Northern CT.

    • @georgebartholemew8444
      @georgebartholemew8444 Před 4 lety

      Well said, what I was saying is that waterproofing the outside of the wall significantly reduces the moisture problem.. Or am I incorrect?

    • @probuilder961
      @probuilder961 Před 4 lety +1

      @@georgebartholemew8444 Are you referring to the crumbling foundations? If so, excessive moisture is not the problem here, these foundations have lost their structural integrity due to the expansion damage then the dissolving of much of the aggregate. Only the small amount of moisture normally found in a foundation is enough to cause the failure.

  • @verygoodboy2688
    @verygoodboy2688 Před 3 lety

    The first homeowner kinda looks like Jack Nicholson

  • @guzman9011
    @guzman9011 Před 4 lety +1

    So if the battery dies on that motion detector..no protection for that night?

    • @freddieh5539
      @freddieh5539 Před 4 lety +1

      Keep your AR15 next to the bed just in case.

    • @Newberntrains
      @Newberntrains Před 4 lety

      @@freddieh5539 its new england the burglar has more rights than you

  • @saulgoodman2018
    @saulgoodman2018 Před 4 lety +6

    So he just put in a space heating.

  • @Lonelyplanet3
    @Lonelyplanet3 Před 4 lety

    Repeat??

  • @adude7050
    @adude7050 Před 3 lety

    I am not sure if the end was a public service announcement or basically a big sucks to be you from all of us to all of you. Just blown away at the issue and wonder what there goal was in featuring it like this.

    • @Marthastewart209.
      @Marthastewart209. Před 3 lety

      I was thinking the same thing. I believe people email the show with questions and seek advice. Looks like they cover difficult questions, as this one did not have a good answer. It was more of a legal/political question

  • @oliviagreen8853
    @oliviagreen8853 Před 4 lety

    The guy with needing heat in his garage, he has some big and really close trees to his house. That would make me nervous

  • @rzu7120
    @rzu7120 Před 2 lety

    What ever happened to Norm?

  • @Furiends
    @Furiends Před 4 lety

    "It's a trade off between privacy and convenience." This isn't exactly true. For one because security isn't "a convenience" monitoring is the fundamental purpose of the system. There is a reason these systems get hacked all the time while say your Nintendo Switch, also an Internet connected device with a camera, does not. The development of these systems is rushed and its not meant to be secure it is meant to be convenient and that is the crux. You're buying a toy not a security system.

  • @lal12
    @lal12 Před 4 lety +1

    Just don't buy smart home sensors with a camera (in a private area), while the system can still be hacked you won't have that much of a problem since, just seeing states of doors being open and closed isn't that exciting.

  • @snowrunnerdevsareshity8243

    We have a ring door bell camera

    • @2loco
      @2loco Před 4 lety

      Cool

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab Před 4 lety

      Careful of a lot of those, the company that made them may sell access to what goes over the Internet. I don't think 'Internet' and 'security' are compatible words, reallly.

    • @2loco
      @2loco Před 4 lety

      @@OllamhDrab. I wouldn't really call a door bell a security system, and even if someone managed to get access via some vulnerability, the best they can see is a wall or maybe a shitty view of the street...

  • @saulgoodman2018
    @saulgoodman2018 Před 4 lety +3

    A 44 is a good security system.

    • @richfarfugnuven6308
      @richfarfugnuven6308 Před 4 lety

      That is if you are home, otherwise you lose your .44 magnum.

    • @saulgoodman2018
      @saulgoodman2018 Před 4 lety

      @@richfarfugnuven6308 Won't lose it if you have your CC.

    • @richfarfugnuven6308
      @richfarfugnuven6308 Před 4 lety

      @@saulgoodman2018 I do, but carry my 9mm shield when out and about the scoped. 44 magnum is too big to carry. So it's in the safe.

  • @Bremend
    @Bremend Před 3 lety

    I keep hearing "Sandy" not "Sanding"

  • @richardfoglerjr3706
    @richardfoglerjr3706 Před 4 lety

    No one who wants to pay their bills sanding uses so many grits of paper. 80 and 120 is more than enough for anything attached to the house.

  • @HugeWolf1
    @HugeWolf1 Před 4 lety

    Why didn't you mention for power outages on the security system, that you can install a UPS for the wifi? Also, no mention of other system than Nest.

  • @edttt4491
    @edttt4491 Před 3 lety

    I don't know if I can put a camera in my house.

  • @kosankrazy4143
    @kosankrazy4143 Před 4 lety +2

    Can't u put a power backup battery charger on the wifi

    • @scotttovey
      @scotttovey Před 4 lety

      Yes, but for the average UPC, your talking maybe 20 minutes of power backup. That would be sufficient to catch an intruder that intentionally cut the power, but in a regular power outage scenario, it's not going to help you much.
      You would need a back up generator that automatically turns on when the power goes out.

    • @steve_main
      @steve_main Před 4 lety

      @@scotttovey I use a UPS at home and get a decent amount of time using a standard UPS if too want longer buy a bigger UPS. You could hold that for a day if needed depends what you want.. and if installing nest devices you can afford a $200 UPS to hold it for a day. A UPS is almost a must for a smart home setup.

    • @Mrcaffinebean
      @Mrcaffinebean Před 4 lety +1

      Scott Tovey average router uses 6 watts and hour. You could easily get a 300 watt UPS to run that for 24 hours which would cover you in anything that isn’t a major outage.

    • @scotttovey
      @scotttovey Před 4 lety +1

      @@steve_main
      I agree, if you have the money to spend then you can get a day of power backup.
      I consider the average UPS the $50 block sitting on the shelf of the local Meijer and Walmart. That is what most people will end up purchasing because they won't know that you can get a bigger sized power backup.

    • @scotttovey
      @scotttovey Před 4 lety

      @@Mrcaffinebean
      That's only provided you don't have anything else hooked up to it.

  • @DixieDee
    @DixieDee Před 4 lety +4

    The best home security system comes in 12 gauge.

  • @JacobEmch91
    @JacobEmch91 Před 4 lety

    Hope he’s not spraying any finish in his garage.

  • @wmnapier
    @wmnapier Před 4 lety

    Why are you publishing this video again ?????????

  • @Arieeeee
    @Arieeeee Před 4 lety +1

    All a burglar has to do is sneak to the side of the house and snip off the cable and phone lines and completely render all your IOT devices useless. When my friend's house got broken into, they didn't even have to sneak to the side of the house because the cable company's outdoor box was in front of the little gated community he lived in and they just pulled the cover off and cut the internet and landlines for all 10 units and went to town. Because of that, for security, a traditional system is still much better IMO as it has cellular backup and all the sensors are hardwired and don't need to be charged up or have batteries that die. It's low voltage wire so running the wires is not that hard. The initial installation labor may be more but it's just one time and by the time you figure out all the cost of the parts and include monitoring, permits, etc. in the long run, it's about the same. The DIY works well in an apartment or small unit where your internet is more protected.
    They do have IOT cameras that have local storage too.

    • @MrEljavi84
      @MrEljavi84 Před 4 lety

      Arie Doesn’t matter if phone lines are cut because the hub has built in battery and cellular and if you pay the monthly fee the hub will call 911. All you have to do is hide the hub in a good location. Hard wired systems are a thing of the past and old technology....

    • @Arieeeee
      @Arieeeee Před 4 lety

      @@MrEljavi84 I checked and indeed there is a cellular backup for an additional $5 a month plus the $29 monthly fee for a total of $34 a month ($10 less if you get a multi-year contract with Brinks) That's pretty much the same as if you had a hardwired professionally installed system so I'm not sure what there is to gain by getting NEST if you end up doing all the work yourself and paying $399 up front plus all extra sensors and monthly fees. We paid $200 up front for our system including installation.
      As for all the cameras, they don't have cellular backup and are 100% cloud dependent. Arlo cameras are cloud and have local storage or they could go with a traditional NVR/DVR system if they want DIY. This whole thing just seemed like a Nest Advertisement and not necessarily what's best for the homeowner.

  • @bigchew3149
    @bigchew3149 Před 4 lety +1

    i love the show but that security system is probably more insecure than you was before & the Companys NEVER update thair software, It Is VERY Easy To HACK & a 10 year old Can do it ! Thy Are Very Insecure ! & The Best Way To Use Them If Ya Must Is With A Seperated Network On a Good PfSense Router/Firewall !

  • @blueribb99
    @blueribb99 Před 4 lety +2

    So, someone wearing a face mask can walk right up to the door camera and just pop it off and sell it ?

    • @MrEljavi84
      @MrEljavi84 Před 4 lety +2

      Glenn Watkins The camera was already scanned with a QR code so if reported stolen its useless to sell.....

  • @lees5097
    @lees5097 Před 4 lety

    Tom Silva has to slow down his awesome explanations, even to experts.

  • @RainbowMedicine2000
    @RainbowMedicine2000 Před 4 lety +2

    To much high tech. So now someone can hack your phone and security sensor and know exactly were your at in your house. Will stick to a good ole fashion baseball bat.

  • @bigchew3149
    @bigchew3149 Před 4 lety +2

    Love The Show ! How Ever 99.9% Of All Security Cams are VERY Vonurable To So Called Hacking As Thy All Have Open Ports ..VERY Unsecure Nest Cams Are Very Very Bad For This ! a Nest am Can b owend by a hacker in like 3-5 seconds flat ! All cause they all NEVER Up Date Thair Software ! Just wanted to point that out ,as i Think Every One Should Know about how bad thy Realy are !

    • @PeterPetrakis
      @PeterPetrakis Před 4 lety +2

      @BIGCHEW IoT devices are hot garbage when it comes to software. Put them on a separate network to isolate them from your home network. Only the "head unit" should be able to see them and have upstream internet access.

    • @bigchew3149
      @bigchew3149 Před 4 lety +1

      @@PeterPetrakis Yes I was aware Thank you for pointing that out! as I had Faild to ! i am a big fan of pfsense for all my stuff,with separate network's ! but as we both know nothing is perfect..

  • @jeremykj69
    @jeremykj69 Před 4 lety +1

    Better hope your wife is faithfull my coworker put one in his house and caught his wife cheating on him

    • @Marthastewart209.
      @Marthastewart209. Před 3 lety

      Saved that man from having to pay the alimony, he is lucky

  • @BigJay28
    @BigJay28 Před 3 lety

    The illustrious bed supposedly drown because heaven gully enjoy absent a caring grease. greedy, nostalgic icon

  • @avalon449
    @avalon449 Před 4 lety +2

    Ross, you wave your hands around like Beato O’Rourke. Not a .good look.