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Question:

Can I wear a shirt that has safety pins in it to school?

I checked the dress code, and it says Students are not permitted to wear clothing which presents a safety hazard. I don't consider the shirt a safety hazard or I wouldn't wear it. The shirt has 5 safety pins stuck in the front. People wear safety pin earrings all the time also. So do you think my school would allow it or no?

Answer:

Some smoke detectors detect lack of oxygen, not smoke. They can be triggered by innocent things like hairspray so you need to think whether there i something you are doing that is setting them off. If not, see above answers.
u should replace a smoke detector ever 5 yrs. battery every year. ck those dates
Either the batteries are low, the detector is faulty (old) or, if wired in, the wiring needs attention.
I've had this happen in my rentals when they were hard wired and there was no heat or fire. My electrician said they need to be vacuumed out every now and again because dust gets inside of them causing a false detection. One unit he had to completely rewire because the 10 year tenant was a smoker and the stuff inside of the unit, on the wires and covers was simply to gunky for the vacuum or canned air to blow off. Any liquid cleaner would have damaged the unit. If yours are battery operated, change the battery and have a look at the guts to determine whether it needs a cleaning. Ones around cooking areas are subject to a lot of grease accumulation and if that is the case, replace the unit.
First off, the plumber DID NOT install incorrect type of piping for your natural gas water heater's water supply. Galvanized pipes have been used for water transport from one point to another, on both well and municipal water supplies for close to a century, and they all rust, to one degree or another, depending on several things, only one of which is the amount of impurities in the water supply. Galvanized pipes may not be used for the movement or transport of natural gas, however, so if there are any galvanized pipes in your gas line, that's a no no. If the plumber installed the unit in the proper place with the proper overflow setup and a code satisfying water supply method, then he's off the hook entirely, if he wants to be. Seems like he's already giving you a deal on the cost of the needed materials to use to keep this from happening again. I wouldn't be crying about the cost of the labor too. Well water doesn't necessarily take a different, or any specific type of piping, so saying that the plumber knew the heater was going to be installed on a well water system means nothing.Many homeowners abd plumbers prefer rigid copper as a good reliable water supply line system. That will last about 30 years, generally, before it starts with the pitting, and outside corrosion which will lead to pinhole leaks, sometimes inside walls. The longest lasting materials, just recently introduced to the market, and preferred by many plumbers is called Pex. It's a flexible piping system that can be snaked around corners, up and over, down and through olaces that most other piping either just plain can't get to, or are extremely difficult and time consuming to get done. It's quicker and easier and saves time and money and will last nearly indefinitely. It would be my choice as the way to go.Once again, Tipster, read the question before you answer. They're not talking about the gas lines, they're talking about the water lines..

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