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#1
posted to rec.boats
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#2
posted to rec.boats
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My house..built 71 years ago in the middle of WW2 when this city was booming supplying Britain with badly needed supplies had the same basic basement when we bought in 1985.
I ran plugs, electric lights and electric baseboard heaters everywhere. |
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#3
posted to rec.boats
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On 5/2/2013 7:48 AM, True North wrote:
My house..built 71 years ago in the middle of WW2 when this city was booming supplying Britain with badly needed supplies had the same basic basement when we bought in 1985. I ran plugs, electric lights and electric baseboard heaters everywhere. Are you still running Knob and tube? |
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#4
posted to rec.boats
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Never did.
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#5
posted to rec.boats
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True North wrote:
Never did. How insightful! Thank you for your contribution. |
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#7
posted to rec.boats
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On 5/2/13 11:27 AM, wrote:
On Thu, 2 May 2013 01:18:36 -0500, Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On Wed, 01 May 2013 22:44:14 -0400, Hank© wrote: Your life is too complicated by this stuff. Once you get a good array of motion and occupancy sensors in place, you start wondering why you didn't do it sooner. This actually started over a quarter century ago when I saw my wife and daughter using the open refrigerator as a night light. You gotta be kidding. Even 100 year-old houses are wired with wall switches by the door. Have you ever heard of flashlights and nite- lites? That was my first indoor motion detector, turning on a small light that lit up the kitchen, dining room and hallway. Now everywhere you go around he house, inside or out, the light follows you. The only places that don't have detectors are the bedrooms. Inside it is really just 5 strategically located detectors and some low level lighting. I bet my dogs would be shocked as they wander around the house. Wonder what all that on/off does for bulb longevity. We have one small CFL in the range hood that provides almost whole house night light. Illuminates enough to avoid tripping everywhere, including the bedrooms if the door is open. My basement isn't wired up for lighting, so I just keep a 3 dollar LED flashlight on a shelf at the foot of the stairs to get to the one wall switch 20 feet away in the dark. Haven't even changed the batteries in about 4 years. Different strokes. I guess I like things a little more convenient than walking around with a flashlight. Human nature is to turn on the light but not to turn it off. I see it every night when I am walking the dog around the neighborhood. I know there are only 1 or 2 people in the house and it is lit up like an office building, even after I know they are probably in bed. If you are just passing through, turning off the light requires a 3 way or 4 way loop that probably was not put there by the builder and would be tough to do after the drywall is up. A $20 occupancy sensor, strategically located, connected to a light or two in the right place, fixes all of that. We don't have problems remembering to turn off the lights when we leave a room. I do, however, have the outside lights on the front porch and on either side of the garage on timer switches, and the floods around the house on motion detectors. |
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#8
posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... On 5/2/13 11:27 AM, wrote: On Thu, 2 May 2013 01:18:36 -0500, Boating All Out wrote: In article , says... On Wed, 01 May 2013 22:44:14 -0400, Hank© wrote: Your life is too complicated by this stuff. Once you get a good array of motion and occupancy sensors in place, you start wondering why you didn't do it sooner. This actually started over a quarter century ago when I saw my wife and daughter using the open refrigerator as a night light. You gotta be kidding. Even 100 year-old houses are wired with wall switches by the door. Have you ever heard of flashlights and nite- lites? That was my first indoor motion detector, turning on a small light that lit up the kitchen, dining room and hallway. Now everywhere you go around he house, inside or out, the light follows you. The only places that don't have detectors are the bedrooms. Inside it is really just 5 strategically located detectors and some low level lighting. I bet my dogs would be shocked as they wander around the house. Wonder what all that on/off does for bulb longevity. We have one small CFL in the range hood that provides almost whole house night light. Illuminates enough to avoid tripping everywhere, including the bedrooms if the door is open. My basement isn't wired up for lighting, so I just keep a 3 dollar LED flashlight on a shelf at the foot of the stairs to get to the one wall switch 20 feet away in the dark. Haven't even changed the batteries in about 4 years. Different strokes. I guess I like things a little more convenient than walking around with a flashlight. Human nature is to turn on the light but not to turn it off. I see it every night when I am walking the dog around the neighborhood. I know there are only 1 or 2 people in the house and it is lit up like an office building, even after I know they are probably in bed. If you are just passing through, turning off the light requires a 3 way or 4 way loop that probably was not put there by the builder and would be tough to do after the drywall is up. A $20 occupancy sensor, strategically located, connected to a light or two in the right place, fixes all of that. We don't have problems remembering to turn off the lights when we leave a room. I do, however, have the outside lights on the front porch and on either side of the garage on timer switches, and the floods around the house on motion detectors. I'm really okay with flicking a switch on and off when I need light or am leaving. It really isn't a burden to me! |
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