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Selecting an Appropriate A/C System for Your House

Purchasing a correctly sized central air conditioning system (A/C) for your home presents a challenge. You must consider the size of the home and the area to be cooled. Measure the floors, ceilings, and walls of each room of your home. Remember to measure the windows and check the attic for insulation. Check the insulation in the crawl space and the walls. Other factors to consider include the temperature inside and outside of the home, roof color, and the number of people occupying the home. Is your home shaded by trees? Shading keeps the house cool. Be sure to check the air ducts for breaks and leaks. Make sure the air flows freely and unencumbered by broken ducts or ones that are too small. Fix misaligned ducts and reseal them using a quality sealant. Replace ducts that are damaged beyond repair. Ensure that the air filter is properly working.

Hire a qualified HVAC installation company that provides the service of selecting the right-sized system, inspects your home, measures it, and installs the new system. The company should provide maintenance and repair services. You will want to select a company that is certified with installation, repair, and the maintenance of new HVAC systems. Select a company that offers emergency service during weekdays and weekends. The company should be knowledgeable about up-to-date equipment and technology used to measure your home, provide statistics, printouts, and a fair estimate. They should stick with the estimate given as well as provide a guarantee and warranty. New A/C systems are required by federal law to meet the SEER level standard of 13 and up to 25. The SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio) level is designated by the Air Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute. The EER (Energy Efficiency Ratio) of a cooling device is the output ratio of cooling energy or BTU (British Thermal Unit) per hour to the input electrical energy (in watts) measured at a given operating point. The EER is generally measured using an outside temperature of 95 °F with an inside (return air) temperature of 80 °F and a 50% relative humidity level.

Keep your cool, when you learn the cost of installing a new HVAC system. An HVAC system can run as high as $5,500 to $12,000. For a completely installed HVAC system, depending upon the size and type of the system installed, the price will vary. Spend time checking on various HVAC installation companies, certifications, ratings, references, and prices. Though BTU is still largely used today, another measure used is joules with 1055 joules equal to one BTU / Btu unit. The kWh is a unit of energy that is typically used by utility companies as a billing unit. One (1) BTU is equal to 0.000293 kWh (Kilowatt hour) or 3.6 megajoules. Instead of fixing various parts of an old HVAC system, it is highly recommended that a new system be installed. Because old systems can malfunction and are inefficient, a new Energy Star rated system is cost-effective, operates efficiently, and it comes with a warranty.

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Residential Fencing: What are my Options?

Fences improve your property value and curb appeal. If you are “sitting on the fence” trying to decide whether you should invest in a new fence for your property, it pays to spend time weighing the pros and cons against the cost of your investment. In the long run, installing a new fence system gives you peace of mind and it boosts your curb appeal rating. That’s a winning combination.
Securing the safety of your property, family, and pets is priceless. Children and pets need to be safe. Keeping intruders off of your property is important to your family’s safety. If you are good with DIY home repair projects, you might be able to install a fence system without professional help which will save a lot of money.

However, for the best return on your investment (ROI), leave the job to someone who is experienced with installing fence systems such as a licensed fence installation company. Choose a fence style and type and gather estimates. Check for references and ensure that the chosen company presents a valid contract with the terms of the job. Check on their reputation, their license, business references, and their online reviews. Avoid disreputable fence installation contractors. You get what you pay for, before you pay money to a fence installation company, protect your investment and check all of the contract’s details. Ensure the contract is what you are expecting as discussed with the company. Sign the contract only if you are sure you will receive a valid deal.

The most common types of fence material installed are wood and chain-link fences. Each type of fence requires maintenance. Some fence types will last for many years in any type of climate and others will last only a short time. Before your final purchase, research to ensure the fence you have chosen is suited for your property, inclement weather, and check the warranty before you sign on the dotted line.
Aluminum, wood, wrought iron, ornamental metal, vinyl (PVC), steel chain-link, and chain-link vinyl-coated are all widely used residential fence materials. Electric (invisible fence), bamboo and high tensile (farm), picket fence (vinyl and wood), deer fencing (plastic), and composite fencing material (engineered wood/vinyl) represent unique choices of fence type and style. Privacy, picket, pool, deer, split rail, front yard (picket, wrought iron, chain-link), backyard (privacy/stockade fence), and security fences are very popular choices.

If you are planning to install a new fence system, study up on fence terminology:
Aluminum, barbed wire, cedar batten boards, chain-link, curved top, custom ornamental iron, decorative rings, extended top, finials, flat top, galvanized steel, gauge, good-neighbor fence, grade change, horizontal picket fence, lattice, pickets, posts, post caps, prefabricated iron panels, press point, pressure-treated wood, privacy slats, rackable panels, rails, ranch style fence, razor ribbon, rot board, salt spray, scalloped cedar fence, shadow box, stain, steel chain-link, stockade panel, treated pine, underpinning, vinyl-coated, western red cedar, windscreen, wood grade, and wrought iron. Not a complete list, there are hundreds more terms and hardware that go with installing a new fence system. Research online to find more fence hardware terminology.

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