Posts Tagged ‘yourself’

Motivate Yourself By Planning To Shock The Bullies And Critics

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Penis Growth Enlargement including Ways At Home To Enlarge You Penis and Stable Male Enhancement

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Are you irrevocably ready to get a larger penis one that will make you and your girl proud? If you’re anything like many of the guys reading this you not only want to enlarge your maturity but want to do so without all the hype commonly associated with enlargement pills pumps weights and the like. Truth is the vast majority of the enlargement harvest you see out there are marketing fads that will give you even larger frustration and disappointment.

If you’re anything like most of the men reading this you are here because you’re miserable with your penis size and you have the courage to reverse the small maturity that Protect Nature has given you. Keep reading where I’ll reveal the simple truth about penis male enlargement and what will really work to make your penis larger better and more impressive.

Can you break your reproduction organ? Well apparently you can. You should read on previous to attempting natural penis male enlargement.

Do you want to know how to do Jelqing to grow a 9 inch monster? Well you are in the right place because I have some fantastic advice for you that will help you achieve this.

Is it really possible to get a larger penis? I am going to get straight to the point here. Yes it is possible but there is only one way to do it. Read how here.

There are more and more penis male enlargement solutions which are readily available today. A lot of you may question for ways to enlarge your penis that work and not just some scam that will just waste their time and cash including their efforts without seeing the results. This article will discuss the solutions of making your penis longer and thicker.

Detailed Info – Motivate Yourself By Planning To Shock The Bullies And Critics

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Male Enhancement Practice including How To Increase Male Stamina with topics about Genuinely Increase Your Penis Size

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There are a lot of benefits to be garnered from making your penis larger thicker and longer. It can boost your confidence and make sex fantastic. But making this happen can be a lot more hard and this is down to the fact that the penis male enlargement market is full of crap!! In this article I am going to teach you how you can add real gains onto your penis and in the process avoid the trash out there…

No longer do you have to descend for your current penis size. The only real question out there is which method would be best for you. There are several methods available to make your penis larger. Unfortunately you must be careful because some have their downsides.

What’s the most terrible that can happen if you buy a CD and you don’t like it when you get it home? You are just a bit poorer and a bit wiser. But when it comes to your body especially your penis the results could be much more serious.

When is the last time you were pleased being naked? Does this have anything to do with the size of your penis? Being smaller than average can have severe implications on your confidence and sexual performance. If you want to learn how you can become permanently larger than you need to read the following article and learn stable penile growth genuinely…

#EANF#

It’s not very helpful to try and tell yourself that you don’t want a huge penis when that’s clearly untrue practically every man would like a few extra inches! I certainly did – and I didn’t mind admitting it too. I longed to stand out from the crowd and be attractive to women and I knew that the best way to do that way to get myself a MASSIVE maturity. And so that’s what I did – and I used a completely natural approach too. You could grow in just the same way if you want to all you have to do is follow some excellent advice…

Do It Yourself Energy Efficiency Projects: Your Home’s Thermal Envelope (Part 1)

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Many people struggling through the tough economy are not going to be able to take advantage of the 2009-10 Energy Efficiency Tax Credit simply because they can’t meet the expense of new windows and doors, water heaters, or more insulation. But, there are a few things you can do around your home to air seal it to save cash during the winter months and during the summer.

Because of the price and use of energy, architects and builders now design a home to be a “thermal envelope”. That is the sum total of the home’s insulation systems including parapet, ceilings, foundation, floors, windows, and doors. These work more effectively with excellent, tight fits that seal out the weather and air. By having a tight seal on your home’s thermal envelope, the less energy you waste or lose by exchanging it too evenly with the air outside.

So, with this in mind, let’s start at ground amount and work our way up to seal your house.

Moisture Barrier

A moisture barrier (usually plastic sheeting) covers the earth beneath a structure to prevent moisture from insightful the structure from the ground. All-stilted structures last years longer if they are kept dry and out of contact with the ground. For a house, not only does it help prevent rot but it also helps keep the drier. Because moisture in the air holds heat, even during the most humid months, a moisture barrier will make your Texas home feel drier and cooler.

Most Texas homes are built on either a slab or have crawl spaces under them. Houses with slab foundations typically have concrete poured on top of a plastic moisture barrier. This limits the infiltration of moisture into the thermal envelope of the house. Homes with crawl spaces, meanwhile, feature a moisture barrier in their crawl spaces. Some older homes do not have one and these can be installed by the home owner very easily.

A moisture barrier is plastic sheeting, usually about 6-8 mils thick and is available at any hardware store, typically in sizes ranging from 25 × 25 feet to 100 × 100 feet. It also need not be one single piece of plastic. As long as the sheets overlap each other by about 6 inches or so, it will be effectual.

To install, you will need to know the dimensions of your crawl space and buy enough plastic sheeting to cover the ground in that space. Simply cut the plastic sheeting to cover the earth from wall to wall, laying it flat. You can use either black or clear plastic, but I would use clear because black plastic would make your crawl space feel like a cramped version of Batman’s lair.

You should notice the difference within 24 hours. If your house feels too dry, simply fold back some of the plastic sheeting to expose the earth underneath. Take up again adjusting until your home feels the most comfortable to you.

As mentioned, moisture barriers limit the infiltration of moisture into the thermal envelope of the house. The house feels drier: It will be simpler to cool in the summer and less likely to develop mold or contribute to wood rot in the winter.

Mudsill and Rim Joists

The next place to check out is the mudsill. The mudsill is the board that is bolted flat on to the top of the foundation wall. An example of one is a 2×8 board bolted onto the final course of cement blocks. It provides a bed to attach the carpet joists and banding boards for the first floor of the house. Depending on how well it is installed, it can let in a lot of cold air and moisture.

Places to look for gaps is where the mudsill is fastened to the foundation. A common building practice now is to place down a plastic foam gasket over the foundation previous to attaching the pressure treated lumber that will be the mudsill. In older homes, either a paper-backed cellulose material was place down or nothing was used. To find gaps, get as close as possible to the mudsill from the inside and look for daylight bright through between the mudsill and the foundation wall and feel for a recruit of cool air.

If your foundation is made of cement blocks, look for the vertical joints between the blocks. When these blocks are place into place, the mortar between the blocks evenly slumps leaving thin mortar or none at all. Over time as the house settles, holes can appear. While these might be small holes that let through tiny amounts of air, if your home has 10 or 20 of them, you’re letting in a lot of weather and insects. Seal every hole you find with silicon caulk or expanding foam.

A further place along the mudsill to look for is where the rim joists attach. The rim joist (sometimes called “banding joist”) is the piece of wood that closes off the end of the carpet joist or is the last floor joist underneath the exterior wall. The bottom edge is not automatically an air-tight seal. In fact, I lived in one older house where there was a half-inch gap between the rim joist and mudsill. Now, while this seems small, the gap ran for the entire part of the house: 25 feet. It was the equivalent of leaving a 24 inch by 24 inch window open all the time. Some supple foam quickly sealed this gap and there was a noticeable improvement in comfort and cost straight away.

Windows

If you have dual-hung stilted sash windows with storm windows that are drafty, there are several ways to make them more energy well-organized.

Make sure the glazing on the glass panes of the sash windows is not cracked or crumbling. The glazing helps hold and seal the glass to the stilted window and thus blocks drafts and quiets rattling – especially from traffic. It also lessens the likelihood that the glass will break if a pet or a child presses against it. Glazing is a touch of a skilled art. That being said, it’s not that hard to do. Re-glazing a window yourself can save you $50 to $100 or more. All you need is glazing putty ($5), a putty knife ($2), some glaziers’ points ($2 for a box of 100) and some time.

First, remove any ancient, cracked, or crumbling glazing with a putty knife. Glazing putty dries to be very, very hard and will last decades. It can be loosened with a heat gun, but keep the gun moving or the heat will crack the glass.

When the ancient putty has been removed, remove all the ancient glaziers’ points. Now, lift out the pane and set it aside. Sand the channel where the pane fits on the stilted sash. Usually, I apply a thin bead of silicone caulk in this channel previous to replacing the glass. This helps to seat and seal the glass pane. This especially helps when working on multiple small panes (called “lights”) separated by thin or fragile stilted mullions (also called “muntins”). Next, insert new glaziers points. This is done by using the putty knife to press points into the stilted sash along the glass pane to keep it in place. Take your time so that you don’t break the glass.

Glazing putty can be bought in either a can or a tube with a shaped tip that fits in a caulking gun. But, it does take some practice to get just the right angle and right amount of putty on the glass. When using the tube mix, keep the 45 degree angled tip steadily against the glass and lay a bead of putty the part of bottom of the pane. If you’re using the putty from the can, roll the putty into long snake (or rope) and place it along the edge of the pane and along the wood. Gently press it into spot so that it forms a nice 45 degree angle with the putty knife. The putty is shaped this way so that water runs off the glass to the edge of the window sash instead of into the window pane channel where it can rot the wood.

The next thing to look for is if your windows close snugly. Both the top and bottom window have what is called a “meeting rail”. On the upper window, it is the bottom of the window and on the bottom window it is the top. These meeting rails are shaped so that they mesh together when they close. This helps seat and seal the window properly. Check to see if the bottom window runs firmly – but not tightly – along the window jamb as you close the window. If it’s too loose and wiggles back and forth, it probably won’t seat very tightly when it’s closed. You can use a putty knife to pry out the window jambs and then re-spot them to improve how tightly the window will close. You might try count felt or self-adhesive foam weather stripping. Also make sure you clean out any debris from the window to ensure the window will seat and seal snugly.

As metal storm windows age, the harder they seem to close. This usually happens because of dirt and deterioration. Make sure the window tracks are clean and free of dirt and debris so the window runs smoothly.

Outside, check that the storm window frame is held tightly in place against the stilted window frame. Screws that hold this frame in place might be loose and might need to be replaced or went to a new spot. Most drafts from storms windows come from where the storm window frame meets the stilted window frame. Once you’re certain the storm window frame is secure, lay a bead of caulk into the seam where the metal storm window frame meets the stilted window frame. Typically, there are two slots cut into the bottom apron of the storm window frame. Do not seal these. These are weep holes that allow condensation to escape.

If you have modern, dual glazed windows (windows with two panes of glass), one of the things to look out for is fogging between the panes. Dual glazed windows are made by attaching a pane of glass with adhesive to either side of a half-inch wide aluminum frame either in a vacuum or a very dry environment. It is then a single unit and is installed into a standardized window frame. Fogging is a sign that the seal on the window unit has disastrous and water vapor has penetrated into the space between the panes. If the fogging is still present in summer, it’s a excellent guess that acids have also leeched in with the water vapor and have permanently etched the window glass. If the fogging disappears when the window warms, then it’s not too late to treat it. Examine the wood of the window for any discoloration from moisture. Look for peeling, flaking paint or soft, gray-colored wood. If you find some, sand it smooth and then seal it with an oil-based enamel or polyurethane. If the wood is very soft, you might try using an epoxy formulated to penetrate and preserve rotten wood. Be sure to mask the glass first with painter’s tape.

A builder installs a door or window with wedges called shims so that the window can float inside a rough opening in the framing. While this lets the door or window open and close unreservedly as it expands and contracts during the year, it also means a lot of outside air can infiltrate your house by getting in around the window frame if it has not been insulated or if it has been hurt. During the summer, it usually isn’t a noticeable problem. During the winter, though, if you see moisture or mildew there could be a problem with the window frame.

Look outside for hurt to the siding and window frame. Look for holes or wet, rotten wood, or even a loose piece of siding. It’s vital to clean and seal problems like these quickly, especially if moisture has been getting inside your wall, because the hurt will just worsen over time. Rotten or hurt siding can be replaced easily with new pieces from the hardware store. Rotten or hurt window sills should be completely removed and replaced and the inside of the wall inspected for mold, rot, and other hurt. But, this is no small job and requires time and skills to complete. It might need the hand of a qualified. For an immediate, fleeting-term fix, clean out the rotten wood as best you can and fill the hole with fiberglass auto body putty. This will provide a hard, waterproof barrier against the weather. Be sure to contour and shape it so that it will not interfere with opening and closing the window.

If moisture or rain is getting into your window frame, check to see if any of your rain gutters run over head. Check to see if these are clogged. Also, consider installing drip edging along the top of your windows to help run water around and away from the windows and siding when it rains. After you’ve installed it, be sure to caulk it in place so moisture can’t penetrate behind it.

A lot of folks consider it hideous to place over your windows but it will keep the wind out: clear plastic sheeting. This is probably the simplest temporary energy fix owners of older homes use to keep cold, damp winter weather out. There are two approaches: Apply the clear plastic sheeting to the outside of the window by stapling it to the wood window frame and then nailing lathe over the stapled edge to secure the plastic. Or apply the plastic sheeting to dual-sided tape on the inside of the window frame (usually available in kits from the home center). To be sure, neither is an attractive solution. But, if you have an older home with dual-hung windows in poor condition, this fleeting-term fix does a lot for only $10 and about 15 minutes of work. In fact, even if your windows close snugly, it might not be a terrible thought for a north-facing window that doesn’t have much of a view.

Energy Well-organized Window Treatments: “It’s Curtains for You!”

Curtains not only add style, color, and privacy to a room, they also act as an insulating blanket for one of the most thermally conductive parts of the house: the windows. Curtains are even more effectual at sealing off a window when they have thermal backing. Thermal backing is usually foam because foam permits water vapor to go through the fabric rather than condensing on the cold side toward the window and causing moisture problems. An bonus benefit to thermal curtains is that they help deaden noise from outside that is normally transmitted into the room by the window glass. In the summer, the curtains also block hot sun.

Thermal curtains can be made even more well-organized by count a valance with a top. Usually, window valances hide the curtain hardware such as the rods and brackets. But, if the valance has a top cover, warm air that would normally circulate down between the cool glass and the back of the curtain is blocked. Valances can be made with plywood and then stained, painted, or covered in fabric.

A further option is a window comforter. These are blanket-like shade that roll down to cover the window. Some are held tightly in place by magnetic strips attached to both the comforter and the window frame.

Irrevocably, one last belt for the dual hung window is the Window Worm. This is a fabric tube about 2 1/2 to 3 inches in diameter and is as long as a window is wide. It is stuffed with quilting foam or cloth scraps and laid along where the top and bottom window sashes meet to help keep out drafts. Longer ones weighted with sand can also be made and placed across the foot of doors.

Do It Yourself Energy Efficiency Projects: Your Home’s Thermal Envelope (Part 2)

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Right now, there are a few things you can do around your home to air seal it to save cash during the winter months and during the summer.

As mentioned in Part 1, your home is a â??thermal envelopeâ?. That is the sum total of the homeâ??s insulation systems: parapet, ceilings, foundation, floors, windows, and doors. These work more effectively with excellent, tight fits that seal out the weather and air. By having a tight seal on your homeâ??s thermal envelope, the less energy you waste or lose by exchanging it too evenly with the air outside.

Now, weâ??re going to look at exterior doors, the laundry center, the water heater tank, HVAC (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning), attic insulation, attic ventilation and rain gutters.

Presenting The Doors!

We all want our doors to be attractive, secure, and weather proof. Like windows, when they are properly installed and kept in excellent condition, they can save you energy and cash. If your door is hard to close or open, moves the total door frame when you open or close the door, rattles when it is closed, or you see daylight and feel a recruit coming from around it, then your door needs work.

When a door doesnâ??t close correctly, it obviously fails to seal. If your exterior door is hard to open or close, the first thing to look for is if a touch is caught in the door or if a touch is sticking out from the door frame, such as a screw head not fully tightened against the hinge. Next, determine with a carpenterâ??s amount whether the door is hanging utterly (straight up and down) and if the door jambs are parallel to each other. Sometimes, a screw head not tightened into the hinge can prevent a door from closing properly and over time deform and come undone the door frame or the door. Also, check to see if any hinges go toward or away from the door jamb or if they wiggle. Hinges should be tightly fastened to the door and the door jamb with no other movement apart from at the hinge joint.

Once I lived in an ancient house and the back door was hard to close because the total frame went with it. It was one of those things I kept putting off to fix. Then one night, I pulled the door shut so hard that I pulled the entire door and door frame out from the wall of the house. I tacked it back in place for the night but the next morning, I settled down to repair it. The original nails had rusted down to the thickness of thread while the stilted shims that kept the door seated properly had rotted because moisture got inside the door frame.

If your door frame moves when you open or close the door, donâ??t place it off repairing it like I did. Fix it now. First, remove the casing from both the inside of the door and the exterior. Be careful â?? evenly in older homes, door casing and other moldings are unique or are no longer available. Sharp-edged casing pry bars are perfect for this. With a small patience and care, you can remove the casing without damaging it too much. A putty knife and a claw hammer are also useful. Again, be patient and careful â?? you are disassembling not destroying.

After you remove the casing, look for any hurt to the wood making up the door frame; such as if it is rotten or split. Check to see if the shims are in place and intact. If everything looks right, check the frame to see if it is utterly. Add shims as needed and check that the door opens and closes correctly. Usually, it is simpler to tack a crumb 1? Ã? 2? across the door when itâ??s closed to seat the door frame properly. When itâ??s utterly and shimmed, carefully nail the frame into place. Next, vacuum debris from the area and seal up seams and gaps with either caulk or expanding foam. Re-fasten the casing and cover up the ancient nail holes with color-matched wood putty.

If you can close a kleenex in your door and then pull it out easily or if your door rattles from noise or the wind, it means itâ??s just not seated snuggly. The simplest early place to for this fix is to add weather stripping. Usually, doors made over the past 25 years have had weather stripping built onto them. But being a door is rough work. Over time, the weather stripping gets stripped from the door. In some cases, the same weather stripping types are still used by the door manufacturer and can be easily replaced. Usually with much older homes, itâ??s not the case. Youâ??ll be either replacing worn-out weather stripping a name else applied, or youâ??ll be putting on groundbreaking new.

First, measure the gap between the door surface and the door jamb at several places. Add about 1/16 of an inch to this measurement and this will give you a rough thickness of the self-adhesive foam or felt you will need to apply. Typically, I apply the foam stripping to the door jamb. Since the door jamb doesnâ??t go somewhere thereâ??s less of a chance for a touch bumping against it and tearing off the foam. The door, on the other hand, is meant to go and will encounter all sort of things in its travels. As mentioned, you want the door to close firmly. Be sure to buy more foam than you will need so you can add and exchange the foam until you have a excellent seal.

If your door is in too terrible of condition to repair, then it really is no longer a topic of weatherization but security. Seriously consider replacing it. Residential exterior doors come in three standard widths: 30, 32, and 36 inches.

Generally, the most insulating material for an exterior door is wood because it doesnâ??t conduct heat as easily as metal, vinyl, or fiberglass. That being said, most inexpensive stilted doors donâ??t fare well over time. They wear quickly in the areas that have the most contact (door handles and foot area), their mounting screws can come undone or tear, and depending on the harshness of the weather they can dry out and split. Steel doors provide better security and stand up to wear but they conduct heat. Wood-core steel doors and foam core doors last longer, are stronger, and better insulated. Fiberglass doors usually are the most strong, durable, and well insulating but tend to be more expensive.

Door Sweeps and Door Jambs with Vinyl Weather-stripping

A doorâ??s most drafty area is along the bottom where it meets the door threshold. Most thresholds are aluminum or stilted ridges that meet the bottom of the door and form a seal. But, since the door is constantly being opened and the threshold is being stepped on, the factory-installed weatherization can wear out quickly. It can be quickly and easily replaced with a self-adhesive vinyl strip that hangs down from the bottom edge of the door. You attach it on the interior side of the door. There is a further kind of door sweep that uses multiple vinyl strips to block drafts. Somewhat more expensive, but it slips on over the bottom edge of the door and is held on with screws.

One product I have used with fantastic success is pvc door jambs with built-in vinyl weather stripping. Mounted on the outside of your door, these door jambs can either replace your existing jambs or slide over them. The vinyl weather-stripping can be pushed up snugly against the door to keep out drafts when the door is closed. Use a circular miter saw to make the proper angled cuts so they can be mounted attractively in place. When they are in spot, they can be quickly nailed or screwed into place and then painted. While I like these, there are many other similar kits that might be more suitable for your particular job.

The Laundry Center

The huge energy users in the laundry area are the washer and the dryer. The typical washer uses about 0.256 kWh per load. The main cost is obviously the amount of hot water the is used during each load. Top loading washers use up to 40 gallons while front loaders use 10-24 gallons. It is simple to cut expenditure here by washing in warm or cold water. But, the main energy savings comes from drying your clothes. Even though modern washing machines do an brilliant job of extracting the water from clothes by spinning them, they still need to be dried.

Dryers tend not to be very energy well-organized because they have one job: force dry, heated air into a rotating drum to evaporate water. Dryers use ten to fifteen percent of domestic energy in the United States. Dryers also produce lint. Lint comes from fibers in your clothing coming loose as the clothes tumble across each other in a dryerâ??s hot drum. Lint not only collects in your dryerâ??s lint trap but also through the dryerâ??s duct work. If lint starts to obstruct or clog your dryerâ??s duct work, the evaporated water from your nice, clean clothes will not leave the system. If the water is trapped, it will take longer and longer for the dryer to work. Therefore, once a year, pull your dryer away from the wall, detach the duct from the bottom of your dryer, and pull out as much lint as you can from the dryer and the duct. The first time you do this, you might be surprised how much you pull out. Youâ??ll also notice a huge improvement in the time it takes for your dryer to dry your clothes.

During the cooler winter months when you are heating your home, you may notice your home feeling drier. While not permanently a terrible thing, if your skin feels dry and itchy or if you notice your sinuses feeling raw and irritated more evenly, maybe your home is too dry. One way around this is to disconnect your dryer vent tubing from the duct work leading out of the house. Place a nylon sock over the end of the vent tubing and tie it in place with a long twist tie or rubber band. (Make sure you block up the vent going outside). This way, every time you run your drier, you will heat and humidify your house too.

Hanging your clothes not only save energy but also helps them last longer. Dry your clothes on a drying rack or clothes line. If you canâ??t hang them outside, you can hang them inside by buying a retractable clothes line (outside models are also available). Set up the line in a hallway of your home and hang your clothes to dry while you are at work. Place a large floor fan in the hallway to help circulate the air. Tumble clothes in the dryer for a few minutes until they are warm. This will relax the fibers and youâ??ll avoid having wrinkled or stiff clothes from hanging.

Getting into Hot Water

The most expensive part of doing laundry is using hot water. And while you might be able to thrash to using warm or cold water for your laundry, having hot water for bathing or cooking or washing dishes is an vital convenience. Currently, the most well-organized way to heat water for a home is an on-demand water heater. While these are increasing in popularity in the US, most homes still rely on the ancient tank-style water heater. In the end, its a 40 or so gallon tank of water that is heated either by natural gas or electric heating elements. Right, the method works well but most of the energy used by tank water heaters is just for maintaining hot water on stand-by and ready for use. That means, itâ??s heating water when you are asleep or at work or on vacation. So, a lot of energy is wasted. Water heater tanks are wrapped with insulation but count more will save energy.

Place a water heater blanket around your water heater. Most water heater blankets at the home center tend to be about an inch thick so that they can be sold in one piece but not be too gray to be held up with tape. These are made of plastic-covered fiberglass and you wrap them around your water heater. In terms of R factors of insulation (R-value indicates an insulationâ??s resistance to heat flow), you will count about 3 Râ??s worth.

You can make water heater blanket with higher R-principles. One method is to use reflective aluminum foil insulation (a.k.a. foil-clad bubble-wrap) and cut enough strips long enough to go around your water heater twice. You could then add the store-bought water heater blanket and have an R-value of more than 7.5. With this amount of insulation, you should be able to turn down your heaterâ??s thermostat and save even more cash.

For safety, do not block any of the control panels, block off the bottom, or place any of insulation across the top of your water heater. Never obstruct the pressure release valve.

Keeping your hot water hot doesnâ??t stop at the water heater. Insulating your hot water pipes will also save energy and cut energy expenditure. Consider this: each time you turn on the tap for your shower, you let the water run until it gets warm. Letâ??s say the pipe from you water heater to your shower is 20 feet long. Now, that might only be a quart but that can turn into a couple of hundred gallons for a family of four in the course of a year. Also, consider that after your shower, there is still hot water in the pipe. By count insulation, that heated water will cool more at a snail’s pace. If you insulate your pipes efficiently enough, heat from the water heater will be more efficiently contained in your hot water pipes. You wonâ??t need to wait as long for that hot water, you will waste less water, and you will save more cash.

Just Ventingâ?¦

There are several ways you can improve the efficiency of your heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system (HVAC). If you have an ancient thermostat that isnâ??t programmable, turn off your furnace path surf, carefully disconnect the thermostat from your wall, and throw it out.

Programmable thermostats can be found for under $25, are commonly found in home centers, and are simple to install. They connect to the same four wire leads that hooked up to your ancient thermostat. By programming temperature settings in your house to be colder during the winter or warmer during the summer when you are asleep or away, you can save energy and cash.

A further simple way of increasing efficiency is to monitor your systemâ??s air filters evenly. Depending on your lifestyle, you should exchange the filters evenly. If where you live tends to be dusty from busy nearby streets or if you have pets, exchange the filters every month. In some homes, it can be done every three months.

While disposable filters are cheaper, their expense builds quickly over time. Consider purchasing two washable air filters. Washable air filters usually cost less than $20 and can be rinsed out in a bathtub with hot, soapy water (in the summer, I hit mine with a pressure washer). By buying two, you can swap in a clean, dry one right way when its time to exchange out the other dirty filter.

One way to significantly improve your HVAC is to check your duct work thoroughly to be sure the system is sealed. A home owner can save up to $300 from their once a year heating and cooling expenditure by sealing their duct work. Start at your HVAC system and feel for moving air coming from small holes or gaps in the duct work. When you find one, place a piece of aluminum HVAC tape over the hole. Remember: The volume of air leaked adds up; the more leaks you have the less well-organized your system is. Check the entire run of your duct work; feel for air leaking from ductwork seams and loose joints. Check at the corners where the metal is folded for leaks, too. Also, make sure that air intake vents are not blocked by furniture or clogged with pet fur.

According to the U.S. Department of Energy Home Energy Saver website, insulating ducts in the typical American home expenditure about $250. Duct insulation will pay for itself in energy savings in about two and a half years, and take up again to save energy and cash in years to come. Depending on your duct work, there are many ways of doing this. Some 6 inch and 8 inch diameter sheet-metal ductwork can be replaced with insulated flexible ducting that expenditure less than $40 for 25 feet at a home center. If you use this, be sure to attach it so that it is snug with the supply ductwork and use aluminum HVAC tape. Other rectangular metal ductwork can be insulated with reflective aluminum foil insulation (foil-clad bubble-wrap), craft-faced fiberglass insulation, and fixed gray duct tape.

Remember: you do not need to insulate the HVAC system intake ductwork, just the output side.

The Thing in the Attic

Unless your attic is finished, your attic space is essentially just outside your houseâ??s enclosed thermal envelope. Heated air rises and conducts that heat into the structure and air of your attic and from there to space. Only one thing efficiently maintains and spreads the preferred temperature inside your house: insulation.

Heating and air conditioning account for 50 to 70% of the energy used in the average American home. Inadequate insulation and air leakage are leading causes of energy waste in most homes. Air sealing wonâ??t benefit a total lot if there is insufficient insulation for the total house. Right through most of the country, the US DOE recommends at least R30 (about 1 foot of blown cellulose or fiberglass) for attic insulation and a minimum of a R13 (a bit more than 3 inches of blown cellulose or fiberglass) in the parapet. (http://www.ornl.gov/sci/roofs+parapet/insulation/ins_06.html) Unfortunately, most homes built in the past two decades are built with R13 in the parapet and attic; few have R30 in the attic.

Letâ??s say your home has R13 of blown cellulose insulation in the attic. The attic measures 1750 square feet and weâ??ll assume that the insulation has settled. To bring it up to at least R30, we need to add a further 17 R-valueâ??s of insulation to the attic. The simplest way to do this is to either apply a further 5 inches of blown cellulose or place down un-faced R19 fiberglass batts (about 6 inches thick).

To figure the cost for blown cellulose to cover the attic space, multiply the square record by the thickness. Therefore: 1750 Ã? 5 inches (or .416 feet)= 728 cu ft. The home center sells bags that are 16 cu. ft. Divide the 728 cu. ft. by 16 cu. ft and you get 46 (16 cu ft) bags. Some home centers may include the free rental of their blowing equipment as an incentive; others may not. To make the insulation work effectively, it must be spread evenly right through the attic so that no thin a skin condition or hollows are formed. Also, to keep the insulation out of soffiting, dams need to be built and installed at the end of each ceiling joist (or around light fixtures) previous to turning on the insulation blower.

Fiberglass insulation is typically figured by square foot. Rolls of R19 come in 23 inches wide or 16 inches wide. This is so the insulation fits between the joists. Roll lengths vary, usually between 48 and 77 feet long (though batts are available). What you should watch out for is just how huge the roll is. In other words â?? can you get it through the atticâ??s entrance or trap door?

Once youâ??ve chose on what size works for you, divide the square record (our 1750 square feet) by the part and you have the number of rolls you need. Craft-faced insulation has a paper vapor barrier facing. Because insulation is being added on top of other insulation in this case there is no need for the paper vapor barrier facing. While it is more expensive that the blown cellulose, fiberglass batts are convenient sizes that can be positioned and laid in place or trimmed as needed. And itâ??s permanently better to have extra.

Now, letâ??s say youâ??ve figured out how much you needâ?¦and that you canâ??t meet the expense of more than $50 at a stretch. Not to worry. The fantastic thing about insulating is that it doesnâ??t need to be done all at once. You can take your time and build on it. The best way, though, is to figure out what area of your home you want to insulate first. Consider these two things: where is your thermostat located and where do you spend most of your waking hours in the home? Usually, the thermostat is in the living room and thatâ??s were most people spend their time. The solution is simple here: lay in your first bundles of insulation over this room. But if your thermostat is in the living room and you spend your time in a further room, such as a home office, you may wish to divide your insulation between the area over the thermostat and the office. In this instance, itâ??s best to take time to choose what priorities fit your lifestyle and how to proceed from there.

The autumn is the best time to install insulation in your attic. After all, during the summer, it could reach as high as 150° F, especially in a poorly ventilated attic. But, if you want to start saving cash now during the peak heating season as well as later on during the air conditioning season, now is the best time to do the job. So, hereâ??s some tips on how to make the job simple:

Heat Shield to Maximum!

Your roof is a heat shield for your house. But in order for it to work at peak efficiency, it needs to be adequately ventilated. The Inhabitant Roofing Contractors Association recommends 1 square foot of ventilation opening should be provided for every 150 square feet of ceiling area. (http://www.nrca.net/consumer/fyi.aspx)

If youâ??ve ever ventured into an attic on a sunny summer day, you know how hot it can be. Temperatures can easily reach 150° F. Trapped heat increases your air conditionerâ??s heat load. This raises your energy expenditure. Trapped heat also can hurt the plywood sheathing, under-layment, shingles and personal bits and pieces located inside the attic.

Roof ventilation works with two kinds of vents, an exhaust and an intake. Heated attic air flows out through a vent in the upper part of the roof. This pulls in cooler air to penetrate through intake vents located down in the soffiting or fascia board. Most houses built in the 1960s onwards use a combination of soffit vents and either gable vents, roof vents, or ridge venting to allow air to flow through the attic. By allowing the attic to breathe and circulate heated air out, the house is better able to let go of the heat it absorbs during the day.

Retrofitting roof vents is not as hard as it sounds. Nevertheless, it can be daunting to climb onto your roof and cut holes into it. I have found the simplest to install is the ridgevent system. Ridgevents come in metal or plastic kits. It has a hollow inside and either vents along its sides or under a overhang. By with a leg on each side of a slot cut though the sheathing at the roofâ??s ridge or peak, it allows heated attic air to leave without letting rain inside.

The actual installation practice varies slightly depending on the kit you use but very in the end remove the top cap of shingles on the roof, and use a circular saw to cut a one inch wide piece of sheathing from either side of the roofâ??s ridge. If youâ??re installing full part venting, youâ??ll be cutting two slots the entire part of your roof so use a sharp blade and take your time. Afterwards, attach the ridge vent and caulk down the loose ends.

Now that youâ??ve seen what to look for in your home thermal envelope, you can start plotting where to start, whether itâ??s parapet, ceilings, foundation, floors, windows, doors, or the roof. And while itâ??s import to consider how your home works as a total, approach improving it one step at a time. Dividing the project of sealing your home into smaller, manageable jobs around the house makes it simpler to tackle. Consider that all these jobs donâ??t need to be done all together all at once. Tackle ridgevents one weekend, insulation a further, or a new thermostat some weeknight after dinner. You should notice more energy efficiency â?? but slight â?? after each improvement. They will add up and you will save cash and your home will feel more comfortable. But be sure to take your time preparing and researching, read the instructions, and use excellent tools.

Above all, be careful when considering projects that seem beyond your skill amount. If in doubt, hire a qualified. After all, sometimes doing-it-yourself can really do-it-to-you.

Quickly Read Xbox Repair Guides and Finish Xbox Red Ring of Death Fix Yourself Easily in 1 Hour

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

The simple step for Xbox red ring of death fix is the most question of the Xbox users. It is also the one that can be the toughest to repair. Unless you know what you are doing and you can do it easily by learn from reliable Xbox repair guides.

 

Previous to learn Xbox red ring of death fix, you should know the produce of this error. This error is caused by a combination of overheating and other factors. The end result is that the console will start to show these errors until ultimately it will stop working altogether.

 

If you have suffered from this problem there are a few steps you can take to fix it quickly.

 

1) If the console is under warranty do not try and repair it yourself. Send it back to Microsoft so you do not invalidate the warranty. The repairing time is around 1-2 months, Microsoft will do Xbox red ring of death fix and send it back to you in 1-2 months without repair cost.

 

2) If the warranty has expired Microsoft will charge you a minimum $140 and the cost of the repair can cost more than a new console.

 

If the above ways are not the best for you, there are some steps you can take to carry out an Xbox red ring of death fix yourself by following Xbox repair guides and you do not need any technical knowledge to do it.

 

 

People have tried many fixes for this including wrapping the unit in a wet rub down to cool it down. This only serves to make it scorch even quicker as no cool air enters the console.

 

The best way to fix this red light of death error is with a step by step Xbox repair guides that will show you with video and audio how to repair this error permanently without any technical knowledge.

 

In personally, I want to recommend you to select one of these 3 Xbox repair guides, they are very standard and work very well for all Xbox user around the world, such are “3 Red Lights Fix Repair Guide”, “3 Red Lights Fix by James Dean”, “Xbox 360 3 Red Lights Fix by Chris Jones”. You can read more detail and compare them by Click Here!

 

 

Fix Xbox 360 3 Red Rings Yourself Easily – Forget Xbox Repair Shops, Xbox Repair Services

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

How to fix Xbox 360 3 red rings, if you know this, you will forget to find the Xbox repair shops and no need to pay $150 for Xbox repair air force. You want to make sure there is not simple solution previous to early repairs.

If it still displays the Xbox 360 3 red rings, then you have hard ware failure and the only solution is to get it fixed. How to fix three red lights on your Xbox 360?

You have 3 options to select:

1) You send your Xbox 360 to Xbox repair air force at Microsoft. It takes at least 1-2 months to repair and not to free of charge, its cost around $140-$150.

2) You can send it to the confidential Xbox repair shops. This can take a repair time for 1-2 weeks, but the expenditure may be high. This is because you have to pay repair expenditure, the hours of work they place into it, etc. This can cost you around $100,- Not really low-cost for a small problem…

3) The third and best option you have is to fix Xbox 360 3 red rings yourself. The Xbox 360 Error Fix doesn’t really take a lot of time. In topic of fact, it can take you less than 1 hour! And the expenditure will be pretty much close to $25-$30. You can learn how to fix Xbox 360 3 red rings (include other errors on Xbox console) from the Xbox repair guides thatâ??re standard on internet. By this way, you will pleased and forget the Xbox repair shops and Xbox repair air force.

Recently there have been a few repair guides which have appeared online with step by step blueprints and detailed video education. Making it simple for anyone to properly repair the three red lights error. Don’t worry too much if you are not very handy. Even novices like me have been able to complete the repair process in about an hour and you can see them by Click Here!

Not having to package up and ship your gaming console to a name who may or may not fix it properly is a huge burden lifted off your shoulders. Especially with some of the suggested prices they charge. I would rather save a hundred dollars and buy two new games fixing it myself, than let a name else do it.

This is roughly about how to fix Xbox 360 3 red rings and forget to find the Xbox repair shops and no need to pay $150 for Xbox repair air force.

Now, itâ??s no need to find Xbox repair shops, no need to pay $150 for Xbox repair air force at Microsoft, believe me, you can back to play you beloved games in 2-3 hours by fix it yourself.

 

 

Tweeting yourself to a Better Career

Monday, February 15th, 2010

The convergence of PR and social media is inevitable, and the ways in which those of us in the industry use social media take up again to expand. One area that has seen some appealing changes is recruiting, and the role played by social networks. Nearly everyone is familiar with LinkedIn, a very square yet very useful tool for both the recruiter and the qualified looking to make a career exchange now, or just interested in building out a network of people in the industry. Facebook, too, which in 2007 opened its doors beyond its college/university roots to professionals is finding increasing adoption among recruiters.

More appealing still is the use of what I would call emerging tools, either newer social networks or social media tools that might not be immediately associated with a career search, but which you might want to look into any way.

Lately, I have been spending a lot more time on Twitter, which can best be described as a global instant messaging system. I won’t place forward a Twitter tutorial here, but here’s the quick downlow on it. Twitter was launched in 2006, and in 2007, after winning a high profile industry award, the service really started to take off and soon became a phenomenon. Twitter comes under a new social media bearing called “microblogging,” tools that let you blog simply, quickly, and tersely. Twitter is in the end IM, limited to 140 characters. Like most social media, Twitter is free. You sign up, establish an identity and then add people that you are “following” on Twitter. Twitter describes its various features and events in a very unique way, which might be part of the “terrible press” it has expected. Your posts are called “updates” or “tweets.” You are “following” the people whose updates you add to your “timeline,” and the people who add you to their timeline are called “followers.” (If you want to see what Twitter looks like in action, just go to the home page and click “Public Timeline.”)

For a long time, many people criticized Twitter as an endless stream of narcissistic and mundane chatter. Recently, but, as people have cultured to adapt Twitter to more vital tasks than communicating that you have just fed your cat, the service has begun to see a number of appealing commercial uses.

Many recruiters are now using Twitter to better connect with candidates. A search on the term “recruit” on Twitter’s home page returns 87 people somehow associated with recruiting. (Not all of them are recruiters. Check the user profiles for more information on each person.) Among these is Lindsay Olson, PRJobs on Twitter, a public relations recruiter. I “met” Lindsay through Twitter. I was impressed by how she uses Twitter. Lindsay “converses” with people on Twitter in a very natural way, letting them see the daily worklife of a recruiter. In this way, Lindsay develops credibility, and builds friendships with a large number of candidates and relations to potential candidates.

I interviewed Lindsay by email on how she uses Twitter. She confirmed my view, which is that any “commercial” use of social media requires an understanding of the etiquette and unique attributes of the medium, and a willingness to downplay hype and square marketing tactics:

“As a recruiter and business qualified utilizing social media technologies in my business, I reckon the single most vital way of communicating this way is by unification the conversation as a peer, and interacting on a personal amount. If you are just throwing links to your jobs and your business out there, your followers get sick of the shameless self-promotion. I reckon the day in the life of a recruiter is somewhat of a mystery to many people, especially potential candidates, and have found Twitter to be an brilliant tool to share my profession. I feel that sharing my successes, failures and experiences in recruiting is helpful for people to understanding how to better interact with a recruiter as well as potential hiring companies.”

Many recruiters, and business people in general, have been reluctant to use social networks for commercial purposes due to privacy concerns. In fact, I contacted one recruiter, who uses Facebook and LinkedIn but not Twitter, and she agreed to speak with me for this piece, but only as an unidentified background source.

I questioned Lindsay about this and she said that it is not “a concern as long as our clients’ and candidates’ confidentiality is respected in public,” which she makes a part of the rules she holds herself to in her use of all social media.

I strongly recommend looking into Twitter and other “alternative” social media as part of your career networking plot. The world of Web 2.0 — blogs, podcasts, wikis, social networks, etc. — is a highly connected and visible one. This high visibility environment has its etiquette, and brings with it the learning curve of any new technology, but the rewards of being so visible and so well connected to the right people can far outweigh the effort required to get up to speed.

Learning Tweet Terms – How to Make Yourself Understood on Twitter

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

When you first step into Twitter space, you will wonder what everybody is tweeting about. New users can be perfectly confused with Twitter terms; but you will soon get the hang of it. Most Twitter terms start with the letters ‘tw.’ For example, “peep” means a twitter message. tweetup means a Twitter meetup. Previous to you peep to other Twitter users, you ought to know the following basic Twitter terms in order to make yourself understood.

WeFollow, Twellow, and Justtweetit are some Twitter directories that can also give you plenty of information on hashtags and tag tracking. While tracking other hashtags, it pays to add your own to the directory, especially if you specialize in a particular niche.

To learn more exciting Twitter terms, stay: http://twitter.com/help/lingo

You might be wondering why Twitter has a different language. The reason for this is simple. Like all Web 2.0 sites, the prosperity of Twitter depends completely on the feature of the material posted by its users. Twitter is of value today because of the valuable tweets of its users. Twitter will flourish only if the Twitter community superfluities. And, for any community to flourish there must be a basic set of rules and regulations pertaining to language. The guidelines are not to curb the frankness of the users, but only to enable the smooth functioning of Twitter. As you take up again using Twitter, you will observe that using Twitter language will really enrich your Twitter experience.

Do It Yourself SEO: How to Generate Free, High Pagerank Links Quickly and Easily

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Here’s a quick and simple search engine optimization (SEO)
practice that anyone can use to generate free, high Google
pagerank links to their site.

SEO in a nutshell: get feature links to your site; the higher
the pagerank, the better.

The problem is that if you submit your site to a high pagerank
directory or search engine, it can take months for your site to
appear. Moreover, many high PR directories and search engines
charge huge bucks for the privilege of getting listed with them.
For example, the Open Directory Project (DMOZ) directory takes
several months or more to list a site. And Yahoo charges $299
per year for a commercial site to be listed in their directory.

While it’s fantastic to be listed in these directories and search
engines, many will involuntarily find and list your site free if
you have excellent feature links to your site. High pagerank links to
your site indicate to many search engines that other sites that
they rate highly link to you. Therefore, they conclude, your
site will probably be useful to their users. So you deserve a
higher pagerank, according to Google. And the higher your
pagerank, the better your search engine visibility. It’s part of
the SEO game and you can learn how to play.

Now here’s my secret to getting some high pagerank sites to link
to you immediately and at no charge.

First you need to make a web page on your site with a list of
links. You will be count links to other sites on your links
page in exchange for these sites count your link to their link
pages. So let’s call this page a reciprocal links page. You
don’t just add any site to your reciprocal links page, but.
You will be looking for high pagerank links to add to your links
page. It’s better if you include links to sites that are related
to your harvest or air force. To make search engines pleased,
limit each of your reciprocal links pages to about 50 links.

Many sites maintain their reciprocal link pages using the free
LinkMan script from PHPJunkYard. If you wish, you could do the
same, but it is not necessary. You can download this php script
from http://phpjunkyard.com

The LinkMan script allows a site’s visitors to add their links
immediately after they add links to the site on their pages. So
all you have to do is to find sites using this LinkMan script,
add their link to your reciprocal links page, and you can
immediately add your link to theirs.

Because the LinkMan script is free, the developer requires the
following notice on the links page: “Powered by Link manager
LinkMan 1.02 from PHPJunkYard – free php scripts.”

You can find sites using LinkMan then by searching for the exact
phrase “Powered by Link manager LinkMan 1.02 from PHPJunkYard”
on Google, for example. Note that there are other scripts named
Linkman, so you should not just search for “LinkMan”. Play
around with your search phrase to find also sites using earlier
versions of LinkMan.

Stay some PHPJunkYard LinkMan link pages with a browser showing
the Google pagerank. You will very soon come across a site using
LinkMan that has a high Google pagerank. Bingo! Add their link
to your reciprocal links page and then add your link to theirs.
You immediately have a free link on a high pagerank site. Free
instant SEO!

And that’s a quick and simple search engine optimization practice
you can use to generate free, high pagerank links.

——————————————–

Copyright (c) 2005 by Kempton Smith. 707 words. This article may
be unreservedly in print if its entire content and links are kept
intact

Broadcasting yourself to the World – How to Set Your Blog on Fire!

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Even if you have a blog, still you need people to stay it right. It is more challenging than you reckon to make thousands flock everyday to read your blog especially with the millions of blogs online.  To make things even harder, blogs don’t have simple URLs or web addresses like websites. The blog URL usually is the name of the website hosting your blog then the name of your blog which turns up to be a very long URL.

Nevertheless, if there is a well there is a way! There are many effectual techniques to use to promote your blog successfully. Some of these techniques are so simple that you will say to yourself why I didn’t reckon of that. Here proven free ways of promoting your blog:-

1-    Connecting with other blogs: – Blogs are a huge community now. Even Google the largest search engine has made a total category by itself for searching for information in blogs. What I’m trying to say is you should connect with other blogs in the community to promote yours. You can stay other highly standard blogs and participate in discussions and make comments. Remember, every time you participate, leave your marks behind! Meaning a link to your own blog! Reckon of it as a piggy back approach. Also, other blog owners will be glad to place a link to your blog if you do the same.

 

2-    Your email signature: – Let me question you this, how many emails you send a day? Or a better question will be how many in a week? I can safely say, at least 10 emails a week. There is this small section at the bottom of every email that you send and called the signature. Of course you know it! Your name, address, phone and other contacts are there right. Add your blog address too! That’s a free unremitting advertising tool that you can benefit from.

 

3-    Web 2.0 anyone?: – That’s a further name for the social networking mega trend that is spreading on the internet like wildfire! Face book, My space, Squidoo, Dig, linkedin, Fubar, deliciousio, Buzznet and hundreds more. These social networking sites are just stacked full of people who want to see what others got! Every time you make an entry in your blog, share it with minimum 5 social websites! Just open financial statement in 5 to 10 social networking sites and post in parallel with you blog. Don’t forget to link to your blog!

 

4-    Using blog directories:- Reckon of it this way, in this age, the internet is full of millions and millions of websites, blogs, social sites, forums, e-zines, article directories and the list goes on. Because of this, thousands of directories have been set up to lead people to these blogs, social sites, forums, e-zines, article directories etc. Yes you got it! Blog directories. Include your blog in blog directories, but wait there are so many. Pick the directories that rank high in Alexa ranking. Download Alexa toolbar to help you determine which ones rank higher than others.

 

5-    Use newsletters to promote your blog: – You can really do this in 2 ways. The first one is that many newsletters are looking for excellent and unique content. If you have excellent and unique content in your blog, a lot of these newsletters will gladly use your blog entries as content for their periodical mailings. Of course, they will allusion the content back to your blog. The other way is to own a mailing list yourself and use your blog’s content as the newsletter’s content mentioning the blog with every mailing of course!

 

6-    Using forums and online groups: – Forums and online groups are the closest relatives of blogs. You can easily connect with other people in forums and groups and invite them to your blog to view your thoughts and insights and they will gladly come.

 

One final vital note, the better the feature of the content you have in your blog, the better your chances of getting people to like your blog and keep coming back. No topic how long you work hard to promote your blog, if you don’t have excellent content that people will come back for, you will fail! Even search engines, which like blogs by nature, will not index your blog if it has low feature content.

For more info stay http://www.internet-business-and-cash.com

 

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