After our usual breakfast and coffee we sat for a while in the living room. This is part of our morning routine and I often use the time to finish up my blog post from the previous day but the last couple of weeks we have been busy and I have not always had time. We enjoyed the time until about 9 AM and then got serious about loading our “junk” into the Chuck It Junk Removal dump trailer.
Mara checked with Cummins Bridgeway and they told her to bring her motorhome in at 11 AM so she broke camp at 10 AM and backed out of the driveway at 10:15 AM. Cummins Bridgeway put several technicians and mechanics to work on her rig to re-install the genset, install new shock absorbers, and service the transmission (filter and fluid). She was out in a few hours and stopped at General RV to return the Camco refrigerator vent cover which did not fit her base on the roof.
We took a break from chucking junk and extracted the old refrigerator from its alcove in the bus, which was a 2-person job. I got some scraps of 1/2″ plywood to set in front of the elevated alcove base as I did not want to walk or slide the unit across the bus sub-floor, especially with the residual thinset mortar. First we had to walk it out a few inches which was hard because it only had 3/8″ clearance on each side. Once it was out far enough we were able to open the doors enough to remove all of the shelves and bins, which Linda took into the house and garage. I then disconnected the water and electric that ran up into the left (freezer) door at the bottom hinge corner for the ice/water dispenser and light. With those disconnected and pulled out of the bottom of the case we unscrewed the bottom and top hinges and removed the two doors. Linda collected all of the small loose parts as we went and put them in a plastic container as we knew we would have to reassemble the unit at some point.
The doors had 1/4″ walnut veneer plywood face panels and we wanted to salvage those to use with the new pull-out pantry. Normally you just remove the handle trim from the edge of the door and slide the panel out. The fridge door panel would not budge so we removed the trim from all four edges of the door. The panel had been stuck in place with strips of double-sided tape so we carefully peeled it loose. The freezer door had two smaller panels, above and below the ice/water dispenser, and they slide out easily after removing the handle trim. We carried the doors, trim, and panels to the garage and then walked the case completely out of the alcove.
I spent some time pondering what would be required to disassemble the refrigerator enough to get it out through the door of the bus but decided not to do anything until I had talked to Butch. Just before dinner I had a long chat with Chuck about the refrigerator swap and he reminded me that DTE Energy (the electric power utility for this region) will pick up old refrigerators and freezers and pay you $50 for them. Linda checked this out online and learned that they have to be plugged in and operating or they won’t take them, so we have a double incentive for getting it out in one, operating piece.
Our revised plan is still to get the case out in one functioning piece through the side window frame but it won’t be this weekend. The guy with the sunroom business in the building in front of Chuck’s shop is still in the process of moving to his new place and has trucks, cars, people, and junk all over the place making ingress/egress to Chuck’s shop difficult to impossible. The business is supposed to be gone by the end of the month so we will wait another week and plan for Saturday August 1st assuming I can get the window frame open. In the meantime I need to get back to work on the bus floor, so I will have to spend part of next week sanding and start installing the 1/4″ underlayment for the new vinyl tile.
Mara and Linda made another pizza for dinner and it was every bit as good as the first one. Mara has been a wonderful house guest. We have left the house open to her and she has made herself comfortable in the kitchen and using the hall bathroom and laundry. It helps that Linda is not possessive about the kitchen. Whenever we have visitors who want to help in the kitchen Linda welcomes their participation. It’s been fun for both of them and they have each learned a few knew things and deepened their friendship.