what about a halogen bulb in the attic? Looking at walmart online it seems damn near all they carry are LED 60w's these days
Have you checked the temperature in your attic?AustinCountyAg said:
what about a halogen bulb in the attic? Looking at walmart online it seems damn near all they carry are LED 60w's these days
Do this for peace of mind. If it aint freezing up there, then there is nothing to worry about.AustinCountyAg said:
no, not currently at home
Picard said:
Seems we have a correlation here of people that heat already hot water that also don't know how to handle freezing weather.
I actually saw something on that yesterday when I googled if you really need to make sure your gas tank is full (they recommend it). Pour isopropyl alcohol in washer fluid. They did not say how much. I put 2/3 bottle of 99%. Most have 70%, so I would probably do a whole bottle.Absolute said:
Know we discussed the washer fluid in the car.
Stupid question probably, but are we starting to talk about temps cold enough to worry about other things in the car engine if it lives under a carport? Newer cars, up to date on Antifreeze and such.
You don't want to do that. Hot air will indeed go up and right out your ridge vents or power ventilator openings. That should draw the cold air from the outside the home up through your soffit vents and would replace the air in the attic which might be 28 degrees or 34 degrees or whatever with the air outside the home which could be 10 or 15 degree air.Mas89 said:On your access door going into the attic, crack it open enough to let warm air go up there if you're worried about it. Maybe prop open with an empty can or bottle. Hot air goes up.AustinCountyAg said:
posted in the other thread, but I am worried about my exposed pipes in the attic. An older house and they arent wrapped or anything.
I have several faucets at an RV park exactly as you describe your 6 faucets. I wrap the pvc pipe that is exposed (10" to 2', they vary) with the tube insulation and zip tie them. Our water pressure is so intense if you barely open the 1/4 turn valve it doesn't drip but turns into a fine misty spray that will turn to ice as soon as it hits the pedestal or anything else. So we put a short piece of hose or a splitter or something on top, and crack the valve, then put a five gallon bucket on top to help with the misty spray and to keep the wind at bay. Have never had a problem, but then I don't think we have gotten colder than like 20 or 22 degrees so far.WLW12SPJ said:
I have 6 faucets along the perimeter of the yard that stick out of the ground 2' - 2.5'. I wrapped them in that black, tubular styrofoam wrap. I then put two feed sacks over that with a lick tub on top. That has also seemed to work since we built, but we haven't been to single digits AND 3 - 4 days below freezing. I'm a little worried on those faucets.
Potcake said:
Would closing doors and/or shutting vents in bedrooms or other rooms that don't actually need the heat help concentrate the heat in the remainder of the house? Or letting all the air circulate throughout.
Waterski02 said:
I'll second "this thread is funny"
Unless all of your homes are built without insulation your interior plumbing in an occupied house should be just fine.
Now those of you with older non frost free spigots. That may be a different story.
Does the pipe not have some give? I can pull mine away from the wall a little bit, certainly enough to get that screwdriver linked aboveMAROON said:
The screw head is literally resting on the brick. I would have to forcefully pull the pipe away from the house. I've been saying I need to upgrade and repair this system. Might be time!
If they don't stop draining (like more than 20-30 seconds), then your bottom valve is not fully closed. Work it back and forth (I had this problem last year) to loosen it a little and make sure you get it fully closed (perpendicular to the pipe). Water should then stop from test cocks, leave them both open, towels, and cover with something to keep towel dry (trash bag).RustyBV said:
I close the bottom valve on my pvb, and when I open the test cocks they don't stop draining water. I suppose keeping the valve closed, test cocks closed, and wrap with towels is the best I can do?
Sazerac said:
Not sure if serious...
Thanks for that.fire09 said:
Asked my buddy in NJ about pool prep, he said leave all the pumps running 24/7 during freeze and everything should be fine.
Anyone covering oleanders up with blankets, should they be ok during freeze, or should I plan on replacing all my privacy bushes in a week?
I'm not unless attic temp dips below freezing, which I doubt it will.Warsteiner said:
I'm in NW Houston.
Anyone doing anything about a water heater in the attic?