Expert Denver Plumbing Company Announces Affordable Kitchen and Bathroom Face ...
May 22, 2012 | Rheo Systems Plumbing, Gives Plumbing Repair Suggestions to Update the Look and Improve Functions at Home. “Older homes usually have galvanized iron pipes, but homeowners are upgrading to copper pipes and getting their plumbing up to date and up to code,” said Mike. “With the housing market in its current condition, folks are staying in their homes and upgrading them with new fixtures and faucets,” said Mike Redinger, owner of Rheo Systems Plumbing. The housing market is currently a buyers market, so many homeowners are opting to stay in their homes and making the best of what they have and finding ways to improve on that. Denver, CO - Everyone enjoys an upgrade but, if a complete bathroom and kitchen remodel does not fit the budget, a luxury look and modern updates can still be attainable. Copper is a more durable material, it can withstand extreme pressure and extreme heat as well as freeze thaw cycles.
Read more »
Nov 30, 2010 | Intended to be a sleek bathroom fixture and installed in plain view, the unit features a
brushed chrome frame, sophisticated blue LED smooth touch™
Nov 26, 2010 | In March, a towel caught on fire in the bathroom, and the house was inspected by firefighters and an insurance company. "Everyone went through the house to
Nov 30, 2010 | I have a good friend who spent many hours of his childhood locked in the bathroom of his family home, face turned directly into the hot-air heater in
Nov 29, 2010 | Choose space
heaters that turn off automatically if they tip over. Never use a space heater to dry clothing. Turn off space heaters before you go to bed.
Nov 21, 2010 | Brenda Ann Mocaer, 47, had to be pulled from the bathroom of the second floor of her burning home Saturday morning. She later died at the hospital.
should i replace the in-wall heater in the bathroom of my home?
May 15, 2009 by division_zeroh
i have an "old school" heater in the bathroom of my recently purchased home. the heater is no longer in operation, and probably has not been in quite some time. This bathroom has no vent or fan to circulate the air during a steamy shower. there is a floor vent from the a/c unit in the room. is it possible to remove this ancient bathroom heater and replace it with some sort of fan that would circulate the air? if not, should i have the heater repaired so that it is operational?
I agree with Mr Fixit.
Not only are they inefficient (the newer ones not so much), but to me, they are unsafe.
Especially with children, pets, moisture..
If you take it apart, I bet you find the previous owners have merely disconnected it.
My GFCI blows when I turn on my bathroom heater now.?
Nov 27, 2007 by Flamingo Kid
I just replaced a standard receptacle with the GFCI in the bathroom. Everything worked fine before the change. The heater and the GFCI share a common neutral I believe. The heater is on a dedicated hot wire. If I remove the GFCI and replace it with the standard receptacle everything works fine again. Any ideas why? Thanks.
Something is not connected correctly. The shared neutral ahead of the GFCI would have no effect. Make sure you are connecting to the line side of the GFCI and that your polarity is correct. If you want the heater connected to the load side of the GFCI you must run both the neutral and hot to the heater from the GFCI load terminals. A GFCI works by comparing the current flow (on it's load side) in the hot and the neutral. If there is a difference, the GFCI trips. Grounds have nothing to do with it.