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skillsby @humansurvive
Basic Home Repair
15 repairs that save thousands a year. Unclog a drain, fix a running toilet, patch a wall. No experience needed.
install with OpenClaw or skills.sh
npx clawhub install howtousehumans/basic-home-repairA plumber charges $150-300 for a visit. An electrician charges $200-400. A handyman charges $75-150/hour. Most of what they do on routine calls, you can do yourself with $30 in tools and a 10-minute explanation. This skill covers the 15 most common home repairs ranked by money saved and ease of learning.
When to Use
- User has a home repair issue and wants to try fixing it themselves
- Wants to build basic maintenance skills
- Trying to avoid paying for a professional for simple issues
- New homeowner or first-time renter who's never done any repairs
Instructions
### Step 1: Get the $30 toolkit
```
THE ONLY TOOLS YOU NEED TO START:
- Adjustable wrench ($8) — fits any nut or bolt
- Phillips + flathead screwdriver ($5 for both)
- Pliers ($6)
- Plunger ($8) — get a FLANGE plunger, not the flat cup kind
- Roll of plumber's tape / teflon tape ($2)
- Roll of duct tape ($3)
TOTAL: ~$30
NICE TO HAVE LATER:
- Cordless drill ($40-60) — the single most useful power tool
- Tape measure
- Level
- Stud finder ($15)
- Utility knife
```
### Step 2: The 15 fixes ranked by money saved
```
PLUMBING (saves $150-400 per incident):
1. UNCLOG A DRAIN (saves $150-250)
-> Pour boiling water down the drain first
-> If that fails: 1/2 cup baking soda + 1/2 cup vinegar, wait 30 min, flush with hot water
-> If that fails: use a plunger (cover overflow hole with wet rag first)
-> If that fails: remove the P-trap under the sink (put a bucket under it first,
unscrew the two slip nuts, clean it out, put it back)
-> NEVER use chemical drain cleaners — they damage pipes
2. FIX A RUNNING TOILET (saves $150-300)
-> Lift the tank lid and look inside
-> If the flapper (rubber thing at bottom) is warped/old: replace it ($5 at hardware store,
pulls right off, new one snaps on)
-> If the float is too high: adjust the float arm down so water stops
1 inch below the overflow tube
-> These two fixes solve 90% of running toilets
3. FIX A LEAKY FAUCET (saves $150-250)
-> Turn off water supply (valves under the sink, turn clockwise)
-> Most leaks = worn washer or O-ring
-> Search "[your faucet brand] [your faucet model] washer replacement"
-> It's usually: remove handle, remove cartridge, replace rubber parts, reassemble
-> Parts cost $5-10
WALLS AND SURFACES (saves $100-300):
4. PATCH A HOLE IN DRYWALL (saves $100-200)
-> Small holes (nail/screw): fill with spackle, let dry, sand smooth, paint
-> Medium holes (fist-sized): buy a drywall patch kit ($8), apply mesh patch,
spread joint compound, let dry, sand, paint
-> The secret: feather the edges so the patch blends into the wall
5. FIX A SQUEAKY DOOR (saves a service call)
-> Remove hinge pin (tap up from bottom with screwdriver)
-> Coat pin with petroleum jelly or WD-40
-> Replace pin. Done.
6. FIX A STICKING DOOR (saves a service call)
-> Find where it sticks (look for shiny/rubbed spots on the edge)
-> Sand that spot with medium sandpaper
-> If the whole door sags: tighten the top hinge screws (use longer screws
if the holes are stripped — 3-inch screws into the door frame stud)
ELECTRICAL — SAFE STUFF ONLY (saves $200-400):
7. REPLACE A LIGHT SWITCH OR OUTLET (saves $200)
-> Turn off the breaker for that circuit (test with a voltage tester or plug in a lamp)
-> Remove cover plate, unscrew switch/outlet from box
-> Take a photo of which wire goes where
-> Disconnect wires, connect to new switch/outlet in same positions
-> Screw back in, replace cover, turn breaker on
NOTE: if you see aluminum wiring (silver color), STOP and call a professional
8. FIX A TRIPPED BREAKER (saves a service call)
-> Find your electrical panel (usually basement, garage, or utility closet)
-> Look for the breaker that's in the middle position (not fully on or off)
-> Push it fully to OFF, then back to ON
-> If it trips again immediately: you have an overloaded circuit or a short.
Unplug everything on that circuit and try again. If it still trips, call an electrician.
EVERYTHING ELSE:
9. TIGHTEN A LOOSE HANDLE/KNOB (saves frustration)
-> Look for a set screw on the base (tiny screw on the side or bottom)
-> Tighten it. That's literally it.
10. FIX A STUCK WINDOW (saves $100-200)
-> Score the paint seal with a utility knife along the edges
-> Spray silicone lubricant in the tracks
-> Tap the frame gently with a rubber mallet or your palm
11. STOP A DRAFTY WINDOW/DOOR (saves $50-200/year in heating)
-> Buy adhesive weatherstripping ($5-10)
-> Clean the surface, apply the strip along the gap
-> For windows: shrink-wrap window insulation kits ($15 for 5 windows)
12. RECAULK A BATHTUB/SHOWER (saves $150-250)
-> Remove old caulk with a utility knife
-> Clean the gap with rubbing alcohol
-> Apply new silicone caulk (cut tip at 45 degrees, steady line)
-> Smooth with a wet finger. Let cure 24 hours.
13. FIX A GARBAGE DISPOSAL (saves $150-200)
-> If it hums but doesn't spin: turn it off, look underneath for a hex key hole,
insert the hex wrench (usually comes with the unit), turn back and forth to free the jam
-> If it does nothing: press the reset button on the bottom of the unit
-> NEVER put your hand inside a disposal
14. UNCLOG A SHOWERHEAD (saves a service call)
-> Unscrew showerhead
-> Soak in white vinegar overnight
-> Scrub holes with old toothbrush
-> Reattach with new teflon tape on threads
15. HANG SOMETHING HEAVY ON A WALL (prevents damage)
-> Find the stud (knock on wall — hollow = no stud, solid = stud)
-> Or use a stud finder ($15)
-> Drill into the stud. It will hold 50+ lbs easily.
-> No stud available: use toggle bolts ($5), NOT plastic anchors for heavy items.
```
Rules
- Always mention safety: turn off water before plumbing, turn off breaker before electrical
- If it involves gas lines, main electrical panels, or structural work: tell the user to call a professional
- Start with the simplest diagnosis before suggesting complex fixes
- Renting vs owning matters: renters should notify landlord for major issues but can fix minor things
Tips
- YouTube is the best repair teacher. Search your exact problem + your exact model number. Someone has filmed the fix.
- Take photos before you take anything apart. You'll thank yourself when reassembling.
- Hardware store employees are usually the most helpful people on earth. Bring the broken part with you and ask.
- "Righty tighty, lefty loosey" — the universal rule for screws, bolts, and most fittings.
- If water is actively spraying: your first job is finding the shutoff valve, not fixing the pipe. Main shutoff is usually near the water meter.
install with OpenClaw or skills.sh
npx clawhub install howtousehumans/basic-home-repairWorks with OpenClaw, Claude, ChatGPT, and any AI agent.