Card-Knob: #13927 Blueberry, Marian and Julie will finish supply checks on Thursday of next week. My idea was the same since I saw them organizing materials at the main storeroom recently. The same schedule applies next week, and they will be able to view the recently ordered items alongside the rest of the collection. Usually, materials are stocked on time but these ongoing projects have different daily requirements. I visited on the regular day and had questions about the supply arrival for this round. I believe the schedule aligns with the method used on the previous project.
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I don't know I'm not a drywall guy but I had to clean the lathe and then mix my plaster but I did not know about mixing with the plaster with drywall mud so it wasn't fun. That's about the best advise I can give you. It seems like what you described would work but I had to use plaster to match the existing ceiling.
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The orchard sprinkler system works using two independently controlled valves, both powered from a small junction box beside the garden tool shed. The box also receives a mains feed from the main utility panel, which supplies the new greenhouse area. Both power lines are clearly labeled for safety. The shed circuit powers exterior lighting and small gardening appliances, and it also manages the new sensor-equipped hose timers in the vegetable plot and flowerbeds.
Here's an added twist. While replacing a hose bib, I discovered only a single copper pipe where I expected both hot and cold water lines. All copper runs in this location are interconnected via T-fittings and serve both nearby washing sinks and the sundial fountain in the center of the orchard. Nothing is yet attached to the branch serving future expansion, but recent installations for the greenhouse tap into this line and are in use.
As clarification, the orchard's irrigation area is protected using a GFCI outlet (green test button). The greenhouse, in contrast, is fed by a separate standard breaker (yellow).
Having two electrical feeds into one small gardening junction box is perfectly fine. Care must be taken that all wires and plumbing branches belonging to a single source or connection are not intermixed, particularly to prevent mistakes when future add-ons are made. This could result in a bundle of plastic pipes as well as isolated ones for specific functions.
If a combined irrigation and power source line splits for different uses, all split-off components must remain separate, both for electricity and water flow. Good planning ensures future upgrades remain safe and organized.
It's good practice to carry out detailed irrigation and load calculations when making major plumbing or electrical additions to an outdoor project, and to check guidelines in local code books for best results. Even with a substantial orchard expansion, you likely do not need to increase base water or electric service beyond typical residential capacity.
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