Depending on the heat source it can work. Mantle trips the hot air and mixes it with room air. No radiant heat from fireplace to TV as mantle blocks it all.Isn't there a thing against putting a flat screen above a heat source?
Depending on the heat source it can work. Mantle trips the hot air and mixes it with room air. No radiant heat from fireplace to TV as mantle blocks it all.Isn't there a thing against putting a flat screen above a heat source?
Looks good. I would have put a lot more outlets for the proposed use.View attachment 56204
Completed this walk-in pantry today. Not that we need more storage, but my wife wanted to move small appliances from the kitchen into there and it was just a 5x5’ room not being used. Base cabinets, a stained top, some floating shelves and some crown moulding. I also ran some electricity into it from the plugs on the opposite side of the wall.
If you have enough space you don't have enough stuff.View attachment 56204
Completed this walk-in pantry today. Not that we need more storage, but my wife wanted to move small appliances from the kitchen into there and it was just a 5x5’ room not being used. Base cabinets, a stained top, some floating shelves and some crown moulding. I also ran some electricity into it from the plugs on the opposite side of the wall.
Four outlets total should suffice. Without doing a lot more work I was stuck staying within the 2x4’s of the two pairs of plugs on the opposite side of the wall.Looks good. I would have put a lot more outlets for the proposed use.
Very nice work! My only concern is in the corner between the shelves doesn’t look like a lot of room height wise.View attachment 56204
Completed this walk-in pantry today. Not that we need more storage, but my wife wanted to move small appliances from the kitchen into there and it was just a 5x5’ room not being used. Base cabinets, a stained top, some floating shelves and some crown moulding. I also ran some electricity into it from the plugs on the opposite side of the wall.
Boss said that's where she wanted them placed. She's likely going to put something of decoration there.Very nice work! My only concern is in the corner between the shelves doesn’t look like a lot of room height wise.
Unless you fill it with smaller things it’s dead space.
But looks awesome. Frak I’m way behind some skilled folks here.
Been there done that…relocated once the boss actually saw how it comes out in her exact spacing.Boss said that's where she wanted them placed. She's likely going to put something of decoration there.
Ferguson?I replaced the old American Standard toilet with the new water saving American Substandard. Higher seat and longer bowl makes it really feel like a throne but there's a tiny leak from the tank to the rim of the bowl.
They claim it can flush a bucket of golf balls. When I poop golf balls water consumption will be the least of my concerns.
I didn't truly understand the sanctity of a quiet, comfortable, and relaxing bathroom until the kids are home for the whole day.Ferguson?
Is it the lighting, or is the drywall done horizontal?View attachment 56204
Completed this walk-in pantry today. Not that we need more storage, but my wife wanted to move small appliances from the kitchen into there and it was just a 5x5’ room not being used. Base cabinets, a stained top, some floating shelves and some crown moulding. I also ran some electricity into it from the plugs on the opposite side of the wall.
I think you're seeing light spilling in from the kitchen.Is it the lighting, or is the drywall done horizontal?
Looks like the light going in through the door.Is it the lighting, or is the drywall done horizontal?
Heater is working well. I'm not directly monitoring energy usage but from electric meter it appears to be ~0.22$/hr off peak (the only time I run it now). So 250K btu of pool heat is $1.10 vs ~$6 with natural gas. Although all pool sizing guidelines said to install >100K btu heat pump, the 50K btu only runs a few hours a day to hold 85F. The test will be when trying to extend the season in the fall or heat it up in the spring. The smaller heat pump was ~$3000 cheaper so that pays for a lot of on-peak hydro if I just leave it running 24 hours a day.Our interlock is mostly light colours with a dark grey around the pool. All too hot to walk on in full sun. Obviously won't transfer heat as well as concrete if it were to have loops under it but I still think it would help.
Ran the heatpump for 12 hours last night. Pool started at 82, air temp was 65, pool was covered, water temp this morning was 82. I was hoping for better but not surprised. Didn't bother checking with something with accurate data after the decimal. Normally pool would drop a few degrees in those conditions so as expected, changes won't be quick but it can get ahead on weekends and maintain through the week. Cost ~$3.50 in power so cost wise, equivalent to a little more than half an hour of the old gas heater. With the overnight temp and 40 minutes of the gas heater, I would expect a lower pool temp so I'm ahead financially. Need to fix a recirculation issue to improve efficiency a bit (air comes out of fan in a cone, hits a wall (wall perp to plane of fan blades) and some comes back to the intake side. A baffle between the wall and heat pump will mostly fix this.
The other upside to a quiet heat pump is you can sit in the air stream on really hot days. It's a nice stream of cool dry air.
250k btu off a 50kbtu heatpump would be 5 hrs x 2.7 kw = 13.5kwh of electricity at approx .13/kwh. $1.75. Gas is aboutHeater is working well. I'm not directly monitoring energy usage but from electric meter it appears to be ~0.22$/hr off peak (the only time I run it now). So 250K btu of pool heat is $1.10 vs ~$6 with natural gas. Although all pool sizing guidelines said to install >100K btu heat pump, the 50K btu only runs a few hours a day to hold 85F. The test will be when trying to extend the season in the fall or heat it up in the spring. The smaller heat pump was ~$3000 cheaper so that pays for a lot of on-peak hydro if I just leave it running 24 hours a day.