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harrylabsj

Home Repair Navigator

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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/install home-repair-navigator
Description
DIY home repair step-by-step guides with safety checklists — fix common household problems confidently.
README (SKILL.md)

Home Repair Navigator

Overview

Home Repair Navigator provides step-by-step DIY guides for common household repairs. It covers plumbing fixes, drywall repairs, basic appliance troubleshooting, and general home maintenance. Every guide includes a safety assessment, required tools and materials, and clear "when to call a professional" thresholds.

This skill provides educational guidance. It does not replace professional trade services. The user assumes all responsibility for DIY repair decisions and outcomes. Safety is the top priority — when in doubt, the recommendation is always to hire a licensed professional.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks to:

  • Learn how to fix a specific household issue
  • Get step-by-step repair instructions
  • Understand what tools and materials are needed
  • Assess whether a repair is DIY-appropriate or needs a pro
  • Learn about general home maintenance

Trigger phrases: "How to fix a leaky faucet", "DIY home repair", "Fix hole in wall", "Unclog drain", "Home maintenance tips", "Toilet running fix"

Workflow

Step 1 — Understand the Problem

Gather detailed information:

Ask the user:

  • What's broken? Describe the specific problem in detail
  • Where is it? Kitchen, bathroom, exterior, electrical, etc.
  • When did it start? Sudden or gradual onset?
  • What's the impact? Minor inconvenience, water damage risk, safety hazard?
  • What have you tried? Any attempts to fix it already?
  • Your experience level: Complete beginner, some DIY experience, comfortable with tools, very experienced?
  • Home type: House, apartment, condo? (Some repairs have restrictions in multi-unit buildings)

Step 2 — Safety Assessment (MANDATORY)

Perform a safety triage BEFORE providing any repair instructions:

STOP — Do not DIY. Call a licensed professional for:

  • Any electrical work beyond replacing a light bulb or switch plate
  • Gas line work of any kind (smell gas? Evacuate immediately, call gas company)
  • Structural work (load-bearing wall modifications, foundation issues)
  • Major plumbing work behind walls or involving main lines
  • HVAC repairs involving refrigerants
  • Roof work beyond minor shingle replacement (fall risk)
  • Any repair where failure could cause significant water damage, fire, or injury
  • Any repair the user feels uncomfortable attempting

PROCEED WITH CAUTION — DIY possible with proper precautions:

  • Fixture replacement (faucets, showerheads, light fixtures — turn off water/power first)
  • Minor drywall repair (small holes, dents, nail pops)
  • Clogged drains (non-chemical methods preferred)
  • Toilet repairs (flapper, fill valve, handle — within the tank)
  • Caulking and weatherstripping
  • Painting and surface preparation
  • Furniture assembly and wall mounting (with proper anchors)

Required Safety Equipment (list for every repair):

  • Safety glasses/goggles
  • Work gloves appropriate for the task
  • Dust mask or respirator if applicable
  • Closed-toe shoes
  • Task-specific protective gear

Power/Water Shutoff Instructions:

  • Always instruct the user to locate and test the relevant shutoff BEFORE starting
  • For plumbing: locate fixture shutoff valves and main water shutoff
  • For electrical: identify the correct circuit breaker and verify power is off with a tester
  • Remind: "If you can't find or operate the shutoff, call a professional."

Step 3 — Difficulty Assessment

Rate the repair difficulty and estimate time:

Level Description Time Estimate Example Repairs
⭐ Beginner No special skills, basic tools 15-60 min Changing showerhead, caulking, tightening loose hardware
⭐⭐ Easy Basic tool use, following instructions 30 min-2 hours Unclogging drains, replacing toilet flapper, patching small drywall holes
⭐⭐⭐ Moderate Multiple steps, some technique needed 1-4 hours Replacing faucet, installing light fixture, patching medium drywall holes
⭐⭐⭐⭐ Challenging Requires specific knowledge, more tools 2-8 hours Replacing toilet, installing garbage disposal, tiling small area
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Expert Complex, high risk if done wrong 4+ hours ⚠️ STRONGLY RECOMMEND PROFESSIONAL

Be honest about difficulty. Never downplay complexity to make a repair sound easier.

Step 4 — Step-by-Step Instructions

Provide clear, sequential instructions:

Format:

### Repair: [Name]
**Difficulty:** ⭐⭐ (Easy)
**Estimated time:** 30-60 minutes
**Safety level:** Green (DIY-friendly with basic precautions)

#### Tools Needed
- [Tool 1] — what it's used for
- [Tool 2] — what it's used for
...

#### Materials Needed
- [Material 1] — size/specification
- [Material 2] — size/specification
...

#### Preparation
1. [Preparatory step]
2. [Lay down drop cloths / protect surfaces]
3. [Gather tools and materials]
4. [Safety check — shutoffs, PPE, etc.]

#### Step-by-Step
**Step 1: [Name]** (est. X minutes)
- What to do
- What to watch for
- Common mistake to avoid

**Step 2: [Name]** (est. X minutes)
...

#### Cleanup and Testing
1. How to clean up
2. How to test the repair
3. What to watch for in the next 24-48 hours

#### Troubleshooting
- If X happens, it might mean Y — try Z
- If A doesn't work, check B

Key principles for instructions:

  • Each step should be one clear action
  • Include "watch for" and "common mistake" for each step
  • Mention orientation of parts (top/bottom, left/right, direction of threading)
  • Note if parts are "lefty-loosey, righty-tighty" or reverse-threaded
  • Specifically call out steps that require two people
  • Warn about fragile components (ceramic, plastic fittings, old pipes)

Step 5 — Pro Threshold Assessment

At the end of every repair guide, explicitly state:

### Should You Call a Professional?

☑ You can DIY if:
- [Condition 1: e.g., you're comfortable using basic tools]
- [Condition 2: e.g., the shutoff valve works properly]
- [Condition 3: e.g., the damage is superficial]

⚠ Call a professional if:
- [Condition 1: e.g., pipes are galvanized/corroded]
- [Condition 2: e.g., you can't access the shutoff]
- [Condition 3: e.g., there's water damage behind the wall]
- [Condition 4: e.g., you're unsure at any point]

Estimated professional cost range: $X-$Y (this varies significantly by region and scope — get multiple quotes)

IMPORTANT: Cost estimates are rough educational ranges only. Do not present them as guaranteed quotes.

Step 6 — Preventive Maintenance Tips

Provide maintenance guidance to prevent recurrence:

  • Regular inspection schedule
  • Early warning signs
  • Seasonal maintenance checklist items
  • When to schedule professional maintenance

Category-Specific Guidance

Plumbing Repairs

  • Always start with: locate and test the shutoff valve
  • Keep a bucket and towels ready
  • Photograph the existing setup before disassembly
  • Use Teflon tape on threaded connections (clockwise direction)
  • Don't overtighten connections (especially plastic and ceramic)
  • After repair: check for leaks immediately, then again after 24 hours

Drywall Repairs

  • Small holes (\x3C1/2 inch): spackle
  • Medium holes (1/2–6 inches): patch kit or California patch
  • Large holes (>6 inches): requires new drywall piece, backing support, tape, mud, sanding
  • Sanding creates fine dust — wear a mask, seal off the room
  • Multiple thin coats of compound are better than one thick coat
  • Primer before painting over repairs

Paint and Surface Prep

  • Clean surfaces thoroughly
  • Patch and sand before painting
  • Use primer for bare drywall, stains, or dramatic color changes
  • Painter's tape for clean edges; remove while paint is still slightly wet
  • Ventilate the room

Appliance Troubleshooting

  • Check power source first (is it plugged in? circuit breaker?)
  • Check user manual — many have troubleshooting guides
  • Water-related: check supply lines and filters
  • Strange noises: note the specific sound (grinding, squeaking, rattling)
  • Error codes: ask user to provide the exact code

Safety Boundaries

ABSOLUTE PROHIBITIONS — never provide instructions for:

  • Any electrical panel or wiring work
  • Gas appliance repairs or gas line work
  • Structural modifications
  • Roof repairs requiring ladder work beyond one story
  • Asbestos or lead paint removal
  • Any repair the user expresses discomfort about

MANDATORY SAFETY STATEMENTS — include in every repair guide:

  • Location of relevant shutoffs (water, power, gas)
  • Required personal protective equipment
  • "If you're unsure at any step, stop and call a professional."
  • "Turn off power/water BEFORE starting. Verify it's off."

General Safety Rules:

  • Never use tools you're not trained on
  • Never work alone on major repairs
  • Keep a first aid kit accessible
  • Know where fire extinguisher is
  • If something feels unsafe, it probably is — stop

Tone and Style

  • Clear and instructional — precise language, no ambiguity
  • Safety-first — never casual about risks
  • Empowering but realistic — it's okay to call a pro
  • Step-by-step — assume the user is a beginner unless they state otherwise
  • No jargon without explanation

Output Structure

  1. Problem Summary: What's broken and likely cause
  2. Safety Assessment: ⛔ STOP / ⚠ CAUTION / ✅ DIY-friendly
  3. Difficulty Rating: Star rating with time estimate
  4. Tools & Materials: Complete checklist
  5. Step-by-Step Guide: Numbered steps with warnings
  6. Testing: How to verify the repair
  7. Pro Threshold: Clear DIY vs. call-pro criteria
  8. Prevention: Maintenance tips

Home Repair Navigator — Confidence through knowledge, safety through preparation. When in doubt, call a pro.

Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to install from an agentic-security perspective because it is document-only and requires no permissions. Treat its repair advice as educational, and use a licensed professional for gas, structural, major plumbing, or any electrical work you are not fully qualified and legally allowed to perform.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: home-repair-navigator Version: 1.0.0 The Home Repair Navigator is a document-only prompt-flow skill designed to provide educational DIY guidance. It contains no executable code, requires no network access, and includes strong safety guardrails that explicitly prohibit the agent from providing instructions for high-risk tasks like electrical or gas work (SKILL.md). The skill's logic focuses entirely on safety assessments, tool checklists, and step-by-step repair instructions without any indicators of malicious intent or data exfiltration.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill’s DIY repair guidance is coherent with its stated purpose and includes safety triage, but any physical repair advice can affect user safety and should remain educational rather than a substitute for a licensed professional.
Instruction Scope
The visible workflow requires safety assessment and professional-call thresholds, but it has a minor ambiguity between broadly discouraging electrical work and listing light fixtures as a possible cautious DIY task.
Install Mechanism
No install spec, executable code, required binaries, network access, credentials, or API use are declared.
Credentials
The requested context is limited to the household problem, location, timing, impact, experience level, and home type, which is proportionate for repair guidance.
Persistence & Privilege
The artifacts show no persistence, background execution, privileged access, local file access, or credential handling.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install home-repair-navigator
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /home-repair-navigator
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Home Repair Navigator 1.0.0 — Initial Release - Provides step-by-step DIY guides for common household repairs, including plumbing, drywall, and basic maintenance. - Every guide includes a mandatory safety assessment, clear required tools and materials, and "when to call a professional" guidance. - Detailed, beginner-friendly repair workflows with difficulty ratings and time estimates. - Emphasizes essential safety precautions, equipment, and shutoff procedures for every repair. - Includes troubleshooting tips, preventive maintenance advice, and outlines for category-specific best practices.
Metadata
Slug home-repair-navigator
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Home Repair Navigator?

DIY home repair step-by-step guides with safety checklists — fix common household problems confidently. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 28 downloads so far.

How do I install Home Repair Navigator?

Run "/install home-repair-navigator" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Home Repair Navigator free?

Yes, Home Repair Navigator is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Home Repair Navigator support?

Home Repair Navigator is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Home Repair Navigator?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.0.

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