![]() ![]() Someone has written a code in the bottom right corner of the whiteboard, but it’s obscured by a few objects. There’s a piano you can jump on to make some noise, but the key point of interest is a whiteboard on the other side of the room. Head back down the hall and into an open doorway with a small darkened room. In the hallway outside, the exit is blocked by another door that has a keypad, and you’ll need to do a bit of digging to find it. When you’re ready to leave, approach the main door and use B-12 to unlock it. Memories that appear in proximity mean they are available somewhere in the chapter, and you can look at the garbled image for a clue - and the main memories on the top row cannot be missed due to the story.īefore leaving, you can take one last look around the flat and have B-12 comment on a few things, like the engineering degree in the bedroom. It will take on the name B-12, and offer to help guide you through the Dead City.Īs you check your new inventory, you can also spot a list of collectible Memories to gain over the course of the story. Jump up onto the main console and place the drone in the lit up platform, and the consciousness will begin uploading itself into the drone.Īfter the drone awakens, it will introduce itself (though the consciousness can’t remember much other than that they used to work for a scientist who lived here). Knock it onto the floor and head down to grab the little thing, and return back into the previous room. Instead, hop to the shelving on the left side of the room and go all the way across to find a detailed box for a Drone Companion - one that looks a lot like what the monitors are displaying. ![]() Jump from the stool to the robot’s head and it will fall off as you jump to the top of the machine - looks like that robot won’t do for a body. Inside you’ll find a mysterious looking machine with an unpowered robot, and several small monitors. Once you’ve plugged in all four batteries, a secret door among the shelves will be revealed. Search the opposite wall full of bookshelves for a stool you can hop onto, and leap up to the top of the shelving where the last battery sits.Glue trim to the jamb and secure with finishing nails. Lift up the bookshelf and place in the pre-fashioned pivot-point pinholes on the top and bottom of the jamb.ġ0. Using a utility knife and a hammer, remove the excess shims on either side.ĩ. Drill through the jamb and shims, and secure with screws.Ĩ. Using a 6-foot level, check that it’s plumb if it needs adjusting, place shims between the jamb and the wall studs until the jamb is plumb. Move the jamb from the door kit into place. Repeat the same steps to fill the back side of the jamb.ħ. Using wood glue, glue the poplar filler piece to the underside of the doorjamb to fill the gap.Ħ. After marking the poplar, cut it with the circular saw, following the scribe line you traced.ĥ. Set your scribes the overall width of the filler and drag the scribes along the piece of poplar.Ĥ. To level the jamb, place a piece of poplar on the floor and make it level. Remove the old jamb and casing with a pry bar.ģ. Remove current door from its hinges by popping up the pins with a hammer and nailset.Ģ. In this video, Ask This Old House general contractor Tom Silva is in Salem, MA, to help install a bookshelf that doubles as a door.ġ.
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