”
In the category of, “No Good Deed
Goes Unpunished, I have been taking care of the list of “Honey-Dos” left me by
my beloved. She, as The Angel of Mercy, gone to help my daughter recover from
the birth of my 26th grandchild, has left me alone to take care of
the menial household maintenance and prepare for winter. I was given the assignment
of freeing up the rusted grinders in the garbage disposal in the kitchen sink.
We have lived in our new home for an unbelievable 14 years and the disposal had
ceased to function as a disposal should, i.e. , it should grind up waste, and
didn’t. I dutifully sprayed the grinders with a rust and environment destroying
, but commercially available, chemical and in, but 48 hours, was able to free the
grinders such that the waste disposal unit functioned normally.
Unfortunately, in the interim, and
in a completely unrelated episode, the dishwasher, which drains into the
disposal unit, had its control board burn up in the middle of the night. I
awoke to a terrible “ozione-ish” smell that seemed to originate in the kitchen.
I sniffed throughout the house and finally came back to the kitchen where the
odor was the strongest. Since the dishwasher was no longer functioning, I took
the front panel off and found the main control circuit board had burned up
during the last dishwasher load. There was a crispy black and burned segment
adjacent to one of the relays on the main control board, and the temperature
sensor was also irreversibly fried. I searched online for the appropriate parts
and found both the board and the sensor available on Ebay and Amazon. I tried
to order the least expensive parts but found that the vendors wouldn’t ship to
Alaska. As Alaskans are always confused by the unwillingness of shippers to
send goods by the US Postal service to Alaska, I was gobsmacked and wrote to
the shippers asking that they might make an exception as it would be no more
expensive for them to ship to me than for them to ship to an address in, say,
Seattle. Both promptly wrote back apologizing, but informing me that their
policy was not to ship to Alaska. I finally accepted the Ebay offer of a vendor
who would ship to Alaska for only an additional $10 and began waiting for the
arrival of the appropriate parts.
In the meantime, after freeing the
grinders in the disposal unit, I tried them out by grinding out some carrot
tops. I watched from under the sink while the detritus spewed out a crack in the
disposal’s side. We have only lived in the house since June 1, 2004 and have
accumulated a few undersink items that include 4 packages of Scotchbrite sponges, 4 quarts of
Jet-Dry, 10 spray-cans of oven cleaner, 4 quarts of various brands of calcium
remover (Lime-Away and others), 3 pints
of granite sealer, ¾ gallon of lamp oil, ¾ gallon of wax remover, 5 packages of
household surface wipes, , 3 containers of various Stainless Steel cleaner, 3
quarts of humidifier bacteriostatic treatment, and several other various and sundry
items. Needless to say, this was the first time the undersink area had been thoroughly
cleaned out. It would be easy to blame my spouse for accumulating the
duplicated essential home-maintenance items, but I am equally responsible
because I, too, bring home those things I remember we “need” while out
shopping.
Anyway, the spewing leak required that
I completely clean out the undersink area to find the problem. I quickly
localized it to the disposal and found that I could replace the 1/3 horsepower
unit with a ½ horsepower unit for only $109 at either Lowes or Home Depot. I
remembered that Costco occasionally sold disposal units and, though they don’t
have their inventory posted online as do both Lowes and Home Depot, I found in
a telephone call, that they had a 1½ Horsepower unit for sale for only $79.99.
That was $10 more than the online price, but considering the price of shipping
to Alaska, was a bargain.
I trekked into Anchorage this
morning to buy the disposal from Costco, returned home and installed it fairly
simply in only about 30 minutes. After finding a couple of leaks in the drains
requiring me to repair the existing connections with new ones, everything
worked.
I am currently waiting for the
dishwasher parts I ordered from Amazon and Ebay to arrive when, I trust, that the
kitchen will be back to normal before the return of my beloved. I wonder what
might have occurred if I had not followed her instructions to fix the disposal
grinders in the first place.
In my mind, I have to conclude that
my wife is always inspired.
*800 words, as if you care. See my
post of a few days ago entitled, 800
Words.
6 comments:
Did you write down the list of all the items under the sink? That might have taken longer than typing up the 800 words! I should clean out under my sink.... but maybe tomorrow...
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