January 18th, 2012
Teen100 asked: I have a vacation home on the CT shore and I was thinking about making it a year round home. What do I need to do to make it up to building code and be sure the pipes don’t freeze in the winter?
Robert
Categories: Maintenance & Repairs |
Tags: Pipes, Seasonal Home, Vacation Home | 1 Comment
December 7th, 2011
Deborah D asked: Have vacation home in western NC which will be unoccupied during the winter months. Evening temps routinely below freezing, sometimes high winds, frequent snows. I understand general principles to avoid bursting water pipes and fixtures. I seek a check list to make certain I don’t overlook details.
Shalonda
Categories: Maintenance & Repairs |
Tags: General Principles, Mountain Vacation, Vacation Home | 7 Comments
October 26th, 2010

mrsrafamarquez asked: I have a vacation home in Utah that is vacant & with no furniture. I know I’m supposed to have the heat on to avoid frozen pipes. I know nothing about programmable thermostats/furnaces. My bill was $160 this month & need to adjust my settings. What temperature would be appropriate for an empty home to avoid frozen pipes? Also, how do thermostats work? For example, let’s say I wanted to keep the house at 55 degrees & not any hotter to avoid an $$ bill. How do I adjust the setting? Like, if the heat turns on when it reaches 55 F degrees, then for how long does it heat the house before the heat turns off & at what temperature does it heat it when it turns on when it reaches 55 F degrees?
I read this online but don’t know what they mean:
“The savings depend on the temperature that the unit is set back to & the length of time for the “setback” periods. Obviously, a setback of 10° saves more energy than one of 5°. Similarly, a 10 hr setback period saves more than a 5 hr setback.”
Thanks!
Thanks for the replies.
I have a programmable thermostat installed already since the house is new.
I also have no water service so everything water-related is shut off. So if the water is shut, pipes won’t freeze, right?
I guess my question was, once I set the
temperature to be 55 F constantly, when the heater turns on, does it stay on until the house is back to the 55 F temperature and then shuts off?
Also, what does ” setback the temperature” mean?
Is it true if there are unused rooms(all 6) in the house, that covering the air/heating vents will help preserve heat?
Thanks in advance and sorry for the confusion; I’m young and a girl so I know nothing about this.
Robert
Categories: Maintenance & Repairs |
Tags: Thermostat, Vacation Home | 5 Comments
October 26th, 2010
Giulia1974 asked:
What do you find most important when renting a vacation home from an owner/company you haven’t used before? What had convinced you in the past to choose one vacation home over another?
Timothy
Categories: Destinations |
Tags: Renting, Vacation Home | 5 Comments
October 9th, 2010
Ron S asked:
I purchased a vacation home early last year for my use only and was able to pay for the home.
Eric
Categories: Uncategorized |
Tags: Purchase Price, Vacation Home | 6 Comments