Author: Matt

Stair Balusters

With the edging installed and the railings varnished, we moved on to balusters. I bought three different kinds of wrought iron balusters to make up a pattern: plain straight, a swirling pattern intended to tie with the front door that we called “squiggles”, and “baskets” where several pieces wrap around to make a ball. Originally I was planning to put “knuckles” for these, little diamond-shaped bits along the straight length, but Sarah liked the baskets and they were cheaper than the knuckles, which made it an easy call. I worked out a pattern and approximate quantities to order, along with “shoes” (the little piece that goes at the bottom), epoxy, and an epoxy gun.

One of the “squiggles”

The installation process was to first map out where the pieces would go, such that they was never more than a four-inch gap (per-code) and yet they didn’t land on the bullnose part of the treads. This probably wouldn’t have been that hard with all straight and basket pieces, but the addition of the wider squiggles meant I had to adjust spacing. I wound up having to be flexible to get this to work, with each run of steps having slightly different spacing.

Dean came over to help with this project, bringing his metal cut off saw (of course he has one of those) which made the process go much faster than if we had just used an angle grinder. We started with the horizontal run along the basement stair opening (the stairs that don’t exist yet). All of the horizontal sections were much easier to work out spacing, since there’s no bullnoses to work around, but it was my first one so it still took me a while. I put a piece of masking tape down, worked out the spaces, and then drilled holes for each one. I used my laser level to determine where the top should go and drilled those too. Drilling these holes took forever, and I wound up getting a new spade bit for the rest of the project, which was dramatically faster.

The other reason the horizontal sections were easier is because all of the balusters were the same height. Dean was able to cut them in bulk and get the ends ground smooth while I got the holes drilled and then I started putting them in with epoxy. The epoxy dispenser worked pretty well, and there was a decent amount of work time. We taped all of the shoes up before we put the balusters in so that we wouldn’t forget them and they’d be out of the way until the epoxy cured. You can’t come back and put the shoe on later if you epoxy the baluster in without it, so this was important.

We worked our way up the first flight, which got the two longest stretches of railing complete that day, but that was as far as we made it. Dean was nice enough to come back not once, but twice this week to help finish the project. I needed to get all of the holes drilled in the edging going up to the attic and in the attic hallway before the carpeting installation so we didn’t get sawdust in our new carpeting, so I got those sections mapped and drilled in advance. The first evening we finished all of the horizontal sections, getting into a good rhythm. The second evening Dean was joined by both his dad and Dan, and the four of us were able to get through the three remaining sections of stairs, cutting, grinding, taping, and epoxying.

The last run we did we encountered a new problem. The balusters are 44″ tall since the railings are 42″ high but they need to pocket in. Somehow, on several of the steps leading up to the attic from the landing, because the baluster aligned with the back edge of the step where the baluster is longest, we needed balusters taller than that. To solve this problem, we added little stubs to the bottom of the balusters where it will be covered up by the shoe anyway.

The kids went around and removed all of the blue masking tape, and then Dan came back on Saturday and used an allen wrench to tighten all of the many, many little baluster shoes in place.

Stair Edging and Finishing

As I mentioned a couple posts back, Sarah took on the project of adding a hardwood edging to the stairs that go from the second floor to the attic as well as the attic hallway that overlooks the stairwell. Carpeting will cover the remainder. The first step was to add a piece of veneer plywood to each step riser using glue and a stapler, next cover the holes with Drydex (spackle) and prime the wood. I mixed up some regular drywall mud and filled in the corners where the risers meet the drywall sides of the stairs. I took the opportunity to patch some dings and dents, as well as close up the too-big vent opening in Emily’s ceiling. Some additional Drydex and sanding got most of these corners looking presentable, and paint will round it out.

Next was cutting mitered bullnose pieces to cover the tread edge. The rest of this L-shaped piece was filled with hardwood flooring scraps, which he fortunately have plenty of. Sarah cut all the pieces and glued and brad-nailed them all in place, with me assisting on a couple complex bits where they intersected the newel posts.

Sarah and Emily went around and spread wood fill into all the cracks. I had picked up red oak wood fill since it’s red oak flooring, but I’m a bit disappointed in the end result, because it’s much redder than the wood itself and stands out, the exact opposite of what you want wood fill to do. I would go with the natural color wood fill if we had a do-over.

After that, we got to sanding. We got some new power tools for Christmas, among them a cordless random orbit sander which got a lot of use in this process. A lot of edges needed more manual assistance from sanding blocks and folded pieces of sandpaper, but after many many hours, it was looking better.

I picked up TotalBoat Halcyon Clear marine grade polyurethane for the newels, railings, and edges, since we know they’ll need to handle a lot of abuse. After yet more sanding, we started brushing on the varnish. This… didn’t go as well. At a lot of the joints in the newels we started getting black drips. We’d wipe them off but then come back in a few minutes to find more, in some cases hardening in the varnish. This led to more sanding, more varnishing, and eventually we got most sections to look decent.

We spent a lot of time cleaning these up, and from the research I’ve done it’s most likely caused by a reaction with the tannic acid in the oak, but we can’t be sure. I don’t think it was a problem with the varnish, since no one else seems to have reported it and it’s very highly rated, but there are some other folks having general issues with oak finishing.

Stair Newels and Railings

In addition to the stair cladding, I also needed to do the newel posts, railings, and balusters. We’re going to have stained red oak newels and railings, and iron balusters with some spiral pieces to tie thematically with our front door. I did a bit of online research and started ordering the parts I needed. I got the newel posts from the same company that made the stair treads, we ordered balusters from a couple of companies, and the railings are from Home Depot.

I also did some research on how to mount these things, since no one wants a newel post that wiggles around. There are a few options, but I ordered some fasteners and set to work from the top down, figuring that since I needed to learn how to do this I didn’t want to start on the most visible and used section of the stairs.

I have a “half newel” that goes against the wall in the attic, which connects a horizontal railing to the newel post at the top of the attic stairs. Almost immediately, I ran into trouble, since the only wood behind the wall to anchor the half newel to was on the other side, meaning I needed screws longer than I had. I moved onto the newel post, figured out where that was going to sit, drilled a hole in the floor and screwed in the giant lag. I figured out the correct height for the newel if the railing is 42″ high and centered in the top portion, then cut the newel post to the correct height. You have to cut a hole in the side of the newel at the bottom and another one in the bottom. The newel fits over the lag bolt, then through side opening you put in a little curved piece and the nut. It’s a total pain to tighten the nut through the little hole with a wrench, and if your height isn’t right, you can’t get the wrench in or out. Finally you glue a little oak circle called a bung into the hole in the side. When we sand and finish, it should mostly disappear.

I had to notch cut the newel at the landing where it met the stair and the next challenge was attaching the railing. I bought “Zip Bolts” which are these little cams that fit into a hole in the bottom of the railing to screw down onto a bolt in the newel. These work well once they’re in and threaded, but getting them attached is a hassle. I also discovered that I shouldn’t tighten the newels down before I install the railing, since then you don’t have any room to fit the railing onto the bolts on either end, but I did have to tighten the newels down so I could get an accurate measurement of the railing length, so I wound up tightening, loosening, and then re-tightening the newels to get them situated. The angled Zip Bolts for the stair railings in particular were a frustration because they were so difficult to tighten into position that they would snap off and need to be carefully removed.

Progress continued slowly. I made a jig that simplified finding the spot on the newels to drill for the railing, and Dean helped get through a few more newels with his impact driver that sped up the bolts. Because I didn’t have room to get the attic railing in with the newel already tightened down and the wooden bung already glued in, I had to buy a variation of the Zip Bolt that had a little keyhole piece you screw into the newel. Then another cam-bolt in the railing can extend into the top, the railing slides into position, and then you can tighten it down. This worked eventually, but like everything else required a lot of trial and error.

The last two railings as I worked my way down were the first floor to the landing and then a horizontal railing on the first floor where the basement stairs will eventually descend. These were tricky because they were each two-part railings. Because the newel on the landing was aligned with the next run of stairs up to the second floor, it was set back from the front edge of the landing, meaning the railing had to change to horizontal before it connected to the newel. I worked this out by laying the railing on the stairs, cutting it to length and then attaching the short horizontal piece. Everything looked great until Sarah and I lifted it into position and it was short by a couple of inches. Some inspection revealed that I hadn’t accounted for how high off the step the bottom of the railing was: that needed to be the same height at the top of the railing where it connected to the horizontal piece. As a result, I’d cut the long railing too short.

Fortunately, I still had one long railing left for the horizontal run on the first floor, which was shorter. That meant I could swap the pieces around and not waste a very expensive piece of wood. The second go went more smoothly and I got the railing installed. The horizontal railing has a quarter turn on the end where it connects to the newel, so that was also a two-piece, but a bit simpler to fit. At least, it seemed that way until I realized the half newel against the landing column wasn’t square and I’d cut the railing down to the shorter side. I managed to get out of this by cutting the railing at and angle, and then fudging the end that ends on the stair newel off center by about a quarter inch.

With all the newels and railings installed, I went around with wood fill, sand paper, and a random orbital sander. I got all of the holes plugged with bungs, flush cut them, touched up with yet more wood fill and sanding, and it was pretty much ready to varnish. At that point we needed to switch gears to the second floor to attic stair edging I mentioned in my previous post, since it made more sense to do that and then varnish everything at once.

Getting Closer

I’ve been working on the stair railings, and I’ll have a post about them hopefully soon, but there’s been a bunch of other things going on we should get caught up on. For starters, we got our countertops! Sarah and I went shopping for stone countertops for the kitchen as well as the three bathroom vanities. We learned that while there are lots of installers, they all buy from distributors and the distributors won’t sell directly to you. We did some online shopping and then visited two different local distributors and figured out what we liked and didn’t. Unfortunately, the distributors only give you a pricing scale with no way to extrapolate how much anything is. We were able to estimate roughly from that, but it wasn’t until we went to our installer to pick out some remnants for the bathrooms that we finally got a quote. It was –somewhat predictably– more than we’d hoped (or budgeted). The granite we wanted for the kitchen wasn’t in stock and wouldn’t be for a while, so we went with our second choice. We bit the bullet and they came out and finalized the measurements and got it all installed about a week and a half later.

We started hollering at the GC to get the plumber, electrician, and trim guys out. The doors for the trim were a couple weeks out, but that had come and gone. Then they delivered the trim but it was still another week before they finally started work on that. After weeks of trying to get the electrician out, he showed up for a few hours and hooked up some lights, but apparently doesn’t want to put in the fixtures, outlets, and switches until everything else is done, which is really frustrating.

The plumbers, on the other hand, were able to get the sinks, showers, and toilet all working, which is exciting. We now have more than one flushing toilet! this morning they picked up the port-a-john that had been beautifying our back yard these last months. They still need to wrap up the freestanding tub in the master bath and the kitchen appliances, but plumbing is otherwise basically done.

Next up the carpet guy showed up. We’re carpeting the attic as well as the stairs that go up to it. Unfortunately, he said we couldn’t wrap the carpeting over the hallway and stair edges like I expected and Sarah decided she didn’t think that would look nice. After some back and forth, we decided to make an edge of hardwood that will match the first and second floors, so she’s been working on that. The carpeting is supposed to be installed next week, along with the glass for the master bathroom shower.

The HVAC installers got one of the two AC condensers up and running, the unit that runs the second floor and attic. They put all of the vent covers in and we realized the drywallers were a bit sloppy around a couple of them and we need to add a bit of mud, which I picked up today. They needed a part that they ordered to finish the other unit, but it’s been a week or two so I need to follow up and hopefully they can wrap things up.

The trim guys started putting in doors, door and window casings, and base molding. There’s definitely some things we’re going to touch up after they leave, but we’ve had them fix the more egregious problems, like installing the bi-fold closet doors upside down, or getting two of the doors mixed up, installing a door in the attic bedroom that swings the wrong direction, and then saying they need to exchange the remaining door for one that swings the other way. I was able to solve that dilemma when I went to turn off the light and noticed the switch was behind the door. Today they fixed those things and then started installing the tile backsplash in the kitchen. Then a whole bunch more boards showed up for them to continue on trim, since they’d chewed through the initial batch already with a lot of the house still to go.

Once Sarah finishes up the attic stair and hallway edging, I can varnish that along with the railings and newels and then install the iron balusters. We’re closing in on being able to move upstairs, and as exciting as that is, I really wish I could get all the contractors out of the house so we can take a deep breath. A few more weeks and I think we should actually be there.

Stove Gas Line

This was a relatively small project. I’d left it on the back burner for a while, but since I was waiting for some (more!) deliveries to move forward with the stair railing project, I decided to knock this one out. Back when we had temporarily (several years) had the washer and dryer on the first floor, we ran a gas line up to it, using the segment that was future-intended for the stove. This meant I had an existing hole in the floor to run through up into the wet wall. The nice thing about the wet wall is that there’s room inside to work.

I bought a recessed box for the gas valve a while back, partially since it looks cleaner, but mostly since it would allow me to cut a big hole in the wall to handle the pipe connections. When I cut an exploratory hole to dial in the position, I discovered there was a stud a bit closer than I’d hoped, and the pipe came up in the middle of the wet wall, so it was about six inches back. I also realized that the electrician had run a conduit just above the sill plate horizontally, which meant I couldn’t have the box configured vertically as I expected.

New branch with sediment trap.

I made the hole the correct size horizontally, and with it enlarged, started reaching in with pre-doped fittings and putting things together. I worked out that the vertical pipe could first elbow toward the wall, then turn again into the box. II hadn’t bought all of the required fittings, of course, so I did have to run back to the store to pick up more.

Fun times with a pipe wrench and my arms inside the wall.

With parts in hand, I got everything put together and tightened down. I ran everything in 3/4″ since it’s a big stove and I’d rather have more than I need than not enough. I put in the appropriate sediment trap in the mechanical room below the branch, since there wasn’t room for it higher up. The last step was to fit the box onto the pipe, add the valve itself, and then secure the box to the wall.

Recessed valve installed

I had the benefit of being able to get into the wet wall on the other side of the wall from the radiant access panel, which will also give me a way to test everything with the gas sniffer before I turn the branch up. We have shut off valves on each branch, so we can easily shut off just that section if there are any leaks, but I was pretty liberal with the pipe thread sealant, so I’m fairly confident this time around.