Find best 10 electrical contractors - Blog With Technicians - Find classified ads of electrical contractors in your area for light fixtures, circuit breaker, surge protection & more. Keep doors open throughout the house, along with cupboards where exposed piping may be. Do not block off vents, and insulate all exposed pipes in and out of the home. Clean out roof gutters and repair any leaks in the roof long before winter picks up. Make sure heat can reach all of the pipes in your home ..More
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3 Indoor Safety Tips for Winter Weather
At Pezz Electrical Services LLC, safety is our number one priority. Our services include safety inspections for heating and electrical equipment alike, which becomes more and more important as winter approaches. Follow these steps to keep your home safe for the winter, and call our friendly team to learn more.
Winterize your home to prevent chilly temperatures and burst pipes. Keep heat from moving out of the home by sealing air leaks, applying weather stripping or caulking to areas around doors and windows.
Make sure heat can reach all of the pipes in your home. Keep doors open throughout the house, along with cupboards where exposed piping may be. Do not block off vents, and insulate all exposed pipes in and out of the home. Clean out roof gutters and repair any leaks in the roof long before winter picks up.
Your gas heater should vent any combustion byproducts—like carbon monoxide (CO)—safely to the outdoors. While today’s heaters have safety switches to shut down the heater in case this doesn’t happen, a safety switch could fail.
Be sure you schedule an appointment with a heating maintenance technician every year, as early in the winter or fall as possible. Keep the air filter clean and replace it monthly.
Test carbon monoxide detectors and smoke detectors monthly as well. If you do not have these devices throughout the home, now is the time to take this step to enhance safety and give you peace of mind. Replace CO detectors every 5-7 years and smoke detectors every 10 years. Change the batteries every 6 months.
If your power went out in the middle of a cold winter day or night, would you have a backup plan? Elderly family members and children often cannot get by without heat, and it could be dangerous. We recommend a whole-house generator, or a portable model at the very least, or that you have a backup plan and a place to stay, just in case.