I know the feeling well. Being newely married I'm in the middle of remodeling/repairing my house before we move into it. We've talked about it numerous times but I still don't think she really understands why we can't put a huge, one piece tub and surround combination (she doesn't like the seams in the others) in the existing bathroom without taking a wall out. She has one in her house which, to me, was obviously set in place and built around. Thing is her bathroom is smaller than the one in my (her new) house so it just doesn't make sense to her why the bigger bathroom can't have the same tub in it. Just can't seem to make her understand even the old one would be a pain to get out through the existing door and the new one she want's simply won't fit without taking out a wall. Looks like I'm going to be building and tiling a custom tub shower combination before too long, not to mention tiling the kitchen cabinets and back splash as well as an area in front of the fireplace...on top of repairing wood rot around both the front and back doors and replacing both doors, putting down a new floor, taking paneling down and refinishing the sheetrock behind it, redoing the ceilings, etc etc etc.... Everything we're doing really needs to be done since the house was never really refinished after a downstairs flood from a burst pipe upstairs nearly 13 years ago but she's sticking with me through the whole construction ordeal. I love her and she want's a nice house as much as I do so I'm doing all I can to make it happen for her. Of course it really helps when she understands I need the tools to do the jobs she want's done. She got me a nice 10" tile saw for my birthday and then also a new Bosch 7 1/4" skill saw I wanted to replace the old junker I picked up out of the scrap yard years ago, not to mention a new wet/dry vac to clean up the resulting construction messes. I've used all my new tools already and am loving them, and her, more every day.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Profile: Farmall M - by Staff. H so that mountable implements were interchaneable. The Farmall M was most popular with large-acreage row-crop farmers. It was powered by either a high-compression gas engine or a distillate version with lower compression. Options included the Lift-All hydraulic system, a belt pulley, PTO, rubber tires, starter, lights and a swinging drawbar. It could be ordered in the high-crop, wide-front or tricycle configurations. The high-crop version was called a Model MV.
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