I just discovered they're actually called Putty Pads.
Here's a place that sells them online.
(Yes, I'm adding this to the Building Products area!)
--Keith
I think you get what you pay for... I wonder how many electrical fire disasters could have been avoided if these things had been used...Stick wrote:Sheesh, those aren't cheap, eh?
I was seriously considering that myself... But I decided that would be a real pain, if not right away, then in the future if the room gets repurposed. I'm always annoyed when I can't push furniture against a wall because outlets (or, more accurately, the electric plugs connected to them) are in the way...Fortunately, I think I'm going to go the surface mount route for the studio interior.
Good point... I'll probably have a pretty good idea of where all the furniture and stuff will go. (I say that now... ha!) After going around one fixture with the first layer today, I'll be glad to save the time (and labor $$) for that hassle. I was thinking we could still run the wire inside the wall and just poke it through a little hole, which is easily filled (with putty?!) or whatever. Or would it be better to run conduit around the walls? That might get a little ugly unless I was going for that industrial look.sharward wrote: I was seriously considering that myself... But I decided that would be a real pain, if not right away, then in the future if the room gets repurposed. I'm always annoyed when I can't push furniture against a wall because outlets (or, more accurately, the electric plugs connected to them) are in the way...I've even gone so far as cutting holes in the back of my nightstands to account for this -- I access the outlets by removing the drawers and reaching through to the back.
Yeah, I think the pads are a good plan.Note that I didn't actually shop for the putty pads -- I just linked up the most obvious source. If you decide to go for the putty pads and find a better deal, then please update the thread I started in the Business Products forum with your source.
Oh man!Stick wrote:. . . recovering from the fever/flu/cold I picked up
Right on!I've made the decision (partly thanks to your prodding, Keith) to hire a local architect to draw plans in order to deal with getting the proper permits and whatnot to be "legal".
Yeah -- everyone, follow this link to Stick's thread on the Design forum.In the mean time, I've posted my plan over on the design forum, so I'd love it if you guys would nit-pick it over there for the more design related elements . . .