Make some cash by moving heavy items out of the cellar!
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(69 votes) Published: Apr 26, 2008 2:03 a.m. Viewed 819 times |
Split-level entry houses were mostly built in the 1950s and 1960s, but my house was ahead of the curve, built around 1920, or probably earlier. From pictures I’ve seen, it was completely submerged, up to the roof, during the St. Patrick’s Day flood of 1936, and probably extensively remodeled after that. It’s got a clumsy 90 degree turn at the cellar door.
Getting large items in and out of the cellar is a chore. So there’s been a mystery as long as I’ve been here: How did they get the piano in?
I happened to meet an old man whose family owned the house during the 1940s. He was just a boy at the time, but he knew the answer. The cellar steps were temporarily removed.
Decades later, I’ve got a collection of bulky crap in the cellar to haul away...
Like this 1960s relic refrigerator, which is still operational, but will never be used again...
And a bookcase and wardrobe I built in the cellar, but simply will not make the 90 degree turn to get through the door...
That 1960s cast iron boiler, which I told you about in a previous egg...
The 1968 Sears Kenmore washer, and a 1990s Whirlpool washer that replaced it. Here’s a Protip--never buy a used washer; there are too many things that can break down. Used dryers are fine; dryers are idiot machines with few moving parts. The washers, on the other hand, now have no moving parts.
There were a few other pieces of metallic junk not in these pictures.
So I set out to disassemble the steps. I pried out a riser gently, but it ripped. By the way, that vinyl floor covering was made in the late 1960s to early 1970s, and probably contains asbestos.
Instead of 2x8 lumber for the risers, they used 1x8 and shimmed the back. So I decided to keep the treads, and destroy the risers.
So, out came the reciprocating saw.
That wasn’t so bad. This took less than an hour, using a little crowbar and a reciprocating saw.
At this time, the need for a ramp became obvious. I had a scrap piece of plywood which had been the kitchen countertop at one time, and some surplus 2x4 lumber. I used drywall screws to assemble it, so I could remove it quickly when finished.
Then I put the boiler on the dolly. That son of a bitch weighs nearly 200 pounds. I can’t likely drag it up the ramp through the tight opening in the steps.
So I got some tow ropes and a racheting manual winch, and put it around the boiler/dolly combination. The other end of the winch was attached to a wooden post that holds up the carport outside.
Then it became easy to move 200 pounds of metal up the ramp, and into the yard.
I did the same thing to the refrigerator.
The washers were done much the same way. The wooden furniture was so wide, I had to remove the dolly, wrap the tow rope around them, and drag them without the benefit of the dolly. Again, not a problem.
And here’s the collection of crap, ready to go onto a truck and take a ride to the boneyard. The refrigerator was taken to a community cleanup day, where the freon was removed. The wooden furniture went into the house through another door. The rest of the stuff went to a scrap iron dealer. I got $100 for the lot of it. Protip: When renting a truck, ask for the Sanford and Son truck. |
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 | Apr 26, 2008 7:18 am - oh my god ur house is nasty |

 | Apr 26, 2008 7:49 am - ^^ indeed
old fridges are great for beer |

 | Apr 26, 2008 9:40 am - hmm lol. i like the photoshop job with that one pic. so i’m guessing it was to be like an exploration style egg because saying "use sanford and son truck" wouldn’t be that much of an egg. 4*’s |

 | Apr 26, 2008 2:27 pm - nasty yeah your house looks nasty. 0*’s |

 | Apr 26, 2008 3:06 pm - nice. 5*s |

 | Apr 26, 2008 7:25 pm - Why so harsh? I only showed you the cellar!
Anyway, someone must have ridden through town years ago, and sold everybody that putrid looking lime sherbet green paint you saw, because practically everyone has it in their cellars. It comes in powder form, like Kool Aid, and you mix it with water.
That equally foul looking yellow vinyl on the steps is also in the kitchen, which I’ve been renovating over the years. For reasons that should be obvious, you shouldn’t replace the floor covering until absolutely everything else in the room is done.
But still, it’s a cellar. What do you expect? |

 | Apr 26, 2008 9:07 pm - is that accually like your house? cause man is it dirtyy!! and why if it is your house would you cut your steps out?
1* |

 | Apr 27, 2008 7:21 am -
Quote: why if it is your house would you cut your steps out?
You have read the egg haven’t you?
4* |

 | Apr 27, 2008 10:43 am - why the fuck would you rate him based on whether or not you like his house? 5* |

 | Apr 27, 2008 11:07 am - oh yeah yeAH, that yellow vinyl stuff is EVERYWHERE too. my gandparents had it in all of there three houses they had when they were looking for a new house. i know a couple of friends who have it too in their older houses. |

 | Apr 27, 2008 11:15 am - ill 4 * |

 | Apr 27, 2008 11:23 am - . I watched Franklin yesterday, and it was about him being scared of the cellar....
I think your’s would give the poor turtle a death wish :)
5*! |

 | Ap 27, 2008 4:29 pm - If he has been renovating his house is gonna look like a mess because hes constantly moving shit everywhere and the walls, even if the green did look good, are gonna look like shit in the cellar anyways because cellars are prone to mold and mildew due to moisture. Stop fucking with the dude over the way his cellar looks. Its not even the point of the egg anyway. Dicks. 5*s |

 | Apr 27, 2008 9:49 pm - Ungrateful little bastards!
*cough* Fire Insurance and a match *cough cough*
j/k
Five stars. Interesting trick. |

 | May 05, 2008 1:15 pm - not bad 4* | |
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