We interrupt this blog to bring you a quick update on my project. As you'll learn in future posts, I had to put the Hellcat back together (spoiler alert) with bent fork tubes, to make a rolling frame, so that I could do a garage reno.... full story of the reno follows.... The bike will return in the future.
So in March of 2021, in the midst of the pandemic, I broke my garage door opener chain. Being too cheap to hire a specialist, I fixed it myself.
I knew that there was something wrong when, upon testing, the motor box made a regular thunking sound, but "no problem", I thought, the chain is just too tight. I loosened the chain 3 times, each time hearing that wicked thunking/chunking sound. On the 4th try, my sprocket sheared. Ok, a new garage door opener was now in order.
The previous owner had gerry-rigged a standard garage door opener into a space that was 5 inches too short, because of a ceiling support joist and post situated right in the middle of my double garage door. I have hated it since the day that I moved in, so 18 years later, I finally got to install a new wall mounted opener.
The LiftMaster rep then told me what I didn't want to hear: "The door tracks that you have are low-profile and our opener won't work with them."
Undaunted, I called a door guy (not-coincidentally, one that sold LiftMaster openers) to see how much the damage would be to get a new door and opener together, with the appropriate track system. The price was right, and I was about to say yes, when I mused that I had planned to do this reno in three years, not now, but the cement floor, the driveway and the retaining wall could still wait. I was then deflated when the door guy told me that the cement replacement was guaranteed to change the height of my floor, so I should do the floor before I replaced the door.... DOH!!!
For you Canadians, in he 1980's, Gordon Pape published a book in Canada called the $50,000 Stove Handle, in which he described how a simple trip to an appliance store, to get a replacement handle for his stove, spiraled out of control into a full kitchen reno. This was my Gordon Pape moment.
I was very lucky. I did some research on cement contractors in my area, and there is one that stands above the others. It was mid-March, and usually cement workers are inactive in my northern climate, but a warmer than usual March had gotten their attention. It was Friday afternoon when I called the really good guy... and he agreed to come and take a look. He told me that if I could completely empty the garage within a week, then he could do it in the last week of March, but if I couldn't then I would be in July as he had work scheduled from April 1 until then.
My basement and cold room are still (December 2021) stacked high with shelving, bike parts, tools, and everything else that I could move into the basement. My bikes, workbench and tool chest were distributed amongst three neighbors houses as the work began...in March.
| The space before construction began. Note the old opener offset to one side of the post (connected to the door on the other side of the post. |
| Ready to pour! |
| Not really part of the garage, but if borrowing to do this, you may as well go all the way: New garage door, new driveway and new retaining wall pictured in August. |
| The work area. The wall around the corner to the left had not been painted yet. |