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How to Detect Water Leaks with Smart Sensors

  How to Detect Water Leaks with Smart Sensors Water leaks are often invisible until they cause major damage—stained ceilings, warped flooring, or a sudden spike in utility bills. Smart sensors aim to shorten the time between a leak starting and a homeowner noticing it by continuously monitoring for signs such as moisture, abnormal flow, or pressure drops and then sending real-time alerts.   While no single device is perfect for every home, combining the right sensor type with thoughtful placement and correct settings can significantly improve leak detection coverage.   Start with the right sensor type   Most smart leak-detection systems use one (or more) of these approaches:   Moisture/contact sensors: Detect water on floors, under sinks, near water heaters, or around plumbing joints using conductivity or probe-based detection. Whole-home water leak sensors (flow/pressure): Track water ... Read more »
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Radon Detectors: How to Choose and Where to Install

  Radon Detectors: How to Choose and Where to Install Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that can seep into homes from soil and rock. Because it’s invisible and odorless, testing is the only practical way to know whether indoor radon levels are high—and the quality of your result depends heavily on the detector you choose and where you place it.   Start with what you need to measure   Different detectors serve different purposes. Short-term devices can provide a snapshot suitable for faster decisions, while long-term tests are better for capturing seasonal variation and typically give a more representative annual average. Before buying, confirm the detector type, test duration, and whether the product is intended for residential radon measurement.   If you’re doing compliance-oriented testing (for example, prior to mitigation or under a local program), look for detectors that are recognized through established quality assurance schemes and ... Read more »...

Hot Water Recirculating Pumps: What They Do and Need

  Hot Water Recirculating Pumps: What They Do and Need A hot water recirculating pump is designed to keep hot water moving through your home’s plumbing so it’s available at the faucet or shower with less wait time. Instead of letting hot water sit in the pipes until you turn on the tap, the system circulates it continuously (or on a schedule), returning cooled water to the water heater to be reheated.   While the idea is simple, deciding whether you need one depends on several practical factors—especially your pipe layout, your typical usage patterns, and your tolerance for energy costs.   How a recirculating pump works   In most homes, hot water leaves the water heater, travels through the hot-water line to the fixture, and then cools in the pipes when you’re not using it. A recirculating pump moves water through that loop so the hot line stays warm. Many systems also include controls such as timers, temperature sensors, or occupancy-based trigge ... Read more »

How to Set Up a Smart Thermostat for Every Season

  How to Set Up a Smart Thermostat for Every Season Smart thermostats promise savings and comfort, but most of their benefits depend on getting the initial setup right. A correct installation, accurate temperature readings, and well-tuned schedules can reduce heating and cooling waste across winter, spring, summer, and fall.   Below is a straightforward setup checklist—followed by what to adjust each season—so your thermostat performs reliably from the first cold snap to the hottest day.   Start with the right placement and compatibility checks   Before you buy or install settings in the app, confirm your HVAC compatibility (heating type, system voltage, and wiring labels). Then place the thermostat where it can measure indoor temperature accurately—away from direct sunlight, drafts, heat sources, and exterior doors. Many issues that look like “software problems” are actually bad sensor locations.   After ... Read more »

Flooded Basement: Step-by-Step Action Plan

  Flooded Basement: Step-by-Step Action Plan A flooded basement is stressful—but acting in the right sequence can prevent injuries and limit damage. Whether the water came from heavy rain, a burst pipe, or a nearby overflow, the immediate priorities are electrical safety, stopping the source, and beginning controlled cleanup.   1) Put safety first (power and hazards)   Do not enter standing water if there’s any chance it’s in contact with electricity. If outlets, appliances, wiring, or the breaker panel are affected, shut off power at the main breaker before touching anything in the water. If you smell gas or suspect a gas line issue, leave the area and contact the appropriate utility or emergency service.   2) Stop the water source   Identify where the water is coming from and address it if it’s safe to do so. For plumbing leaks, shut off the home’s water supply. For outside flooding, redirect water away f ... Read more »

Flood Control Systems in Illinois: What They Are

  Flood Control Systems in Illinois: What They Are Flooding in Illinois can come from multiple sources: prolonged rainfall that overwhelms storm sewers, rapid creeks and streams that rise quickly, and major rivers that crest after upstream storms. To manage these risks, the state and local agencies rely on a mix of engineered infrastructure and ongoing maintenance funded through public and federal programs.   Flood control systems are designed to reduce the frequency and severity of flooding—but they don’t eliminate water entirely. Instead, they aim to manage where water goes, slow its movement, and protect homes, businesses, and critical services.   What flood control systems include   In Illinois, flood protection typically combines physical structures with land and water management. Common components include levees and floodwalls along rivers, detention and retention basins that temporarily store stormwater, and dams that regulate flows. For smaller wa ... Read mo...

What Is a Combi-Boiler and Is It Worth It?

  What Is a Combi-Boiler and Is It Worth It? A combi-boiler —short for combination boiler —is a type of gas (or sometimes oil) boiler that provides central heating and hot water directly from the mains supply. Unlike traditional systems, it doesn’t require a separate hot-water cylinder or cold-water tank.   In most homes, this means you get hot water whenever you open a tap or run a shower, while the boiler simultaneously supports heating through radiators (or underfloor heating). The key idea is “on demand,” rather than storing hot water in advance.   How a combi-boiler works   When there’s a heating call, the boiler heats water for the central heating circuit. When you turn on a hot tap, sensors detect the flow and switch the boiler to deliver hot water to your taps. Because the system relies on mains water, the boiler’s performance depends on your incoming wat ... Read more »