Saturday, December 16, 2006
Tornadoes
In 2000, a tornado raged through Tarrant County. I don’t have any information regarding anything similar happening during this storm but you can bet some bizarre things happened.
I was a mile away from the storm when it passed through. My neighborhood experienced some high winds and heavy rains but sustained no major damage.
The storm hit late in the day but it was still daylight.
News broadcasters were beginning to show up at many of the areas hit hardest.
I never considered myself a gawker but I’m as curious as the next guy.
So shortly after dark, I headed to Monticello, a west-side neighborhood in Fort Worth filled with elegant older homes. On my way to downtown to view the damage done to several of Fort Worth's landmarks, I was quickly turned away. Too many power lines and trees were down. There were no street lights and more gawkers were coming out.
It was just as well. I was already beginning to get uneasy, seeing what devastation that an ordinary tornado can do to an ordinary neighborhood.
It’s anthropological, I’m sure, but is there something inherently wrong about being so curious when it comes to someone else’s misfortune? Perhaps it’s nothing more than feeling lucky; grateful that it wasn’t me.
Knowing that it could easily be my house with the roof that's gone or my house that's ripped completely off its foundation. Or worse.
My consolation is that it is an inherited trait; I didn’t invent curiosity.
I'd like to think that all my bad traits are inherited and all my good ones are acquired but I know better.
Now many years after, Fort Worth, Arlington and other cities who were smitten by Mother Nature and her wrath have completely restored their communities.
That is a good thing.
Monday, December 11, 2006
Who Do You Trust?
NEW HOME OR OLD HOME?
We've come a long way since then.
The old saying "They don't build 'em like they used to" is true.
[But] That is a good thing. Materials were stronger and methods were more traditional but there are several misconceptions about the old days.
I had the privilege of working with some of the Old World craftsmen as a young carpenter. They grumbled when plywood became more prevalent; they snarled when air nailers were changing the way wood was fastened. They would never "use a stapler for anything but paper".
These methods merely changed the delivery of the product; they did not compromise the integrity of the structure as many think. Architects and engineers have made certain of that. As new products are introduced, cynicism or reservations will always accompany a new idea.
Houses are much safer, easier to maintain and much more affordable. On top of that, they are much more energy efficient.
Many of the things they did as home constructors were actually harmful to us or the building. At times, home builders were careless and abusive with poisonous chemicals. These chemicals are now regulated.
Builders no longer treat every new house with pesticides as they once did. Pre-treating was at least unnecessary and at most, reckless.
At least in North Texas, builders no longer install heating and air conditioning systems in crawl spaces under our house. They no longer embed ductwork into and under our concrete slabs.
They vent clothes dryers to the exterior instead of into the garage or the attic.
They install shut-off valves on all of our gas appliances that don't require special tools to turn in case we need to shut them off.
They install smoke detectors and fire alarms.
They elevate appliances in our garages to reduce the risk of fire.
They install special firewalls, fire-rated doors and fire stops.
They install special electrical devices to keep us from accidentally electrocuting ourselves. They now install devices that can detect a faulty electrical outlet as we sleep. Builders use more fire-rated materials than ever before.
They use plumbing materials that don't rust and that make our drinking water safer. They install water heaters in a way that prevents flooding of our interiors if they leak or burst.
Our homes are better insulated and no longer contain asbestos.
They are equipped with windows that allow more light and keep out more heat and cold. Fireplaces now require less maintenance and provide more heat. Our carpeting and other products no longer contain high levels of formaldehydes. Our paints no longer contain lead.
And yes, they are right. "They don't build 'em like they used to"..........
and that is a good thing.
Wednesday, December 6, 2006
Do electric heating systems have problems?
Ductwork materials/Goodman, Owens-Corning
Tuesday, December 5, 2006
Tankless Water Heater
Electric ceiling heaters in the bath....
What does a pier and beam foundation look like?
Gas heating is not always economical........
This gas heating unit is worn out. It should have been replaced years ago.
The scorching isn't normal [you probably guessed that much].
Having flames lapping the sides of this fire-trap is frightening enough in itself but I found a unit just like it in a church day care center in Arlington.
220 Volts In Disguise
These 110 volt receptacles look like typical electrical outlets but one is not. Instead of 110 volts, the one in the center of the picture contains 220 volts [for a previous window air conditioner that required 220]. The former air conditioner was replaced with a 110v unit and plugged into the other outlet which was 110 volts because the dimwit knew enough NOT to plug it into the 220. Duh. [Are you following this?]
But the 220 volts not only stayed inside the wall but was allowed to be disguised as a 110 volt outlet. [A shocking development.]
[You can't see it in the photograph but there is a marking inscribed in pencil on the cover plate by the electrical wizard who installed this that reads: 220 volts. [Probably for his own sake, lest he forget.]
Plug in your new Plasma TV into this outlet and you'll need another kind of plasma.
This is why real electricians get the big bucks; they keep us safe from our own stupidity and help to keep us out of the Emergency Room.
For The Sake Of A Tree
I have to do something with this someday.
When is someday?
With all the cracks in the ceilings and walls, how on earth would you ever know if your foundation was moving?
The cost of cutting down this beast has never been more expensive but it will never be cheaper than today.
How did this happen?
[Please tell me a little kid traded his family cow for some beans and a giant lives in the top of it.]
That's the only logical explanation.
Wiring Wizard
Monday, December 4, 2006
Poly-Butylene Plumbing
Someone once thought this material was a good idea. Thousands of leaky pipes and dozens of class-action lawsuits later proved otherwise.
If you have this material, you may never have a problem. You are at risk of having a leak, perhaps a serious one. Plumbers know all about this material. Some even feel the risk is over-hyped and greatly exaggerated but Shell, Celanese and other large corporations paid out great sums of money to quell the masses and their lawyers. I do not feel the risk was over-hyped. I don't like the material. [I don't like plumbing at all but I would miss it greatly if I didn't have it.] You should consider replacing any of this material if you discover that you possess it.
Plumbing repairs can be artful.
It's not often that I come across a true work of art like this one.
I'm not sure what the artist is expressing but I'm sure there is deep meaning in his work. [I am certain it was a man; women like to work with other mediums; they don't work well with urea-formaldehyde foam and old T-shirts.]
Perhaps mice were coming through the wall or he was stopping a draft.
The soot on the side of this furnace tell us that sometimes the fire wanders aimlessly around the attic. Flames are licking the outside of this heater. That can't be good.
Aside from the obvious, a defective heat exchanger can make you or others in your family very sick. If exhaust gasses are crossing over into your warm air as you are heating your home, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide may be present without you knowing it. Known as the silent killers, CO and CO2 can make you very ill at low levels and can be fatal at higher levels. Most defective heat exchangers are not this obvious so have your gas furnace checked every heating season. I prefer other methods of heating but I like gas heaters until they begin to age. Once a gas heating unit becomes 11 or 12 years old, it should be checked at the beginning of each heating season. By year 15, the system is aging and becomes more of a liability each year after. [This unreliability grows exponentially, not incrementally.]
So are galvanized pipes but galvanized plumbing doesn't react as badly to natural gas and it is found to be more common especially when the handy-dandy home handyman can't tell the difference and grabs the cheapest thing on the shelf at the home store. Electrolysis is already occurring at the copper and brass flare connection if you look closely.
Also the radical bend in the copper tubing is not a good thing. This puppy is going to leak in someone's attic and very soon if not corrected. [Incidentally, the gas company will refuse to turn on the service to this vacant house until this plumbing nightmare is corrected.] They have a thing about safety; fires, explosions and such. Go figure.
If this is your attic and your inspector tells you there are four-legged furry little critters also living there, believe him; just don't ask him how he knows. If he's a nice guy he'll spare you the details.
Can you guess?
Look closely and see a brick broken in half, taped to a rafter brace to hold a gas line in place. The gas line has no nearby shut-off valve [why would it?]; the galvanized pipe is a dead giveaway that no particular skill was needed to complete this very fashionable installation. On a scale of 1-100 this is a 3. [Two for creativity and one for courage.]