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Home Warm

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Home Warm

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Make your Home Warm and Well Insulated

Is your home not maintaining a warm temperature in the winters? Well, your home might be in need of maintenance and proper check. You can start looking at your central heating system. Besides, you should also check how well is your home insulated. Good insulation can save a lot of energy and your central heating system won’t be overloaded.

To maintain your home in good shape, you need to properly check the functioning of all the devices and equipments. An energy efficient home can cut your heating bills to a large extent and contribute to green cause. Double glazing and proper insulation can really help you save energy. Solar energy, wind turbines, ground source heat pump, etc., are not only features of a green home but they can also help you in saving money in the long term. Initially, you may be required to spend a lot of money on these green sources of energy.

Homeowner loans are available for carrying out home improvements. There are more than 57 building societies, high street lenders and various private online lenders who can provide you finance for improving your home. A big loan is required to be backed by some security like your home. Homeowner Loans are economical and they allow the borrowers a lot of flexibility in repayment.

How Home Improvement Loans can help you?

You can spend the loan amount in making your home fully insulated and draught proof. Loft insulation is also important. Preferably, the insulation should be a minimum of 270mm thick. You can save up to one-third of heat loss through well insulated walls. You can also opt for cavity wall insulation. There are lot of other things that you can do with the help of home improvement loans. Latest gas boilers with dedicated controls can conserve energy and help you in saving up to 30 per cent of your hot water bills.

About the Author

The author is a business writer specializing in finance and credit products and has written authoritative articles on the loan industry like (Secured Loan, Secured Homeowner Loans etc).

Why are circut breakers in home electrical panel getting warm?

I'm only drawing a load of about 100-200 watts on 20 amp circut breakers. Yet each time I try to switch to a new breaker that one gets warm. Any ideas, my electrician friend is stumped. It get like mildly warm, not hot. Like the keyboard/palm area of a laptop. He's telling me that I'm just worrying too much and that the breaker will trip if anything bad happens. How long can the panel go on at this rate without having problems?

If a 20A breaker gets anything above ambient temperature one of two possibilities exists:

a) There is a poor connection within the breaker, at the buss, or at the wire into the breaker. This will cause increased resistance at that connection - making heat. Given that the heat follows the connection, this is unlikely to be the case.

b) There is a poor connection/partial short downline of the breaker. Although your 'connected load' may only be 200 watts (about 1.7A), this defect could increase the load on the breaker considerably. This could be in a junction-box, at the receptacle, or even in the connected device(s).

If you have use of an amprobe, measure the actual load on the breaker and confirm that it very nearly exactly matches the observed connected load. If not, you have found your problem. If you do not, call an electrician who has access to one.

DO NOT ignore this issue. If a breaker is getting warm with no apparent reason you have a serious problem-in-the-making that could result in a fire. Really. Here is the issue:

A 20A breaker can handle up to 2,400 watts without tripping. The typical space-heater, even ones with exposed heating elements takes only 1,500 watts. And you know how hot conventional incandescent lamps can get. Imagine something this hot inside your wall somewhere - and the breaker can handle such a load all day and all night without tripping. That is the scenario you are trying to avoid.

Call an electrician with an amprobe, get to the bottom of this soonest!