Friday, October 11, 2013

I am looking for Carlton Electric Fireplace info where can I find this?

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granniefun


Through an estate; I just obtained a Promaster HES40 Carlton Electric Stove (fireplace) manufactured by Harris Systems, Inc. of Skokie, Ill. I would like to obtain additional info on this or their booklet on how to operate it and parts, accessories as needed in the future.


Answer
www.fingerhut.com
www.walmart.com

How to get rid of the film on the glass on a electric fireplace ?




Dillon


I took off the glass on the fireplace to see if I could clean it with just water. And once it dries It goes right back to where it was with that film on it. I really want to figure out how to remove it. Someone please help me.


Answer
A product called Soot Out...Should do the trick,, find a store that sells wood burning stove etc, they carry such a product, it may have other names but they are all the same. Look in places like Lowe's and Walmart and home depot. You can also try, Vinegar & Water.

http://www.northlineexpress.com/fireplace-hearth/fireplace-accessories/fireplace-maintenance-items/fireplace-glass-cleaner.html




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How do you heat your home and keep Heating prices low?

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olivia6799


With natural gas prices rocketing sky high - what are you doing to keep your heating bills at a minimal? Any unique ideas to heat up your place without giving up your arm this coming winter?

Currently we have an air-forced duct system in place. I really hate it, the heat does not distribute evenly throughout the house and despite of having a so-called humidifier installed
into the system, we still have excessive dry air.

I really liked those old water based - radiator heaters, it minimized static and really kept homes warm -- whatever happen to those?

Anyway, give me ideas on how to maintain a nice warm house this winter, I do not want to make this a major project -- keep it nice and simple.

I also have two non-working fireplaces in this old house, I don't have the slightest idea how to use / maintain one. Currently there are sealed off, and if I get it going ... will it even be safe? will it be worth it ? Please share your ideas with me -- I am desperate! ~thanks



Answer
The house I own had no heating system other than a blower box on the fireplace when I bought it. Several thousand dollars later I had central heat with a heat pump in place. I thought all would be great, until I got my first heating bill. If I use that thing I can expect heating bills to range from $300-600 a month in the winter.

SOOOoo I have become something of an obsessive about tricks and alternative heating sources.

1. You would not believe how much outside air leaks into your house. Go around when it's cold and windy and put your hand over door cracks, keyholes in the knobs, window sills, even along the floor by the wall. If you can't plaster over the leak, tape it. All that cold air coming in just drives up your costs.

2. A $4 flannel blanket from Walmart works wonders when hung over doorways that are not regularly used. I also hang them over windows as a cheap alternative to heavy drapery.

3. Those fireplaces? Forget 'em. They'll suck out more heat than they put in. The only time a fireplace really does good is if you are either right in front of it, or you have a blower insert that forces the heat out into the house instead of sending it all up the chimney.

4. I can't say enough about those $1.25 draft dodgers that you stick on the base of your doors. Just peel the backing and stick them on. Any hardware store or Walmart will have them.

5. Insulation. When is the last time you checked it in your attic? You lose a LOT of heat through the ceiling, so a few hundred bucks worth of blown in insulation can save you thousands over a few years. You need at least 6 inches of insulation up there (I put in a foot!), so if it's all compressed down to a few inches, it's time to resupply.

Look around, you'll find one of those radiators. I finally realized the heat pump was very efficient until the outside temp dropped below 45, then the meter nearly spun off it's base. So, I hooked up a free standing, vent free, propane fueled fireplace that will make the place toasty warm when the temp drops into the 30s or below.

Avoid the temptation to get little electric space heaters. The energy they use up to make that little bit of heat is NOT worth it.

Do electric fireplaces really look real?




Richie Ric


The ones I saw at walmart and homedepot look like crap. I looked online and some some from a company called Dimplex that looks pretty real. Has anyone bought one of these? Do they look real? I don't want to be be embarrassed with some piece of crap that I bought online and can't return. Does anyone have any other companies to suggest? Thanks.


Answer
do electric fireplaces look real?...well they kind of do, but the better electric fireplaces are not going to be at a big box store, you really need to visit a specialty fireplace shop. Any shop worth its bricks will carry a good brand that looks more realistic.
Overall though you are not going to fool anyone that an electric fireplace is a real one. They are an aesthetic all their own.
Personally i like the look of them and they are easy to operate but they are not going to fool anybody into thinking they are real.




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Have you ever seen the Heat Surge infomercial? Was it as amusing to you as it is to me?

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Jen is don


Electric fireplaces created by the Amish, complete with "real" footage of "real" Amish people making the fireplaces!!

Never mind that the Amish don't use electricity.

And don't believe in being video taped.

And don't pierce their ears.
misslabeled I actually get my information from a friend of mine who's parents left an Amish colony. And they don't believe in being videotaped or photographed because it's prideful and "showing off," therefore "showing off" their heat surges and working in front of the camera is against what they claim to believe in.

Thanks for offering me a reason to explain that further.



Answer
funny thing about a lot of those Amish I found when I lived around them, they will use electricity, phones, cars etc...as long as it's not theirs, ie they won't pay for it or own it but will use it, seemed kinda hokey to me.

Is this enough to give out?




Danielle


I wanted to make christmas very special!

For my mom:
T'was the night before Christmas video I'm personalizing myself [If you want I will give you the link on Christmas, just ask (=]
Some candy cane stocking holders cause she just got an electric fireplace,
Cookie jar filled with her favorite candies; Turtles and Hot Tamales,
A video of us kids growing up if the camera cooperates and there isn't any little white areas on the photo. :)

Brother; hard shopper; Some fake tattoo's, a DVD, and I'm going to try to find a cute washcloth for him [He has to clean his face often.]

Sister: She's moving so I'm getting her a throw for her couch that has a picture of us (=

Thanks, if I need to give more INFORM ME! :) I'll think of some greater gifts.

By the way I only have about 50$ extra to spend cause I payed for the some of the kitten to take a load off my mom. (= By the way my mom works extra hard during now so I got her the most! :)



Answer
idk




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Is it better to keep the door open to a wood burning fire place or close the door.?

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Flow


My argument is to keep the door open, we are only trying to keep our living room warm. I get the concept that keep the door close heats the metal and warms throughout, but I live in new Zealand and if you don't know heating is non existent. anyways the goals is to heat only our leaving room which is blocked off with blankets. Some of us say keep the door open as it gives direct heat into the room, and other argue differently. Let me know IF you ACTUALLY know what is right! Pretty sure door open is best.
To add to the comment below, by heating the metal i mean that the fireplace is metal, and the assumption is by keeping the heat in, the metal chiminey going up through the house preserves the heat as well as the actual fireplace. My flatmates argue that this preserves heat, but in contrast I say the costs (aka amount of wood required to heat entire chimney) do not meet the benefits. It is a 7 bedroom uninsulated house (small for 7 bedrooms) therefore the goal is to at least keep the living room warm. We have looked up multiple things, and some say keeping the door open burns through wood much quicker, but we all have agreed there is more direct heat comes out when the door is open. So long story short which 1.) Creates more heat into the room once fire is going? 2) what is more efficient? and 3) what is better for our Cause which is that we want our living room warmest possible as it is winter here!



Answer
YIKES! It depends 100% on the age and design of the fireplace and how it was installed. There are essentially three types of solid-fuel fireplaces. Many more, but they may be grouped into three basic types:

a) The conventional wood-burning decorative fireplace installed in centrally heated houses to be used, but not to be depended upon for heat (first link below): This fireplace is designed to direct most of the heat and all of the smoke up the chimney. The smoke-shelf is designed to increase the draw and prevent any smoke at all from getting into the house. Further, the more efficiently it works the more air it takes *from inside the house* to function. At best, fireplaces of this design are energy neutral. Many are considerably energy negative. If you have a fireplace of this design and want it to heat **leave the doors CLOSED**. Only in that way will you get the benefit of radiated heat from the fire itself.

b) Solid-fuel burning heating fireplaces (may burn wood, bituminous coal, peat, lignite and in some cases anthracite - second link): These fireplaces are designed to exhaust fumes but direct heat into the room. As you can see, the firebox is slightly extended into the room, there is a ventilated back and an iron firebox to keep the fuel elevated. There is no smoke-shelf and ventilation is strictly by induction (draft). Starting a fire in these beasts is a trick, and if allowed go cold one must start over from scratch, but once going they are relatively efficient, about 30% of the heat generated comes into the room. These fireplaces were not normally installed with doors, but if you have one, leave them OPEN.

c) Modern sealed fireplaces or inserts (third and fourth links): These are pretty much late 20th century developments and may be anything from a purpose-built sealed heating fireplace that draws combustion air from the exterior and often have electric booster fans on them. These can be up to 60% efficient, some very recent units claim up to 80%, and some hybrids have catalytic converters on them for even more efficiency. Also not cheap. These are typically installed as complete units. Doors closed in these cases.

We have a Type C in our summer house that will keep 900 square feet quite toasty even at 20F on the outside. We have three Type As at our main house, and we run them for decorative reasons only as if all three are going (family occasions) the house will get quite cool quite quickly from the draw.

Last Bit of Lecture:

One perceives heat in three ways:

Conduction - touch something hot. This is pretty obvious.
Convection - stand in a stream of warm air and get warm. This is generally how central heat is perceived.
Radiation - stand in front of something very hot and feel the heat coming off it. This is primarily via infra-red radiation and how many passive electric heaters operate. And this is what you are feeling standing in front of a hot fire. BUT- BUT! the flue is still drawing smoke *AND* warm air from the rest of the house -meaning that you are warming yourself yet cooling the house. Local benefit, general negative.

Hope this helps.

I have split level home and room tempeture is so different.....?




jpae0018


there's about 10 degrees difference down stair and upstair. my mother stays down stair and me and my husband stays upstair... espcially in summer time it's never cool enough upstair and frezzing cold down stair.... what can I do?
have celing fans in everyroom upstair... and closed the vent down stair...



Answer
I had this exact same problem. I have a downstairs fireplace with a wood stove insert I use for additional heating in the winter, to lessen my electric bill. I found the way to even things out was to use a whole house circulating fan. I installed it mainly for distributing heat in the winter but found it works for cool air in the summer. Mine was added after the fact and sits in the cold air return and is in addition to the fan in the bottom of my electric furnace. It runs all the time when I have to use heat, which is about 6-7 months out of the year. The heater vents upstairs are all only 20% to 40% open. The vents downstairs are fully open so most of the air flow is directed downstairs. The whole house fan equalizes the distribution of heat throughout the house by moving the air around all of the time instead of just when the furnace is on like the built-in fan does. It took me a while to balance out the air flow In a single level house, a couple of ceiling fans would do the same thing. In the summer, the only thing I change is to open the upstairs windows and the chimney dampers. You would be amazed how much air flow there is in an open chimney without a fire from a hot living room in the summer, especially after sundown when it gets cooler outside. It isn't perfect. There still is a difference between upstairs and downstairs, but it is much less than it was before I had the fan installed.




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can lighting candles in a room be the equivalent to a portable heater?

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.


The flames from candles give off heat, similar to having a fireplace if there were many of them. A great way to save on the electric bill.


Answer
Yes, they will heat a room, but they won't be cheaper than heating with electricity unless you pay very high electricity rates and buy very cheap candles. If I burn six candles for four hours or so, my living room will get warmer after a couple of hours if it's not too cold outside. I buy cheap candles, $8 for 20 of them. Using 20 of them daily will cost $240 a month for about 4 hours of heat a day if I light them all at once. In winter it would take 20 of them to heat the house to any noticeable degree. My entire electrical bill is usually about $125 for a month in winter at around 7 cents/kWh and that includes heat, lights, cooking, heating water, laundry, and running appliances.

Has anyone else experienced bad problems with KOA?




JD_in_FL


I have stayed at many KOAs in Florida and a few in Georgia and Tennessee. The ones not in Florida were excellent, for value, service, and attitude. Most of the ones in Florida so far seem to bite big time. I had one in Lake City that was "on a lake" (the lake was mostly dried up and had 8 foot weeds growing everywhere, couldn't see the water), one in St Augustine acted like a Russian boot camp and would only rent the paddle boats between 1 PM and 5 PM, if they felt like unlocking them: On our trip, they said they weren't for rent because they had a tour bus comming in. What? One in Orlando (Lake Wippoorwill) advertized one-room cabins, but they aren't cabins, "they are hard-shell tents", and one KOA in Mims, FL says wood fires are not allowed, not even in the BBQ pits because it is against State Law, when the real reason is so they can charge a $100 deposit plus a daily rental fee for a "portable fireplace". Other KOAs deliver firewood. Has anyone else experienced KOA problems?


Answer
I'm not sure where Lake Wippoorwill KOA is and I 'm from Orlando. If that's the one on US 192 next to Sams Club, I toured it for a review and found it unacceptible, mainly for lack of shade. We stayed in one of those wooden tents in Seffner, FL. My wife couldn't hold it through the night and had to use the trash can for a potty.

The problems you mention is one of the reasons I try to stay anywhere else than KOA. We traveled to Alaska and back, from Brooksville, Florida, last year and stayed in a few KOA's, most we will never stay in again. Ocala KOA was $50+ several years ago, for what? being with-in 90 miles of disney?

We found one in Souix City, SD that wasn't open yet they let us stay the night, very nice people. Farther up the road, in Wyoming, we couldn't get decent electric and left. On our way back one in Great Falls, Montana was $30 a night higher than any other campground around. Somewhere near Bismark, ND we stayed in one that was barely large enough for our 35' motorhome, no place for our towed.

We have seen those nickle & dime you to death campgrounds and they aren't just limited to KOA. You must really watch yourself out there.

We are in the planning stages of a return trip to Alaska for next year and you can bet there won't be any KOA's in our trip. We plan on a campground every five days on the way up. WalMart and Flying "J" fuel stops will be our campgrounds for this trip.

Good luck and happy camping.




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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Any one out there ever buy an electric fireplace?

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Atsa me At


for your home? Not an insert. Which did you buy? I would like to get one that has a large open face so I can see more of the flame..a no headache one...seems everything you buy anymore, if you don't know the correct questions to ask the sellers, they don't go out of their way to warn you of potential problems/hazards, well of course not they want to sell their items...thank you.


Answer
I wouldnt buy an electric if your looking for heat. They are stictly for looks. Sales guys will tell you "OH and it does 3000 or 5000 BTU" If you have a $30 space heater from Target that sits under your kitchen table, then you know how much heat that is. That will heat your bathroom after some time and thats it. All they put in them is a cheap little space heater. If your looking for something large to view Lennox makes the best one on the market but they charge for it. You will spend $2-3000 just for the fireplace and with 220v it will do 10,000BTU with 110v it just does 5000btu. But at that price I would just go for gas or wood, because you still have to purchase a full surround mantel. It def. looks the best out of all though because it doesnt use just standard lights. Other wise all the other brand are just cheap little boxes with lights in them with a 20 dollar space heater. Heat Surge claims to be Amish, but when purchased look on the back and you will see MADE IN CHINA, it's all chip board, Amish don't use chip board, so if the sticker is missing thats proof rite there.
I just recommend pick the one you think look the best, just don't plan on purchasing it for heat. And I would not leave the heater on for long times. Leaving just the fireplace on is just a 60W. bulb but with the heater at the same time you have about 1500w an hour

How much would it cost to convert an attached (not used for many years) storefront into a studio apartment?




Carol B


There is water and electrical and gas, but no heat. It is fairly cool in the summer because it is attached and has a wall to the walk-in basement of my house. The place is 100 years old. It is about 500 square feet. I have a bathroom outside the space in the basement portion. I'd want a kitchen, bed and living space and I have drawn it out. I'd like to make it modern and sleek with high-end appliances. This is Wisconsin, so I have to get it heated well.


Answer
You have a number of options for the heating, electric baseboard heaters, gas or electric fireplace. Another option is radiant heat in the floor (very efficient & comfortable) depending on your flooring.
You will need an electical outlet for every 6' of wall, generally, as well as lighting, appliances & communications. You may need to upgrade your electrical panel.
Your existing main drain will determine where you can put your plumbing. The main drain may need an upgrade as well, or you may need to add an additional one in order to handle 2 sinks, tub, toilet & possibly laundry.
Line up some estimates from electrical & plumbing & you will have a good idea what you're in for there.
How much structure will you need? Framing & drywall.
Paint & trim. Windows. Doors. Closets. Cabinets. Hardware. Fixtures. Lighting. Flooring. (new subfloor)
Outside finishes. With so little to go on, my guess is $15-30+ thousand plus appliances. You can save on labour by doing as much as you can yourself & calling on friends & family. Some creative shopping for fixtures & materials can save much more. Good luck with your project!
PS Design tip: If you have an internal bathroom (no window) install a transom window above the door to borrow light.




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How to get rid of the film on the glass on a electric fireplace ?

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Dillon


I took off the glass on the fireplace to see if I could clean it with just water. And once it dries It goes right back to where it was with that film on it. I really want to figure out how to remove it. Someone please help me.


Answer
A product called Soot Out...Should do the trick,, find a store that sells wood burning stove etc, they carry such a product, it may have other names but they are all the same. Look in places like Lowe's and Walmart and home depot. You can also try, Vinegar & Water.

http://www.northlineexpress.com/fireplace-hearth/fireplace-accessories/fireplace-maintenance-items/fireplace-glass-cleaner.html

What are the best ways to turn my regular house into a more eco-friendly green house?




Lost


I have baseboard hot water heat, and a gas-powered hot water tank. No central air... just window units in the bedrooms. I have a fireplace, but don't use it much. I live in cold New England. Lots of trees around the house.

I just want to go green, but I don't want to move. What can I do without spending too, too much money?



Answer
going green is a large term many companies use today and it used to widely, mostly for profit. but that does not mean the little people cant go and do a little green them selves. just short of rebuilding a house, you can help by recycling all paper and plastics and glass etc.... then start reducing the amount of electricity you use by using a digital A/C thermostat, change your bulbs from incandescent to compact florescent bulbs (home depot, Lowe's) (remember to check your local trash company for disposal when they burn out)bad for environment but cheap to use, check your electric company web sites, they usually have great tips on how to reduce power in your home. start using paper bags at the grocery store instead of plastic. all of the things i listed are cheap to start and very inexpensive to do...... going green is not always changing all of the products in house but adjust to help the environment, that alone is going green...
hope this has help you!!!!




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Does anyone have info on "Heat Surge HT-Xl" furnaces made by the Amish ?

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HollysMom


I read about this furnace in the newspaper & thought it sounded GREAT, before I buy it I would like to know if anyone has bought 1 or knows of someone who has. Can you also give me your input on this furnace, every little bit will help. The newspaper is offering a $198.00 coupon.


Answer
Consumer Reports posted a video review of this exact item on YouTube. It's a Chinese made faux fireplace with an Amish-made wooden mantle. For some reason, it seems heaters with combustible housings are trendy lately. Check the first link I've included if you want to see what happens when something goes horribly wrong with a heater made out of materials that burn.

All 120v electric heaters are 100% efficient and they all max out at 1,500 watts (5,121 BTU). Buy the least expensive one that is made out of something that doesn't burn - that means not plastic or wood.

What do you think of this house?




Lost&Found


http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/711-N-19Th-St_Fort-Smith_AR_72901_1116004954


My friend is looking to get him a house. He and I agree that the price is cheap, but we don't really know much about real estate. From the pictures, Do you think it looks any good?



Answer
Any good is a matter of opinion. What one person loves, another person hates.

Just reviewing the comments here are my concerns:

Pictures: The exterior looks a bit rough, the roof may need attention. Does your friend have resources to address these issues down the road?

Year built: 1920. This means that nothing will be straight. If your friend os going to hang wallpaper or run some fancy molding, it will be an undertaking.

Electric log fireplaces: Why? If they are ornamental, fine. But this is not a heat source.

1 car garage: Not great for resale.

Heating features, space heaters: What? Your friend may have financing issues if space heaters are a major source of heat in this house. And again, resale comes into mind. It is no secret that space heaters are great for running up your electric bill and being a fire hazard.

Wood windows: Not energy efficient.

OK, there you have my 2 cents.




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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

How long to leave an electric fireplace on ?

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Rebecca C


Hi,

There is an electric fireplace here where I live and I had it on for about an hour.

It started making banging noises i turned it off but I am a bit scared !

did i leave it on too long?

Thank you !



Answer
Call the landlord and ask if there is a problem with the fireplace because it should burn longer than an hour

How can I get the flames in my electric fireplace to work again?




chrys_foll


My electric fireplace gives off heat, the fan works but the flames won't flicker and move anymore. They just look like they are frozen in time. Any thoughts on how to get them moving?


Answer
It sound like you need to replace the flicker motor that rotates a rod with fingers on it.
As the motor turns that rod it simulates the effect of flames flickering.Thus the term flicker motor.




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Has anybody owned or does own a 1993 Damon Escaper 5th Wheel? (35ft long & 14 ft power slide.)?

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Chris


I have or I should say just bought less than a month ago.. a 1993 Damon Escaper 5th wheel. It is approximately 35ft long with a 14ft power slide. I only have one question... over the weekend, on of our outlets tripped (behind tv, had tv and electric fireplace going) and made 3 other outlets trip. I figured this was because the outlet is on a series circuit with the other 2 outlets. I was wondering if this will do this all of the time? I pushed the "reset" button on the outlet in the kitchen and now they all work... What happened? I would also like someone to tell me more information about it. I like to know as much information about all of the things that I own that is in high in value like that (I knew just about everything about my 1992 Salem by Cobra 27ft Travel Trailer...). And I just remembered another question.. the people that we had bought it from (a dealer) and they said that it didn't have a fireplace in it as it does now.. but it looks stock.. There is no signs that someone had put it in there their selves. Let me know! Thanks!


Answer
The "Resettable" outlet in the kitchen is a "Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter" and it does indeed cut off power to all of the other outlets on the circuit. It is not an overload protector - that will be a circuit breaker located in the power center and Inverter assembly - look for a square or rectangular metal panel which opens with (usually) a pair of twist locks at the top, located inside the trailer near where the Camp Power electric cable enters from the outside.
If the GFCI trips frequently replace it carefully following the instructions - the IN and OUT wiring MUST be correct! Or have a professional electrician replace it.
A skilled person can certainly install an aftermarket electric fireplace and make it look totally factory!




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Monday, October 7, 2013

i am replacing insulation, ceilings, and walls in an older home, any advice or tips to save money.?

electric fireplaces 2012 on Fireplace  this is not a cheap pleasure | Fireplace Mantels
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Candace Br


I have an older trailer that has been renovated throughout the years that has two rooms added on. The two rooms that were added on were built not with the greatest standards. But for the purpose of the home, it seamed plausible. The older home is a family owned residence that is used for a "lake house" typically used only during the summer months. The intentions are to make it a permanent living quarters to save money. The home is paid for in full, so the only bills will be the electric bill. However, there are some flaws. The two rooms that are added on have some issues. the rooms act as a living room and a bedroom. the paneling is buckling in some spots and the ceiling suffered from a past leak(which has been repaired). Me and my fiance have full intentions of knocking the ceiling out and pulling the paneling down only to add new insulation and drywall. the questions are as follows...
-sheet rock vs. drywall and the pros and cons of each.
-is this a task that two very hands on people could make a DIY project?
-what is the best type of insulation for the project? not necessarily the most expensive.
-what are the average cost and labor times of a such project?
now i haven't yet to go get the exact measurements of the rooms, how ever and estimate, i would say the living room is a 16x10 and the bedroom is a 14x10. the living room has one exterior door three windows a fireplace and an interior doorway the size of double french doors. the bedroom as two windows one input closet and on doorway which leads to the hall.

thanks for all and any advice. :)



Answer
You shouldn't encounter much technical difficulty. Cost is hard to predict. It varies greatly with geography, market timing and EXACTLY what you're buying.
If you open the walls, the space must be brought up to 2012 codes:
1) possibly shrinking all rooms for 5 1/2" exterior wall insulation
2) electrical upgrades, smoke alarms, etc.
3) egress window/ventilation requirements.
If the building is not your owned, legal, primary residence you have to hire contractors for everything. It's a side effect of landlords shoddily fixing tenants' spaces.
I'm sure the place was built before the mid 80's. Read up on the newer, federal EPA laws regarding lead paint abatement. They're really up-tight.
As far as time goes, take your best guess and than multiply it by 2.5. The budget gets the same multiplier.
P.S. SheetRock = drywall = wallboard




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Sunday, October 6, 2013

Do electric fireplaces really help you save on your electric bill?

electric fireplace 1500w on Electric Fireplace Wall Mount Fireplace Wood Front Panel Heater 1500W
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alucard





Answer
Nope. If you want to save some money; use a 1500w space heater in the room you are in, and keep the thermostat in the house set at 50, or 55. Shut it off - and unplug it - when you are not using it.
How much money you will save depends upon the peak rate from your power company, and what type of heat your house has now.

i have a boston innovative products electric heater model # FP08-342 heater 1 and heater 2 have stopped workin?




cheryl


heater 1 and heater n2 in my electric heater have stopped working the fan is working and the flame lighting is still working I am trying to troubleshoot what the problem may be so that i can possibly fix it or order parts for it


Answer
You can sometimes find these items used on ebay. Here one sold for $50: http://www.ebay.com/itm/BIP-Electric-Fireplace-Moveable-Heater-1500W-ModelFP08-342-Low-Start-No-Reserve-/220939017984

A direct search does not seem to find a manual, parts or a mfg web site. It could be that the unit is manufactured under another name and there is another company or part number you should be researching.




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What are the five elements I'm missing in Little Alchemy?

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VolPa


What are the five elements I'm missing in Little Alchemy?
Hello! My sister introduced me to a game called Little Alchemy a little while ago and I've been playing it nonstop since then, but I just cannot find the last 5 elements out of 390 of them. Even using the Little Alchemy site to find all the elements, they aren't showing up, so I've made a list of all 385 elements I've found thus far, so if you guys could be so kind as to inform me of what I'm missing, that'd be super ^__^

Basic Elements:
Water
Fire
Earth
Air

A:
Acid Rain
Airplane
Alcohol
Algae
Alien
Allergy
Alligator
Ambulance
Angel
Antarctica
Aqaurium
Archipelago
Armadillo
Armor
Ash
Astronaut
Astronaut Ice Cream
Atmosphere
Atomic Bomb
Atomic Fireballs
Avalanche
Axe

B:
Bacon
Bacteria
Baker
Barn
Bat
Batman
Bayonet
Beach
Beaver
Beer
Bicycle
Bird
Birdhouse
Blackhole
Blade
Blizzard
Blood
Boat
Boiler
Bone
Book
Bread
Brick
Bridge
Broom
Bullet
Butcher
Butter

C:
Cactus
Cadbury Eggs
Camel
Campfire
Candy Cane
Car
Caramel
Caramel Apple
Caramelo
Cardon Dioxide
Cart
Castle
Cat
Caviar
Centaur
Cereal
Chainsaw
Charcoal
Cheese
Chicken
Chimney
Chocolate
Chocolate Milk
Christmas Stocking
Christmas Tree
Cigarette
City
Clay
Clock
Cloud
Coal
Coconut
Coconut Milk
Coffin
Cold
Computer
Cookie
Cookie Dough
Corpse
Cotton Candy
Cow
Cuckoo
Cyborg
Cyclist

D:
Dam
Darth Vader
Day
Desert
Diamond
Dinasuar
Doctor
Dog
Doghouse
Double Rainbow
Dough
Dragon
Drunk
Duck
Dune
Dust
Dynamite

E:
Eagle
Earthquak
Eclipse
Egg
Egg Timer
Electric Eel
Electrician
Electricity
Email
Energy
Engineer
Eruption
Explosion

F:
Family
Farmer
Faun
Field
Fireplace
Fireworks
Fish
Flood
Flour
Flute
Flying Fish
Fog
Forest
Fossil
Frakenstein
Fridge
Frozen Yogurt
Fruit
Fruit Tree
Fun Dip

G:
Galaxy
Garden
Geyser
Gift
Glacier
Glass
Glasses
Glasshouse
Goat
Gold
Goldfish
Golem
Grass
Grave
Gravestone
Graveyard
Grenade
Grim Reaper
Guiness Float
Gun
Gunpowder
Hail
Ha
Hamburger
Hard Roe
Hay
Hero
Horizon
Horse
Hospital
Hourglass
House
Human
Hurricane

I:
Ice
Ice Cream
Iceberg
Idea
Igloo
Internet
Isle
Jedi
Juice
Juicy Fruit

K:
King
Kite
Knight

L:
Lamp
Lava
Lava Lamp
Leaf
Leather
Letter
Life
Light
Lightbulb
Lighthouse
Lightsaber
Lion
Livestock
Lizard
Love
Lumberjack

M:
Manatee
Meat
Mermaid
Metal
Meteor
Meteoroid
Milk
Milky Way
Mirror
Money
Money
Moon
Moss
Motorcycle
Mounds
Mountain
Mouse
Mud
Mummy
music

N:
Narwhal
Nerd
Nerds
Nest
Night

O:
Oasis
Obsidian
Ocean
Oil
Omelette
Orchard
Origami
Owl
Oxygen

P:
Palm
Paper
Peeps
Pegasus
Pencil
Penguin
Phoenix
Pie
Pig
Pigeon
Pilot
Pipe
Piranha
Pirate
Pizza
Plant
Plankton
Plant
Platypus
Pokki
Pond
Pop Rocks
Popsicle
Pottery
Pressure
Printer
Prism
Pyramid

R:
Rain
Rainbow
Red Vines
Reindeer
Ring
River
Robot
Rocket
Rust

S:
Sailboat
Sailor
Salt
Sand
Sand Castle
Sandpaper
Sandstorm
Sandwich
Santa
Scarecrow
Scissors
Scorpion
Scythe
Sea
Seagull
Seahorse
Seaplane
Seasickness
Seaweed
Shark
Sheep
Sickness
Ski Goggles
Skittles
Sky
Skyscraper
Sledge
Smog
Smoke
Snake
Snow
Snowboard
Solar Cell
Sound
Space
Squirrel
Star
Starburst(
Starfish
Statue
Steam
Steam Engine
Steamboat
Steel
Stone
Storm
Story
Sugar
Sun
Sundial
Sunflower
Sunglasses
Surfer
Sushi
Swamp
Sweater
Swedish Fish
Sweethearts
Swim Goggles
Sword
Swordfish

T:
Telescope
Time
Titanic
Toast
Tobacco
Tool
Train
Tree
Treehouse
Tsunami
Turtle
Twilight
Twix

U:
Umbrella
Unicorn

V:
Vampire
Village
Volcano
Vulture

W:
Wagon
Wall
Warrior
Water Pipe
Wave
Werewolf
Wheat
Wheel
Wild Animal
Willy Wonka
Wind
Windmill
Wine
Wire
Wizard
Wolf
Wood
Wool

Y:
Yoda
Yogurt

Z:
Zombie

Also, does anybody know why this question would be removed because of Community Guidelines? I posted this question a few days before I went to spend a week at my friends house and I couldn't check on the question because she was being greedy with her laptop and I only have a desktop that I obviously couldn't bring with me, so when I got back today I wanted to check if anybody had answered and I found the question had been removed. I read ALL of the community guidelines and found absolutely NO reason for why a question like this one would be removed, and now I'm REALLY f*cking pissed the hell off about it XD

Anyway, thank you for answering and have a nice day!! <3



Answer
I found 6 - not 5, Idk...but I found them here:
http://www.littlealchemygamecheats.com/2012/09/little-alchemy-game-cheats.html
here they are

Moon + Sea = Tides
Paper + Paper = Newspaper
Snow + Human = Snowman
Human + Human = Sex
Human + Fire = Fireman
Glass + Plant = Greenhouse

What should I get for Christmas?




Danielle


Ok soo. I'm 13 and I'm very picky. :/ This is hard but I have everything I want. Hd camera, a best friend, her trampoline and pool are always available [Tramp would be for christmas anyways.] Umm vacation trip is for 2012 (:
Maybe my personality will help?
I love taking videos, I don't have a fancy smancy VIDEO maker though.
I really dunno, were looking at ragdoll kittens whe

Where can I buy an Amish Fireplace in Kentucky?

electric fireplaces reviews consumer reports on The Best Clothes Dryer of 2012 | Ask the Appliance Guy
electric fireplaces reviews consumer reports image



jenelle


Where can I buy one? and how much are there.

If u don't mind, include a source, please. =]



Answer
If you are getting it for looks is fine but if you are getting it for "saving" money dont even waste your time. I read it on other places too but here are few reviews that people wrote on this site http://www.alternativeconsumer.com/2007/12/09/heat-surge-fireplace-whats-up-with-that/

My husband and I purchased two of these Heat Surge fireplaces and we have seen NO savings on ur electric bill. We turned our thermostat down to 68 degrees for the month, and our electric bill went up. Go figure. Where is the savings at?? They are misleading the public into a ton of savings, and all you have is fireplaces that look good in your home. We purchased these for the saving, but their is NONE! Very dissapointed and would not recommend these unless you want to pay higher electric bills.


Eden Pure finished dead last in Consumer Reports Oct. 2007 report.

If you have access to nat. gas, it takes a lot of discipline to come out ahead by heating just one room at a time with electricity.

Electric heat costs about twice as much per delivered BTU as natural gas in most parts of the USA. One kilowatt hour of electricity supplies 3413 BTU. One hundred cubic feet of gas (almost exactly one âthermâ on your gas bill) is 100,000 BTU. Look up your local prices and do the math. One therm costs about $1.05 right now in the upper Midwest. Divide that by 80% efficiency on a typical furnace = $1.31 per 100,000 BTU delivered. You need 29.3 kilowatt hours to deliver 100,000 BTU (at 100% efficiency). At 10 cents per kilowatt hour, thatâs about $2.90.

Does anyone have info on "Heat Surge HT-Xl" furnaces made by the Amish ?




HollysMom


I read about this furnace in the newspaper & thought it sounded GREAT, before I buy it I would like to know if anyone has bought 1 or knows of someone who has. Can you also give me your input on this furnace, every little bit will help. The newspaper is offering a $198.00 coupon.


Answer
Consumer Reports posted a video review of this exact item on YouTube. It's a Chinese made faux fireplace with an Amish-made wooden mantle. For some reason, it seems heaters with combustible housings are trendy lately. Check the first link I've included if you want to see what happens when something goes horribly wrong with a heater made out of materials that burn.

All 120v electric heaters are 100% efficient and they all max out at 1,500 watts (5,121 BTU). Buy the least expensive one that is made out of something that doesn't burn - that means not plastic or wood.




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Sellers lied about their electric bill! What can we do?

electric fireplaces $200.00 on 24
electric fireplaces $200.00 image



TKANDAG


My husband and I just bought a vacation home in the mountains. It IS electric heat and we were aware of that. We did ask the sellers to give us an amount of how much they paid per month. We were told $40.00 and at the most $60.00 when it was being used. The house does have 2 fireplaces and I admit, they help out a lot when heat it kept in the 40's, low 50's. We got our first bill and it was $130.00 for 15 days for a few days of being in the house! I called PPL, was told they are not allowed to provide information on the previous owners but told me their usage amount would have put them in the approx range of $200.00 per month! I feel so foolish for not calling PPL 1st before buying and my husband & I are usually very thorough. I do have an email from our realtor telling us how much it was. I am so upset that someone (sellers) would flat out lie about something like that. We now have vacation house that we want to use, winterized, and the bill is still 77.00 for about 3/4 month. It's estimated to be 120-140 w/house being practically SHUT DOWN!

Should we contact a lawyer? Is it even worth it? We didn't strap ourselves but the extra money for electric is coming out of our "cushion" or possibly savings. We asked for every detail ahead of time so we could budget. Shame on us for thinking there were honest people out there!

Any suggestions?! Please be serious. I don't need a teen commenting on something they know nothing about.

THANK YOU!
Ya know, I completely agree! We should have asked for bills. We were actually going to and they were so slooooow w/the regular paperwork, they were holding up settlement (costed us a mortgage rate to go higher in 1 day), we would have locked in and obviously did then when we realized they were not quick movers. There were so many hold ups on their end, we decided to just ask for utilities via email/text. We'll probably have to sell it. $60.00 vs. $200-$250 is a big difference. We never had electric heat so we had no idea. I heard if you're reasonable and cautious it can work to your advantage.



Answer
Nothing to do. Your fault for not checking into it. You really though a house with electric heat in the mountains where it gets really cold could possibly had an electric bill of $40? I would have called BS on that the second I heard it.




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