By the time we started breakfast the landscapers were back. Steve started to dig a trench for a drain line from the end of the lower deck and hit 2×8’s on the flat about 2-3″ below the surface, so he abandoned that work and moved the excavator around front to the trash pile.
The major construction work up in the back is nearing completion and the lads were picking up some of the smaller debris, the larger stuff having been moved around front to the trash pile yesterday. Steve used the excavator to load some of the trash onto the trailer (normally used to move the excavator), where the crew covered and secured it. He loaded more of it into the back of his pickup truck. They are still having tire issues with the trailer so I charged up my 200 psi air compressor (150 psi regulated) and rolled it over so they could fill one of the tires.
Steve moved the excavator to the southeast corner of the house to dig a short (10′) shallow trench for a drain line to get water from the downspout away from the house. I conferred with him regarding the exact location because the main propane line enters the house at that corner, the electrical service for the RV outlet runs under there, there is a tree about 12 feet southeast of that corner, and that corner is where the new natural gas meter will be installed. There will be a similar short drain line at the southwest corner of the garage, but it will be dug by hand as the main electrical service runs directly under there about 2′ below the surface.
The lads continued to work in the back placing egg rock. They were about 1/2 cubic yard short and I asked Steve to order a full cubic yard and use the other 1/2 yard on the west end of the north edge of the lower upper deck to match what they had done at the top of the west retaining wall. Steve gave the crew instructions on how to prep that area, add a piece of edging to define where the rock will go, and install landscape fabric. He and I then looked at the boards he hit in the back while trenching and it turned out there were only three of them 4-6′ long and they appeared to be old construction material that had possibly been used as a step off of the lower deck.
Linda gathered up household trash and recyclables and headed off around 10:45 AM. I finally got started on my projects for the day around 11 AM, opening the garage door so I would have light when the power was turned off at the sub-panel main breaker. My first task was to move the new outlet I installed in the utility closet the other day. The return air duct will be installed against that wall and would cover the current location. When we installed the door yesterday we did not put any 2×4’s above the door and up to the ceiling. Darryll is going to run the supply duct straight out from the furnace above the door and then angle it over against the east wall of the garage.
With the outlet relocated I cut some scrap insulation to fill the lower half of the open wall cavities and then stopped while I pondered getting a ground wire into that space. Linda got back from running her errands about then so I decided over lunch to call Bratcher Electric to see if they could give me an idea of what it will cost to run a 100 Amp service entrance cable from the transfer switch in the southwest corner of the garage to the garage panel in the northeast corner of the garage. (I estimated it would take 40′ of cable, but have no idea what the labor will be.)
The earliest I will be able to talk to Mike Bratcher is next Monday so I decided that I really needed to run a ground wire from the sub-panel to the main panel allowing me to disconnect the ground wires from the neutral wires in the sub-panel by removing the bonding screw in the sub-panel and giving us a code-compliant, and much safer, sub-panel until such time as it gets re-wired as a main panel.
Linda and I determined that I needed about 40′ of #10 copper wire to get from the sub-panel to the main panel. Pondering sometimes leads to good things. I really did not want to stop working to go get wire when I remembered that I had a length of green insulated copper wire I had used for grounding a ham radio and antenna mast at the old house. It was coiled up on the floor in garage and when we uncoiled it we discovered it was … 40′ long! I love it when that happens. I checked the gage and it was #8, so it was actually larger than required for the 60A cable that feeds power from the main panel in the basement to the sub-panel in the garage.
I checked the approximate location for drilling a hole and then drilled a 1/2″ hole from the inside of the garage just above the base plate and out through the siding. I fed the ground wire through the hole from outside the garage, pulled it up into the sub-panel, and secured it to one of the ground bars. I dressed it and fastened it to the side of a stud and coiled up the extra outside on the lower upper deck. I will complete the run to the main panel another day.
With the ground wire installed I was able to install the insulation I had cut earlier and secure it with our staple gun, which I had managed to locate in the tub of tools we took with us out west last summer. With Linda’s assistance I cut and installed two pieces of drywall from an old scrap piece we had. I then taped the seams and mudded the screw dimples. By the time I finished it was 4 PM. Spencer came to the garage to let me know that they would all be leaving around 4:30 PM due to a severe thunderstorm that was on course to hit our area around 5 PM.
By 4:45 PM we were hearing thunder and I decided to stop work temporarily and help Linda close up the house. The storm came, a cold wind blew, and it rained hard, but only for a few minutes and we did not get any of the hail that was reported prior to the storm’s arrival at our location. An hour later we had a lovely summer evening with blue skies. Linda made roasted winter vegetables for dinner. It’s the end of July, but we had overnight lows in the mid-40’s two nights ago. The first six months of this year have been the coldest in 21 years, so winter vegetables were appropriate for dinner even though it is the end of July.
I had planned to do a lot of other electrical work today, but it was a full day and everything that got done was something that needed to get done. It was also work that had to get done in the order in which it was accomplished. My original plans were obviously too ambitious, and today’s work involved details that required time to figure out and execute.