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    DIY Home Improvement | How to Videos and Articles | Danny … - July 6, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    DIY Extension Ladder Rail Covers Its important to cover the ends of extension ladder rails with protective covers to keep from damaging your house. Watch this video to find out how to make ladder covers the easy way using a foam pool noodle. Southern Romance Project: Episode 8, Front Porch Tea Party Watch the eighth in a 13-part series of web videos on the renovation of a historic Southern home as Phantom Screens CEO Esther De Wolde holds a tea party on the front porch of her house. July Home Maintenance To-Do List July means summer has arrived in full force. But before heading out for your summer vacation, take the time to tackle these needed home maintenance chores, including water heater and driveway maintenance, cleaning sink and tub drains, and inspecting your crawlspace. Read on to find out more. How To Grow Oriental Poppies in Your Garden Oriental poppies are long-lived and easy to grow perennials, but they dont behave quite like other garden plants. Read on to find out what you need to know to grow and enjoy Oriental poppies in your garden. Fixing Carpet Floor Squeaks in Your Home Learn how to find and repair a squeaky wood or plywood subfloor under carpeted floors in your home. Watch this video to find out more.

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    DIY Home Improvement | How to Videos and Articles | Danny ...

    Lexington Computer Repair BlogSolved: Missing Base … - July 5, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Home > Uncategorized > Solved: Missing Base Filtering Engine in Windows 7 December 12th, 2011 admin

    UPDATE 21 Jan 2012: If you are missing just BFE, the information below should be helpful. However, if you are missing BFE, Windows Firewall, Security Center and a couple of other services after a virus infection, you are going to need a more comprehensive security services fix. The second post by Farstrider (that starts you can also try this:) works great. After getting the Norton 5013,3 error on yet another customer computer, I found this solution fixed the Norton problem without requiring me to reinstall the OS. HOWEVER, even still the Security Center service was still not starting, fixing that required me to download and run the Security Center registry entry from here (reboot afterward). Good Luck.

    It looks like there is a virus now that can take out the Base Filtering Engine Service in Windows 7, and I suppose then in Vista and XP as well. I noticed this problem on a computer that I removed a virus from. Everything looked fine until I went to install Norton Antivirus and it barfed with an error message about Error 5013,3. The instructions to fix the problem included restarting the Base Filtering Engine Service but oops, it wasnt even there. As it turns out, the fix for this is easier than you might think.

    The fix I used was to recreate the BFE service entry in the registry, which had been deleted. The registry entry that needs to be recreated is:

    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetservicesBFE

    According to this Microsoft Technet article, you can just export the key from a working machine of the same OS and import it (just double click on the exported and moved .reg file) into the problem machine. I can tell you this absolutely worked like a charm for me.

    WordPress wont let me attach a copy of my Windows 7 x64 BFE entry, but if you need one, this link should work, otherwise leave a comment and Ill try and mail it to you..

    More here:
    Lexington Computer Repair BlogSolved: Missing Base ...

    Leading Kitchen and Bath Industry Show | KBIS Event for … - July 5, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The Kitchen & Bath Industry Show (KBIS) is North Americas premier annual event dedicated to the kitchen and bath industry. KBIS is the voice of the kitchen and bath industry and has been for 50 years.

    Owned by the National Kitchen and Bath Association (NKBA), KBIS is an inspiring, interactive platform that showcases the latest product innovations and trends from leading kitchen and bath brands. Each year kitchen and bath designers, dealers, architects, builders, and remodelers from all over the world attend KBIS to not only discover the newest product innovations, but to also take advantage of the education and networking.

    Whether you are looking to stay up to date on the latest kitchen and bath design trends or focus on business-related topics, the NKBAs learning program & conference has you covered. The NKBA learning program at KBIS applies to all segments of the industry and is designed to foster professional growth. Most importantly the conference series allows attendees to hear the best presentations from their fellow colleagues in the kitchen and bath industry.

    KBIS also offers unlimited networking potential. With a variety of special events, parties, and receptions taking place outside of the exhibit hall, there are many opportunities to connect with fellow kitchen and bath industry professionals and forge new business relationships.

    From parties to educational seminars to designer-oriented programs, KBIS is full of ways for you to engage with your peers and immerse yourself in the kitchen and bath industry.

    Kitchen Dealers, Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers, Bathroom Fabricators, Kitchen Supply Manufacturers , Kitchen Installers, Kitchen Remodelers, Kitchen Architects, Cabinets, Countertops, Hardware, Kitchen Lighting, Accessories, Appliances, Building Materials & Systems/Maintenance, Business Services, Cabinets, Countertops, Flooring, Hardware, Kitchen Technology, Kitchen Lighting, Outdoor Living, Plumbing

    Continued here:
    Leading Kitchen and Bath Industry Show | KBIS Event for ...

    Remodel Your Kitchen at Wholesale Prices with DirectBuy … - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Buy Kitchen Remodeling Products Direct

    DirectBuy offers you a huge selection of kitchen remodeling materials such as kitchen cabinets, flooring, appliances, furniture, outdoor kitchen supplies and much more at direct dealer prices. DirectBuy has the kitchen remodeling materials you need to help refashion your kitchen in style all with no hidden retail markup.

    Visit a DirectBuy Club and discover how DirectBuy members are able to buy direct from hundreds of top manufacturers and their authorized suppliers.

    Supplied with virtually everything you need to remodel your home, including kitchen remodeling materials, DirectBuy gives you exclusive access to several hundred brand-name manufacturers and their authorized suppliers in the U.S. and Canada.

    This means you get incredible savings shopping direct from the source without having to worry about paying the middleman.

    Its easy to update your kitchen but it doesnt hurt to have the help of a professional design team. DirectBuy offers design services to help you pick out new cabinets, determine which decorative backsplash will look best behind your stove and discover the right style of tile for resurfacing your floors.

    DirectBuy has all the products you need to remodel your kitchen in one place, direct from the source.

    Get Your Free Visitor's Pass Now!

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    Remodel Your Kitchen at Wholesale Prices with DirectBuy ...

    How to Install Chicken Wire | Garden Guides - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Overview

    Chicken wire is a very versatile product, used for a range of purposes from chicken coops to plant supports to framing for parade floats and stucco walls. Chicken wire is often sold under the name poultry wire or poultry netting and is very flexible, yet strong. Because it has small enough holes to keep out rodents and other garden pests, chicken wire is very useful for garden fencing and vegetable plant supports.

    Build an appropriate frame for whatever purpose you are using your chicken wire. It is easiest to attach chicken wire to wood, so if possible, use that for your framing. If you are building a fence, metal posts are more common because of their ease of use, strength and endurance.

    Put on work gloves, unroll 3 or 4 feet of wire and fold the last 3 inches of wire over, making a smooth ending surface with no wires hanging out. If necessary, twist or bend individual wires to get them out of the way. Chicken wire is small, thin wire and is very sharp so use extra care when doing this and be sure to wear gloves.

    Attach the chicken wire to a good starting point in your frame or fence. To attach it to wood, use the staple gun or fencing staples and run them along the edge of the chicken wire, about every 6 inches. If using it as fencing, attach the end of the chicken wire to the fence using 6- to 8-inch wire pieces that you have cut from the spool, wrap them around the fence post, through the predrilled holes in the post and around the chicken wire. Twist the ends of the wire at least six times until it is tight around the chicken wire, then bend in the ends to avoid catching on clothing.

    Unroll enough chicken wire to move to the next part in your frame or to the next fence post. Slide your fingers (with gloves on) into the holes in the center point of the chicken wire, just past the next fence post, and pull it firmly to stretch the chicken wire across the open area. Attach the chicken wire to this part of the frame or post using the staples or wire pieces. Move your hands down to the edge of the chicken wire and stretch the wire again by pulling away from the center and away from the previous fence post. Attach that section of chicken wire to the post. Continue this process until that fence post or piece of frame is complete, stretching the chicken wire and attaching it to your frame.

    Continue attaching the wire to the remaining pieces until you reach the last section. Cut the chicken wire to the desired length plus an additional 3 or 4 inches. Bend over the end of the chicken wire and fold it so that you have a smooth edge and attach the chicken wire to the frame, completing your project.

    See original here:
    How to Install Chicken Wire | Garden Guides

    MSIZAP.exe The only way to clean up windowsinstaller - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Why would anybody ever want to clean out this hidden directory? Simple, it gets full of junk that you dont need or want any more.

    Anytime an MS update fails to install or gets interrupted, regardless of the product, pieces get left in windowsinstaller so that you loose disc space. This appears to be by design as MS has now removed the download for MsiZap.

    If you ever wish to see how much space you can reclaim from all those uncessary installation files leftover to rot in your windows folder, download MsiZap.exe. I have chosen to link it right here for all to download as needed. This tool is a must and why on earth MS chose to remove it I will never know.

    So now that you have this important file here is how to use it.

    Press Start=>run and type cmd. If you are using the new crappy windows, dont use this program cuz you know your version of windows is just too cool to need anything like this.

    Navigate on the command prompt to where the file is located. I place the file in %systemroot%msizap.exe so that it was all ready to in my path.

    Now that you have the location down just type:

    Watch as lots of stuff scrolls by on your screen, or not depending on how long windows has been installed. Then go check your system drive and see how much space you have saved yourself.

    This program has been able to save me and several family members lots of space. Normally its about 2-10 GBs but this one time while camping it was over 60GBs

    Hope this program helps you as much as it helped me.

    Link:
    MSIZAP.exe The only way to clean up windowsinstaller

    Solar Water Heating Projects and Plans – Build-It-Solar - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Hands-on Basics The Home Power and FSEC articles listed below are the best way I have found to get up to speed with building a solar hot water heater. They are very well done, and very hands-on. Solar Site Survey ...

    http://www.azsolarcenter.com/technology/solarh20.html

    See the entries below for more details on each type of system, and for systems you can build yourself. If the number of types of systems Ken describes seems a bit overwhelming, then concentrate on 1) batch systems, 2) drain back systems, 3) closed loop systems, and 4) thermosyphon systems -- these are the most common and robust. Some additional considerations if you want to build your own system...

    FSEC Solar Thermal Resources Pages (very good):

    FSEC's main page on solar water heating...

    Good detailed section on system installation including collector mounting, plumbing, tank, ...

    Also, good Installation Pictorials for the entire solar water heating installation.

    This article is currently available as a free download from the Arizona Solar Center here

    Here is the original post:
    Solar Water Heating Projects and Plans - Build-It-Solar

    How Much Does Water Heater Installation Cost? | Angies List - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Youre getting a licensed, qualified individual whos going to install the water heater correctly, make sure all of the safety features are in place, and that its installed to the current local plumbing code, says Chuck Sauro, a master plumber and manager at A.B. May Co.in Leawood, Kansas.

    Steve Hyde, general manager forWashington Water Heatersin Bellevue, Washington, echoes that sentiment. Installing a water heater is dangerous and we encounter improperly installed water heaters on a daily basis, he says.

    RELATED: Don't Let New Water Heater Rules Surprise You

    On electric water heater installations, youre dealing with 240 volts of electricity," Hyde notes. "On a gas water heater, if a gas leaks occurs and its not corrected, it could result in catastrophic damage to the house or its occupants.

    Other considerations when installing a water heater include making sure the unit is adequately plumbed, including installing it with enough clearance and ensuring drip pans are equipped, if needed.

    Hanleybrown says one of the most important elements for gas-fired tank water heaters or tankless water heaters is ensuring the units are properly vented to prevent exposure to carbon monoxide gases produced by combusted fuel.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, unintentionalcarbon monoxide poisoningcauses 400 deaths each year and 20,000 visits the emergency room.

    Hiring a licensed plumber with experience in water heater installation including how to properly vent exhaust gases and one who pulls a permit, if required, are safety measures every homeowner should take when installing a water heater, Hanleybrown says.

    Because of the carbon monoxide issue, we say people should always question anyone who is not pulling a permit, he says.

    MORE: How Often Should I Flush My Water Heater?

    Excerpt from:
    How Much Does Water Heater Installation Cost? | Angies List

    Solar water heating – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Solar water heating (SWH) is the conversion of sunlight into renewable energy for water heating using a solar thermal collector. Solar water heating systems comprise various technologies that are used worldwide increasingly.

    In a "close-coupled" SWH system the storage tank is horizontally mounted immediately above the solar collectors on the roof. No pumping is required as the hot water naturally rises into the tank through thermosiphon flow. In a "pump-circulated" system the storage tank is ground- or floor-mounted and is below the level of the collectors; a circulating pump moves water or heat transfer fluid between the tank and the collectors.

    SWH systems are designed to deliver hot water for most of the year. However, in winter there sometimes may not be sufficient solar heat gain to deliver sufficient hot water. In this case a gas or electric booster is used to heat the water.

    Water heated by the sun is used in various ways. While perhaps best known in a residential setting to provide domestic hot water, solar hot water also has industrial applications, e.g. to generate electricity.[1] Designs suitable for hot climates can be much simpler and cheaper, and can be considered an appropriate technology for these places. The global solar thermal market is dominated by China, Europe, Japan and India.

    In order to heat water using solar energy, a collector, often fastened to a roof or a wall facing the sun, heats a working fluid that is either pumped (active system) or driven by natural convection (passive system) through it.[2] The collector could be made of a simple glass-topped insulated box with a flat solar absorber made of sheet metal, attached to copper heat exchanger pipes and dark-colored, or a set of metal tubes surrounded by an evacuated (near vacuum) glass cylinder. In industrial cases a parabolic mirror can concentrate sunlight on the tube. Heat is stored in a hot water storage tank. The volume of this tank needs to be larger with solar heating systems in order to allow for bad weather[clarification needed], and because the optimum final temperature for the solar collector[clarification needed] is lower than a typical immersion or combustion heater. The heat transfer fluid (HTF) for the absorber may be the hot water from the tank, but more commonly (at least in active systems) is a separate loop of fluid containing anti-freeze and a corrosion inhibitor which delivers heat to the tank through a heat exchanger (commonly a coil of copper heat exchanger tubing within the tank). Copper is an important component in solar thermal heating and cooling systems because of its high heat conductivity, resistance to atmospheric and water corrosion, sealing and joining by soldering, and mechanical strength. Copper is used both in receivers and primary circuits (pipes and heat exchangers for water tanks).[3]

    Another lower-maintenance concept is the 'drain-back': no anti-freeze is required; instead, all the piping is sloped to cause water to drain back to the tank. The tank is not pressurized and is open to atmospheric pressure. As soon as the pump shuts off, flow reverses and the pipes are empty before freezing could occur.

    Residential solar thermal installations fall into two groups: passive (sometimes called "compact") and active (sometimes called "pumped") systems. Both typically include an auxiliary energy source (electric heating element or connection to a gas or fuel oil central heating system) which is activated when the water in the tank falls below a minimum temperature setting such as 55C. Hence, hot water is always available. The combination of solar water heating and using the back-up heat from a wood stove chimney to heat water[4] can enable a hot water system to work all year round in cooler climates, without the supplemental heat requirement of a solar water heating system being met with fossil fuels or electricity.

    When a solar water heating and hot-water central heating system are used in conjunction, solar heat will either be concentrated in a pre-heating tank that feeds into the tank heated by the central heating, or the solar heat exchanger will replace the lower heating element and the upper element will remain in place to provide for any heating that solar cannot provide. However, the primary need for central heating is at night and in winter when solar gain is lower. Therefore, solar water heating for washing and bathing is often a better application than central heating because supply and demand are better matched. In many climates, a solar hot water system can provide up to 85% of domestic hot water energy. This can include domestic non-electric concentrating solar thermal systems. In many northern European countries, combined hot water and space heating systems (solar combisystems) are used to provide 15 to 25% of home heating energy.

    There are records of solar collectors in the United States dating back to before 1900,[5] comprising a black-painted tank mounted on a roof. In 1896 Clarence Kemp of Baltimore, USA enclosed a tank in a wooden box, thus creating the first 'batch water heater' as they are known today. Although flat-plate collectors for solar water heating were used in Florida and Southern California in the 1920s there was a surge of interest in solar heating in North America after 1960, but especially after the 1973 oil crisis.

    See Appendix 1 at the bottom of this article for a number of country-specific statistics on the "Use of solar water heating worldwide". Wikipedia also has country-specific articles about solar energy use (thermal as well as photovoltaic) in Australia, Canada, China, Germany, India, Israel, Japan, Portugal, Romania, Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States.

    Read more:
    Solar water heating - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Build Decorative Garden Fountains the Easy Way - July 3, 2015 by Mr HomeBuilder

    In this version of the decorative water garden fountain, the ceramic planter is left empty, instead of being filled with water. The result is an interesting hollow sound. Photo Credit: David Beaulieu

    On Page 1, I presented one version of my garden fountain. In that version, upon completion of the project, not only the pond, but also the ceramic planter was filled with water. If you take that approach, the visual element will perhaps be more striking, as you'll be treated to the pleasing look of water spilling over the sides of the ceramic planter.

    In order to keep water in the ceramic planter and achieve this effect, you'll have to plug up the drainage hole in the bottom.

    A permanent way to plug it would be to use grout and a sealer. But if you wish to experiment with different options, forgo a permanent solution. Instead, plug the hole with something you can later remove, such as putty or -- if you can find the right size -- just a regular bath plug.

    In the version presented on this page, I explore another option, for which you'll want the ceramic planter's drainage hole to be unplugged. Above, you can see that the ceramic planter has been left empty. As water falls into the empty planter, a cool hollow sound is emitted. I suggest trying it both ways. Decide for yourself if you prefer the look achieved on Page 1 or the sound that results from choosing the option shown above.

    Be sure to check the water level periodically for any garden fountain, so that the pump doesn't burn out due to accidental loss of water.

    The plantings you see in my photos include elephant ears, hosta plants, sweet potato vine, calla lily and ferns.

    Originally posted here:
    Build Decorative Garden Fountains the Easy Way

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