@eazyrat4 years agoThe editing and production quality of this channel puts it above most. This format was cool thanks. 4
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@uniqprojects3814 years agoHaha the mostfunny vid roger has ever been a part of. 9
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@SteveAndAlexBuild4 years agoWhat a double act 98. 6 is more like rogers age. Great video. all the best to you all at skill builder. 4
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@bambibigboy4 years agoRoger im crying with laughter. You and your mate are hilarious. Merry christmas to you and your family. Cheers craig. 2
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@danielbuckner21674 years agoHaha, the end of that is freaking fantastic! 4
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@julietphillips19914 years agoRoger and company are incredibly funny today! Problem: neighbours! 13
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@daytona19604 years agoLove it, funny guy' s. Was you playing dip. 1
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@jockstewart87934 years agoIf the problem is really tricky it looks like the answer is to get nicola to fix it. 3
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@SteS4 years agoWhat do you do if your dog peddle dashes your floor? Ours shit everywhere today in a big circle with one blob in the middle. It was like a mini stone age monument. 2
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@anthonydefreitas60064 years agoIf you keep on asking people with big problems you' ll get boris ringing you up. 6
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@roysammons24454 years agoAhmed should have sent a pic of himself then you would have known if he wanted to fit an outside thingy to the wall. funny videos guys. 1
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@rudispruell8834 years agoHey, guys. Pebble dash was used, here, in the us, for a time, back in the 70s and 80s. I don' t know what we called it; maybe the same. Various finishes.. ...Expand6
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@janetburrows1374 years agoWhat is the best damp proofing. Pump in cream or osmotic? 1
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@Edsbar4 years agoHere' s one for you, how do i get my pub open. I have a shed full of tool and none of them seem to help with this. 2
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@gdfggggg4 years agoFramescrews, the best of the all. The recommended hole size is 6mm, but. If you' re drilling into semi soft material like soft brick use a 5. 5mm drill and if its really soft like celcon drill straight in. If youre drilling into hard stone use a 6. 5mm drill. Takes a bit of experience to know what drill to use but once youve got it, you cant go wrong. If youve drilled into something soft and the concrete screw spins round make a wood splinter (very easy) from an old piece of timber and wack it in the hole, then screw it in. Loves me concrete screws. ...Expand2
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@MrJFoster19844 years agoHa challenge accepted, i will try to perplex roger. 1
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@dickdoc33374 years agoRodents in the walls and otherworks for one of larger supermarkets they all of a sudden had problems with mice coming in. Seems they knocked down a an old factory years old next door and the mice moved to the supermarket. Or there was one of them large brand name pet shops three shops down and the mice escaped or broke out from there: they knew the mice where there but could not get them so they sprayed a luminous sort of dye on certain places where they thought the mice came in. A different color dye every day. Son said when you turned out the lights at night you could see luminous footprints of the mice going there everywhere like one of them dances or raves with luminous sticks that people used to hold. ...Expand
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@SkillBuilder4 years agoThis from ahmed re: your episode on youtube (how do i fix to hollow walls) i wrote the following comment there but it didn' t appear. hi sb, thanks for the reply. I think i didn' t manage to explain my question in the first place. I mean of course i would have used these wall plugs once i got to the real wall. That wasn' t too hard to figure out even by an amateur like me. But what i didn' t know is how to expose the wall without damaging this facade of the pebbledash which is raised about three inches. Now the fixture i' m installing is a satellite receiver dish that has got a mounting base plate with 4 holes. So should i really remove that area of circa 20 square inch of the pebbledash so that i can reach the wall behind it? p. S. By the (drum or drumming sound) i meant to describe the hollow structure as i tapped around the wall to inspect it. Sorry for the confusion again. ...Expand
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@jasonantigua68254 years agoHi richard, do you always plug your voids?
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@davidelliott58434 years agoThose concrete panels are about 50mm (2) thick often used for sections garages. Bolting anything significant to that stuff is not a good idea.
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@tinytonymaloney78324 years agoHe needs colgate toothpaste (other toothpastes are available) that' s good for fixing cavities. 18
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@AngelAsylum784 years agoWould he be better using chemfix and threaded rod?
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@paul1962uk4 years agoThat sounds like ahouse, bolted together concrete pebble dashed panels. 1
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@peterbell41544 years agoHappy and a merry christmas roger and i guess friend! At last something to laugh at thank you. 1
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@olgajoachimosmundsen46474 years agoI was told this. When you have rat-problems; catch two of them. Feed one, and starve the other. Starve the second one really bad, and then give him the. ...Expand3
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@MrSmid8884 years agoTell you an annoying problem ive got. Depending on the moisture content in the air you can see the dot and dab through the paint on the wall thats on m. ...Expand
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@anthonygriff6684 years agoHow do i fix to hollow walls? Use hollow wall fixings. Well that was a useful vid. I must say.
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@Confuselocated4 years agoWhen you said hey siri the video paused and my siri kicked in. We must be voice brothers.
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@ttfweb14 years ago95 degrees! Cold-blooded b*ard. Nice video.
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@express3754 years agoMissed the important bit, i was listening to the dog shit story in the background: 4
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@davidelliott58434 years agoMy neighbourhood is so bad, i went to the store to buy some rat poison and the clerk said, shall i wrap it, or do you want to eat it here? rodney dangerfield.
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@wojciechturek16014 years agoNon traditional construction types this is just uk speciality hahahaha have you heard about swedish timber construction type build in ~1930. 1
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@zyspan4 years agoBicarbonate of soda after a first disgusting wash.
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@cb49203 years agoYeah, weve got the stuff over here, north america. Glad the fad seems to be fading-out.
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@michaelwilliams40864 years agoPoor roger, just throw him under the bus. Some friend.
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@vinnysurti4 years agoIf you thought fisherfix were good try these, I thought they were brilliant! Really strong & impressive ..1
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@user-bn8si2cs2m3 years agoIts not akhmed it is ahhmed the h is more full.
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@rajivvashm60462 years agoBest (spontaneous) jokes are by construction people. Professional comedians are all scripted.
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@paul1962uk4 years agoGood bit of social distancing going on. 1
all the best to you all at skill builder. 4
funny videos guys. 1
re: your episode on youtube (how do i fix to hollow walls)
i wrote the following comment there but it didn' t appear. hi sb, thanks for the reply. I think i didn' t manage to explain my question in the first place. I mean of course i would have used these wall plugs once i got to the real wall. That wasn' t too hard to figure out even by an amateur like me. But what i didn' t know is how to expose the wall without damaging this facade of the pebbledash which is raised about three inches. Now the fixture i' m installing is a satellite receiver dish that has got a mounting base plate with 4 holes. So should i really remove that area of circa 20 square inch of the pebbledash so that i can reach the wall behind it?
p. S. By the (drum or drumming sound) i meant to describe the hollow structure as i tapped around the wall to inspect it. Sorry for the confusion again. ...Expand
rodney dangerfield.
have you heard about swedish timber construction type build in ~1930. 1