where would be the best place to get material for an organization 13 cloak and what type of material is best?
do not want to worry you but keeping the switch turned off will not switch off the power to the light, there is always live connections at the light. if you have circiut breakers or a rcd the fuses will go anyway if water gets to the connection best thing to do is, switch off the power, remove the screws in the light fitting and gently pull the wires about 6 through the ceiling and let the fitting hang. then switch on the power again.
You live on the eastern seaboard, don't you, or phili, because these are the only two places in the entire country that you would have this problem. Sorry, but I'm going to go for a nice relaxing walk in my suburban Iowa neighborhood with my mp3 player and enjoy the night, but first I'm gonna finish my beer. If it makes you fees any better, I just got let go from my $70k per year job due to downsizing, so that oughta help. Good luck bro. -john in Iowa
It's not supposed to set it off but yeah it can, I think the steam confuses the little air sensor in the unit. the best way is to leave the fan on in the bathroom during your shower and do everything you need in the bathroom before opening the door, making opening the door the last thing you do.
I have found that an ordinary kitchen sponge pot scourer does the trick not only in the car, but sofas and clothes and just about on anything.
I had a leak in my den that was there for 2 concurrent reasons. 1- There was a hole around the drain pipe that leads to the roof. Supposedly, when this pipe is installed a silver cone (aluminum) goes around it and then tar to patch it up. IF you use the wrong size cone to begin with, it becomes a point of least resisitance and eventually breaks through and you get a leak because that pipe goes up through the roof. My roofer told me this was very common. My advice to you is to get a different roofer to give you an opinion on the roof, especially since you do not have any POSSIBLE leaking pipes above you like I did: Read on, just in case I really am not capturing the anatomy of your space 2- I have a bathroom right over my den. When they originally installed the shower stall (no bathtub, just a standing shower space) they were supposed to put some kind of rubber looking like protection underneath the tile. They did do that but it eventually got a hole in it and in addtion they had cut it (that red sheet) too small. IT's almost like a big giant red rubber sheet that they throw on underneath all the tile where you step on and the drain goes. It's underneath your feet. Well, that thing whatever it might be called had a hole and it was originally cut too small so it leaked through the hole at times and sometimes it would leak on the edge of the red sheet. It was therefore very confusing because between the roof drain pipe and the 2 issues with this red protective sheet, at times, I felt I had 3 different leaks all going on in the same vicinity. Just so you know: I had some of the copper plumbing replaced, I left the ceiling open and I could still see the leak. I then, called the roofer (he fixed the drain pipe) and I ended up just renovating my entire upstairs bathroom which solved the red sheet issue.