Place a special washer in every other cap hole all the way around the inside of the repair
Yes it is possible. Imagine regular square tiles cut into four pieces. The cuts would be from one corner to the opposite corner, similar to an X. Presto!! Triangles
Half the angle it is to be mounted to. Example- A 90 deg cabinet corner would require that each piece of molding is cut at 45 in order to butt up flush to each other. If a corner cap is used that cover 45 deg of the 90 deg corner, then each piece of molding would be cut to 22.5 deg in order to butt up flush to the cap.
True. The first slice produces two pieces; the second slice intersects the first, bisecting each slice to produce four pieces; the third slice bisects two corner pieces to produce a total of 6 slices; and the fourth bisects two other corner pieces to produce eight slices
A 30 foot circle covers about 707 square feet. 23 pieces would technically cover that. I'd get 30 of them so I wouldn't have to cut any of them.
A mitered corner is one where the material is cut at an angle, most commonly 45 degrees. Two pieces of material cut at 45 would make a 90 degree corner. Of course many other angles are possible as well.
assuming 12"x12" tile, it would take 204 tiles to cover the area add about 5% for breakage and cut-pieces
That would be a pool company.. Now there are dozens of coping styles and sizes, so take one of the old one with you..
No. It doesn't. For honor to rhyme with corner...corner would have to be Conor. And that isn't a word.
It would depend on the type of floor you are installing. There haven't been enough details about the project provided to answer this question thoroughly. If you are installing engineered hardwood just lay down a 3/4" piece of plywood and a moisture barrier. If you are installing a floating floor, use a moisture barrier and two 1/2" pieces of plywood. see related links
Yes, or Cancer/Scorpio would be a good match for you.
it is poosible there was a ground wire not connected after installing the valve cover
What would happen if you broke the Styrofoam up into lots of pieces, then threw the pieces into water?