Added: 2 years ago
From: PutSome5tankOnIt
Views: 7,628
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  • lololol! This guy thinks the few feet of pipe he ran is a work of art!

  • I see that arrogance travels from the job site to a freakin youtube video. All the guys iv ever worked with are just like all of you knowitalls. The tape job sucks,you probly took forever,I can do it better, wah wah wah go back to your jobsite and whine like the little bitches you all are. Oh and Ill see you there while installing my duct right through your skulls fuckfaces.

  • @senicalj I don't mind you running duct through my skull as long as you tape it up neatly.

  • @PutSome5tankOnIt

    On a penetration like that I used commercial duct sealer. Stuff some mineral wool inside the penetration around the duct. Then fab up a nice little frame out of 90 degree angles. Top it off with some firecalk.

  • @senicalj I see what you mean. The fire seal is already there. Above the cabinets, the round sleeve is fireproofed at the ceiling to keep flames from reaching the attic. Caulking or a two-piece trim ring may have been used to neaten up the inside of the cupboard.

  • @PutSome5tankOnIt

    LOL no I was talking about fireproofing your skull when I run the duct through it lol. 

  • The difference between good sheet metal work and GREAT sheet metal work? BWAHAHAHAHA We would run you out of North Carolina for slapping up that kinda crap!!!

    1: Your penetration didn't have a 1" clearance

    2: You used foil tape to seal it instead of non flammable duct sealant

    3: You didn't even seal each gore!!! You just sealed the joints.

    Is this how you union boys do work? No wonder we're stealing all your jobs!!!! ROFLLLLL

  • @TreyLutrash It passed inspection.

  • It would not have passed here in Texas either. That vent pipe is too close to the electrical cord and all that crappy tape job is horrible.

  • It would not have passed here in Texas either. That vent pipe is too close to the electrical cord and all that crappy tape job is horrible.

  • @dparsons76905 We're not in Texas. The first vent connection in the video is mine. The second (sloppy) one was done by a coworker. Proximity to the power cord is not my problem. It's up to the inspector to make the electrician move the receptacle. Thanks for commenting!

  • Yep the foilback tape should peel right off after the first or second use of the range below it and nice rizer clearance goin through the top of the cabinet, not wouldn't pass inspection in Colorado,,, HaHa .....SCAB work at its finest

  • @offsetfragmentor Thanks for watching. I'm glad you liked it.

  • Get the fuck outta here, great sheet metal?? Try TRIANGULATION, to develop that square 2 round to offset over, avoiding the need for elbows altogether!! This is good enough for when time and money are of concern. But it's not GREAT SHEET METAL WORK. 7" round pipe seems a little extreme, for the cfm of this exhaust hood.

  • You wanted a 3 1/4" x 10" flat offset? What about the receptacle for the range vent? That would require a compound offset (or two offsets). Building a 135 degree elbow was the best way to do this connection. Seven inch round was specified in the blueprints.

  • any idiot can see the receptacle and how access to it would be extremely difficult with a 10" wide duct right in front of it...it's a no brainer to go with round duct here...the electrician who mounted the receptacle there is obviously not the brightest bulb in the pack ;)

  • good job shyboy13 sucks again

  • At the end of the day, the job needs to be completed. You do what is necessary in order to get it done. Excuses and whining don't pay the bills. Even us union guys have to be creative, sometimes.

  • So ur union or non-union? Because on ur other video u made a comment about "us union thugs"... But if ur a fellow union brother then that's different LOL. So what company do u work for if ur apart of local 105 also?

  • shouldve used a long radius elbow instead of putting 2 elbows together like a scab would do

    Sheet Metal Workers Local 105

  • I have yet to meet a scab that can spin two gores together.

    SMWIA Local 105

  • @PutSome5tankOnIt that's the problem with you union guys is it probably took you 4 hrs to do it.

  • @04xbobo I don't remember those elbows taking more than 10 minutes to diassemble and reassemble. It's really not much different than putting a couple of broken elbows back together. Being a Union member has nothing to do with it.

  • Generally, if it's assembled it can disassembled. And vice versa. Putting adjustable elbows back together was one of the first things I learned. My old boss was a craftsman. We weren't allowed to use dove tailed collars and elbows. I made spin collars in the shop and rolled a bead on elbows. Good times.

  • Definition of a craftsman: Paying attention to detail when others fail to even make an honest effort. Looks good, I didn't know those could be pieced.

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