Great video from start to finish. As always great real world problem solving. I did a lot of these type repairs pre-UA-cam days. A few observations. - can knock down excess epoxy w a hand plane - sun and heat dramatically speed up set up time - abatron is a good product for replacing rotted portions. Thanks again!
Thanks for an instructive video. It's good to know about the epoxy and filler for other uses as well. I'm not sure I'd have the patience to do 20 pairs of shutters like that. It seems pretty tedious.
When I set up for a video sometimes things take longer or I do things more slowly. With the camera off I do things like this assembly-line style, by setting up the shutters in a row, doing all the epoxy at once, doing all the sanding and priming at once, etc. It's still a lot of work, but you can minimize some of the tedium this way.
Great video from start to finish. As always great real world problem solving. I did a lot of these type repairs pre-UA-cam days. A few observations.
- can knock down excess epoxy w a hand plane
- sun and heat dramatically speed up set up time
- abatron is a good product for replacing rotted portions.
Thanks again!
Thanks for an instructive video. It's good to know about the epoxy and filler for other uses as well. I'm not sure I'd have the patience to do 20 pairs of shutters like that. It seems pretty tedious.
When I set up for a video sometimes things take longer or I do things more slowly. With the camera off I do things like this assembly-line style, by setting up the shutters in a row, doing all the epoxy at once, doing all the sanding and priming at once, etc. It's still a lot of work, but you can minimize some of the tedium this way.
I was once removing shutters from an old house and found BatMan sleeping there...😂😅