Well I finally got the electric problems taken care of and so i screwed down the last two deck boards. These boards butt up against the two light poles. And I did the finish cutting of the curve.
So here are the details:
I mentioned earlier, I believe in the first blog of this series that I installed a GFCI circuit breaker in the fuse panel and i was having problems where it kept tripping whenever i put a load on the circuit. Even a load as small as a Dusk to Dawn switch with nothing else.
LumberJock Richard Williams stated that he wished that he was closer so that he could find my problem. Without me paying his plane fare from Las Vegas I did the next best think. I asked him for his phone number so I could call. He replied. I called.
I told him all of the things that I had tried and that had failed. He suggested a couple of things to try. Verfy that the bare ground wire was not touching the white wire anywhere in the circuit. (I didn’t think I had that problem) Replace the buss bar that was in the circuit sub panel. (Mine was very rusty). This discussion was going on in a 3” rain storm, so I was not too interested is stepping outside at that moment.
The next day I was returning home from taking my son to school, and I was running the circuit through my mine. One of the things that Richard has said was that a GFCI breaker is measuring the amount of current that was going through the black (hot) wire and then checking that the reverse of that was going through the neutral wire (white) of the other wave of the alternating current. (These are my words and not necessarly his exact words). I was wondering in my mind about how that was working on the circuit that I had installed.
I then realized that I might have hooked it up incorrectly. (I had never read the instructions, Because I assumed that it was hooked up the same as a regular circuit breaker.) I had hooked up the black wire to the GFCI breaker. I was suppose to also hook up the white wire to another terminal on the GFCI breaker. I had failed to do that. So what was happening was that any load that I put on the black wire was not being offset through the white wire, because I had not attached it to the GFCI breaker.
When I removed the white wire from the buss bar and attached it to the correct terminal on the GFCI breaker, my circuit worked as designed. The Dusk to Dawn switch does not trip it, a light bulb does not trip. (I have not put my finger across the terminal to see if it does trip it. Like a SawStop you hope it works)
Once I got all of the electric wiring problems I screwed down the final two deck boards
I cut the angle off the deck to match the sidewalk around the Solarium.

I measured the curve for the end of the deck. I found that it was a 22’ radius. So I had my wife hold the tape measure and I inscribed the curve with a pencil. I then used my Bosch Jigsaw to cut the curve to the line that I had drawn.

We set up a table and chairs and had supper tonight on the deck. It was chilly but we didn’t care.

The supervisor checking to see if we left any scraps on the deck. (As if anything would get as far as the deck surface when he’s hanging around)

So now on to the benches.
-- Karson Southern Delaware karson_morrison@bigfoot.com























16 comments so far
Roger Strautman
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483 posts in 539 days
posted 84 days ago
Nice deck Karson!!! I like the way you change the foot print of the deck from the norm. The lights really add beauty of your deck. Well done!
-- " All Things At First Appear Difficult"
Grumpy
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4097 posts in 257 days
posted 84 days ago
Now you can sit back & enjoy a job well done Karson.
-- Grumpy - "Always look on the bright side of life"- Monty Python
Napaman
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1400 posts in 483 days
posted 84 days ago
ahhh…the first supper…on the new deck…with many more to come for certain…turned out great!!!
-- Matt, Napa, CA...SING WITH ME: "Sum...sum...sum...summ...summ...summ...summertime..."
Greg3G
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616 posts in 491 days
posted 84 days ago
Great job Karson. Hope you and the Mrs. enjoy it for years to come.
-- Greg - Charles Town, WV
GaryK
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8274 posts in 394 days
posted 83 days ago
Fantastic looking job, Karson. Those lights really set it off!
-- Gary, East TX -- The longest journey begins with a single step.
Douglas Bordner
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2298 posts in 469 days
posted 83 days ago
Man, I saw that inspector of yours giving your work the once over. I thought Deb could be picky!
He must be at least a quarter Tasmanian Transit Hound…
-- "Bordnerizing" perfectly good lumber for over a decade.
Scott Bryan
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8031 posts in 228 days
posted 83 days ago
Karson,
Well done. It was a nice idea to put a curved front onto the deck.
This has been interesting so far.
-- With God's help all things are possible- even woodworking. Woodworking is not just a hobby, it is an (expletive deleted) expensive hobby.
FlWoodRat
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224 posts in 315 days
posted 83 days ago
Love the deck and your discussion of the electrical issue. It a good reminder for all of us: IAFYDSRTI
If At First You Don’t Succeed, Read The Instructions. Hope you and the family enjoy many years of quality time on the deck.
-- Even the best of men relish a little spice every now and then... HG Somers, circa 1905
jeffthewoodwacker
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182 posts in 210 days
posted 83 days ago
Karson, very nice job.
-- Genius is immediate, but talent takes time.
Brad_Nailor
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631 posts in 363 days
posted 83 days ago
I really like the lights allot! They give the deck a real warm feel…makes you want to sit out there even if it’s dark! Great work.
-- Women love me.....trees fear me
jjohn
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396 posts in 119 days
posted 83 days ago
I hope the benches turn out as good as the deck. Nice job.
-- JJohn
Jeff
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945 posts in 499 days
posted 83 days ago
Very nice Karson!
-- Jeff, St. Paul, MN
Richard Williams
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57 posts in 198 days
posted 83 days ago
Wow, what a nice finish on everything. You are okay buddy. Fantastic abilities. Love those lights too. You said the benches are next, right? They will be a great touch to what you already have there. Take care.
-- Rich, Nevada,
thetimberkid
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772 posts in 109 days
posted 83 days ago
Nice work!
Thanks for the post
Callum
-- There is no such thing as a mistake....just a design modification Check out my site http://thetimberkid.blogspot.com/
teenagewoodworker
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1739 posts in 174 days
posted 83 days ago
great job karson. this is a beautiful deck. i like the idea of the curve too. thanks for the post.
Lee A. Jesberger
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2204 posts in 385 days
posted 80 days ago
Hi Karson;
I’ve never seen one of those jig saw chairs before. Does it have wheels on it? LOL
No wonder my work pants all have stained knees.
Lee
-- by Lee A. Jesberger http://www.prowoodworkingtips.com http://www.ezee-feed.com