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Message
As a FTHO, What Should I Focus On?
Posted on 7/8/23 at 9:53 am
Posted on 7/8/23 at 9:53 am
Just bought my first home, and excited to be a homeowner. That being said, I'm completely ignorant on what that entails other than seeing my dad constantly doing stuff around the house. What are some tips, tricks, and things I should know how to do? I'm not especially handy, but can fumble my way through easier projects.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 11:18 am to Jcorye1
Just maintain it. Water is the enemy, specifically standing or constantly wet.
Also, every issue/repair can be answered by finding a solution on YouTube.
Also, every issue/repair can be answered by finding a solution on YouTube.
This post was edited on 7/8/23 at 11:21 am
Posted on 7/8/23 at 11:23 am to Jcorye1
Welcome to the money pit!!! If you purchased new, you will (hopefully) get several years before shite starts breaking. In the meantime, crack open a cold one and enjoy your space. There will always be a project on your list from now on.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 11:53 am to Jcorye1
You will spend more time on youtube than you ever imagined. And if Google ever starts charging a $100/mo to access youtube, you would be stupid not to pay it.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 12:20 pm to Jcorye1
As a very not handy person I can tell you that working on your house is a labor of love. First, add something that you will love and get immediate gratification from such as a garden. Next, assuming you do not have immediate repairs needed, I would look at how to make the home more efficient when it comes to maintenance. For instance, I bought a robot vacuum at the same time my mother spent almost $500 on a new vacuum. She toils away with that while the robot has cut down drastically how much I actually need to take out a broom and mop. You will learn that the more space you have, the more shite you fill with it. Think about storage and how you will manage it. Every year I do a major cleaning out of my house and either sell or donate, for a tax write off, what I do not need anymore. Speaking of buying shite, you will need tools along the way. Buy the basics of what you need now but do not go crazy as you can just get what you need at that time for anything specialized. Make it your space. Home theater is what I am slowly working on. Whether it is content (plex/nas server), sound, tv, even lighting such as Philips Hue. Reddit has a ton of info on this.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 1:39 pm to Jcorye1
Patio upgrades. Gotta be able to grill, watch the game, and put down cold ones without going inside.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 2:27 pm to Jcorye1
Start putting out feelers for a good AC guy. And when mine comes out same day, I tip him with cold beer or an extra $20. He always seems to come over same day now.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 2:44 pm to Jcorye1
Termite treatment - either get a company to do it or figure out how to DIY it,
Get a decent tank spray bottle and order some talstar concentrate and spray regularly for bug.
Learn how to care for your lawn - when and how to treat for weeds, fertilize, etc. Lots of good landscape guys here (Ronk, Crawdude and others) that provide tons of advice on yard care.
Don't start too many DIY projects at once. Finish a project before moving to the next. Don't get yourself in too deep on anything you can't handle.
Get a decent tank spray bottle and order some talstar concentrate and spray regularly for bug.
Learn how to care for your lawn - when and how to treat for weeds, fertilize, etc. Lots of good landscape guys here (Ronk, Crawdude and others) that provide tons of advice on yard care.
Don't start too many DIY projects at once. Finish a project before moving to the next. Don't get yourself in too deep on anything you can't handle.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 4:51 pm to Jcorye1
Plan for a couple grand in repairs and updates per year at a minimum. There is always something breaking in a home.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 5:14 pm to Jcorye1
Biggest thing i learned
Add 1/2 cup bleach to your ac float switch line every 6 months! Nothing is worse than the ac shutting down because you have a clogged line!
Add 1/2 cup bleach to your ac float switch line every 6 months! Nothing is worse than the ac shutting down because you have a clogged line!
This post was edited on 7/8/23 at 5:15 pm
Posted on 7/8/23 at 5:32 pm to Jcorye1
Congratulations on your purchase. I remember how proud I was when I could finally call the place I was living mine. I’ve been very fortunate over the last 30 years to prosper with each home purchase. Every time I’ve gotten transferred by my company I’ve always seemed to get lucky and hit it just right when the market was sky high and once even doubled my money selling my house. Another two times I’ve made over 100k than what I bought the homes for and was only there less than 6 years. Keep your house and yard nice. If you can improve the landscaping do it as you can. People often are impulse buyers and will pay more for a well maintained home.
I’ll offer a few suggestions that are simple but often overlooked. Stock up on air filters and keep them changed every 30-45 days. If you have bushes growing around your AC unit keep them trimmed away from the unit so it can get plenty of air. I recommend you buy plenty of light bulbs particularly if you have taller ceilings with recessed lights. It takes a ladder to get up there and change mine so a ladder is a handy thing around the house. When your light over the oven burns out buy 5-6 of those because inevitably those things will burn out at the most importune time and it’s nice to have spares. Buy a good toilet plunger. Get you a good bug man. Take advantage of any tax break you can get. If possible pay an extra house note a year and apply that payment to your principal. Doesn’t hurt to buy a little basic set of tool’s because inevitably something simple like a doorknob needs a screw or two tightened. Those are just some basic pro tips from an old guy.
I’ll offer a few suggestions that are simple but often overlooked. Stock up on air filters and keep them changed every 30-45 days. If you have bushes growing around your AC unit keep them trimmed away from the unit so it can get plenty of air. I recommend you buy plenty of light bulbs particularly if you have taller ceilings with recessed lights. It takes a ladder to get up there and change mine so a ladder is a handy thing around the house. When your light over the oven burns out buy 5-6 of those because inevitably those things will burn out at the most importune time and it’s nice to have spares. Buy a good toilet plunger. Get you a good bug man. Take advantage of any tax break you can get. If possible pay an extra house note a year and apply that payment to your principal. Doesn’t hurt to buy a little basic set of tool’s because inevitably something simple like a doorknob needs a screw or two tightened. Those are just some basic pro tips from an old guy.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 5:41 pm to Jcorye1
Youtube DIY videos are wonderful.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 7:33 pm to Jcorye1
Buy a meter key wrench if you can’t get it turned in the box with a crescent. Don’t use your garbage disposal as a trash can and don’t pour grease down the sink. It will keep your pipes from getting clogged.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 8:04 pm to Jcorye1
Get a spare AC capacitor (for each unit if you have multiple). Also get a good studfinder (I recommend Franklin sensors, a wide model where it shows studs via multiple lights) and a solid drill/driver set with some combo bit set kit. Also learn to caulk. I suck at it less than I used to.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 9:56 pm to Jcorye1
If you are willing to learn, and not be afraid to do the work, almost everything is available on YouTube.
Small appliance repairs like changing ice makers to swapping your dishwasher pump. I rebuilt a used dryer based on a YouTube video. Replaced a bad magnetron in a microwave…..on and on.
AND right now, BEFORE they fail, order back up AC blower and condenser capacitors. Swap them out as needed by testing prior to fail.
Small appliance repairs like changing ice makers to swapping your dishwasher pump. I rebuilt a used dryer based on a YouTube video. Replaced a bad magnetron in a microwave…..on and on.
AND right now, BEFORE they fail, order back up AC blower and condenser capacitors. Swap them out as needed by testing prior to fail.
Posted on 7/8/23 at 11:09 pm to Jcorye1
Good advice in the thread.
If you have an attic, you can create a lot of extra storage space by laying some sheets of plywood up there. Makes it easier to get around too.
Take good care of your A/C. Become acquainted with how to do basic maintenance on it, and it will save you a lot of frustration later on.
If your yard doesn't have good drainage. Work on that.
Keep your trees maintained. If you have something like a Bradford Pear, just remove it now. Don't overprune your trees, but don't neglect them either.
Never let a minor problem become a big one. If you notice something is an issue, take care of it right away. Especially, if you notice a leak/stain somewhere in the house. The sooner you take care of it, the less problems you'll have down the road.
If you have an attic, you can create a lot of extra storage space by laying some sheets of plywood up there. Makes it easier to get around too.
Take good care of your A/C. Become acquainted with how to do basic maintenance on it, and it will save you a lot of frustration later on.
If your yard doesn't have good drainage. Work on that.
Keep your trees maintained. If you have something like a Bradford Pear, just remove it now. Don't overprune your trees, but don't neglect them either.
Never let a minor problem become a big one. If you notice something is an issue, take care of it right away. Especially, if you notice a leak/stain somewhere in the house. The sooner you take care of it, the less problems you'll have down the road.
Posted on 7/9/23 at 1:42 pm to Jcorye1
Stick up on light bulbs
They all go out at one time
Saying that because I just left Home Depot w 100 dollars worth of bulbs
They all go out at one time
Saying that because I just left Home Depot w 100 dollars worth of bulbs
Posted on 7/10/23 at 10:25 am to Jcorye1
quote:
Just bought my first home, and excited to be a homeowner. That being said, I'm completely ignorant on what that entails other than seeing my dad constantly doing stuff around the house. What are some tips, tricks, and things I should know how to do? I'm not especially handy, but can fumble my way through easier projects.
Make it your goal to find something productive to do on your house every day. You don't NEED to do something every day, but maintenance is easiest done in small doses instead of letting things pile up. Even if it's just sweeping, dusting, mowing, trim a bush, or pressure washing off the patio. There is literally something to be done on your house every day. And every day you don't do something on your house is another opportunity for work to pile up.
Budget for doing something major every year. You don't need to do something major every year, but things seem to break in pairs. Don't let repairs back up on you or you'll have $20,000 worth the shite that needs to be repaired eventually.
Posted on 7/10/23 at 1:15 pm to Jcorye1
Get you a small tool kit and keep it accessible inside the house.
You're a lot more likely to go tighten that doorknob or whatever it is if you don't have to go to the garage/shop to track down a screwdriver.
Stay on top of yard work, if you get behind it sucks.
Clean up/declutter and put things back where they go as soon as you're done with them. If you have a wife, she will likely be terrible at this
You're a lot more likely to go tighten that doorknob or whatever it is if you don't have to go to the garage/shop to track down a screwdriver.
Stay on top of yard work, if you get behind it sucks.
Clean up/declutter and put things back where they go as soon as you're done with them. If you have a wife, she will likely be terrible at this
Posted on 7/11/23 at 7:42 am to Jcorye1
not sure how old the hose is, but if your electrical panel is not labeled then have each breaker labeled. and if there are Federal Pacific (FPE) breakers in there. replace them with newer ones. while your at it just spend the money and get the whole panel replaced and let your insurance company know.
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