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Indoor Fountain Installation: Plumbing Requirements Checklist

  Indoor Fountain Installation: Plumbing Requirements Checklist Indoor fountains can transform a room, but their look depends on reliable plumbing. Unlike outdoor setups, indoor installations need careful planning for water supply, pump operation, and—most importantly—safe drainage and overflow control.   Before you buy parts, decide on the fountain’s recirculating design. Many indoor models use a closed-loop system where a pump pulls water from a reservoir and returns it to the display. Others require a continuous feed with drainage. Your selection determines what plumbing lines (water supply and/or drain) you actually need.   1) Water supply: where the incoming water comes from Most recirculating fountains still need some method to top off evaporated water. Options include connecting to a household water line via a small shutoff valve (often under a sink) or using a refill approach depending on system design. If you connect to plumbing, include a dedicated shutoff for m...
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Radon in Illinois Homes: How to Test and When to Act

  Radon in Illinois Homes: How to Test and When to Act Radon is a radioactive gas that forms in the ground and can seep into homes through cracks in floors, walls, and foundations. Because it is invisible and has no smell, the only practical way to know whether your home has elevated levels is to test.   Illinois’ weather and housing stock—ranging from basements to slab-on-grade homes—mean radon pathways can vary widely even between nearby properties. That’s why experts recommend testing at the address, not relying on neighborhood averages.   When should you test in an Illinois home?   If you haven’t tested before, schedule a test as soon as possible. You should also retest if you move, finish a basement, seal major openings, install a new HVAC system, or make other structural changes that could alter airflow and pressure.   For many homes, radon testing is most informative during typical living conditions. Use the instr ... Read more »

Plumbing Maintenance Schedule for Multi-Unit Buildings

  Plumbing Maintenance Schedule for Multi-Unit Buildings Multi-unit buildings rely on shared plumbing systems—supply lines, risers, drainage stacks, valves, and domestic hot water equipment—so small issues can escalate quickly into service disruptions, tenant complaints, and costly repairs. A structured maintenance schedule helps property managers spot wear early, reduce emergency callouts, and document compliance-ready inspections.   The schedule below is designed as a baseline framework. You should still tailor it to your building’s age, fixture types, water quality, local code requirements, and manufacturer recommendations for boilers, water heaters, pumps, and backflow devices.   Monthly: focus on high-frequency checks   Run short inspections and quick preventive tasks that catch problems before they become emergencies. Start with tenant-facing signals (slow drains, recurring clogs, unusual odors, or pressure complaints) and verify upstream causes. Al ... Read mo...

UV Air Purifiers for HVAC: Do They Actually Work?

  UV Air Purifiers for HVAC: Do They Actually Work? UV air purifiers—especially systems using UV-C light—are often marketed as a high-impact way to improve indoor air quality in HVAC setups. The short answer is that they can work, but “do they actually work?” depends on how the device is designed, where the UV light is placed, and whether it provides enough UV dose to the air or surfaces it’s intended to treat.   Unlike filters that physically trap particles, UV-C in HVAC applications works by damaging the genetic material of microorganisms (like bacteria and viruses) so they can’t reproduce. However, that effect is not automatic: it requires sufficient UV intensity, the right exposure time, and appropriate airflow paths that bring air close to the UV source.   What UV in HVAC systems is (and isn’t) doing   In many HVAC installations, UV-C is installed in one of two places: inside air handlers near evaporator coils, or in uppe ... Read more »

Do Illinois Homes Need Radon Mitigation Systems?

  Do Illinois Homes Need Radon Mitigation Systems? Radon is an odorless, invisible radioactive gas that forms naturally in soil and can enter homes through cracks in basements, crawl spaces, and foundation walls. Because you can’t detect it by smell or sight, the only reliable way to know your indoor risk is to test.   Illinois has regions where radon levels can be high, so the question for many homeowners is not whether radon exists, but whether their specific home has elevated concentrations that warrant action. Public health guidance generally emphasizes testing first, then installing mitigation only when results justify it.   Why radon testing matters in Illinois   Radon exposure is linked to lung cancer, and indoor concentrations can be significantly higher than outdoor levels. Even homes that look sealed or well-maintained can still allow gas to enter through microscopic gaps, plumbing penetrations, or construction joints.   Because r ... Read more »

Flood Control Systems: Battery Backup vs. Water-Powered Backup

  Flood Control Systems: Battery Backup vs. Water-Powered Backup Flood control systems—such as sump pumps, backflow preventers, and stormwater pumping stations—are only as dependable as the power that drives them. When electricity fails during heavy rain, the difference between a working barrier and standing water can come down to the type of backup.   Two common approaches are battery backup systems and water-powered backup (typically leveraging stored water pressure or gravity-driven operation). Each option has distinct strengths, trade-offs, and installation requirements.   Battery backup: fast, controllable, and widely compatible   Battery backup solutions supply electricity to pumps and controls during outages, helping ensure the system can respond immediately to rising water levels. They are often paired with level sensors, alarms, and automatic transfer switches so the system can start without manual intervention.   In practice, battery back ... Read more...

Moen Flo vs. Traditional Leak Detectors: Is It Worth It?

  Moen Flo vs. Traditional Leak Detectors: Is It Worth It? Water leaks are one of the most common causes of costly home damage—yet traditional leak detectors, while effective, often rely on simple alarms and may not provide the same level of visibility across a home. The question for buyers is whether a smart system like the Moen Flo is worth paying extra compared with traditional leak detectors .   What traditional leak detectors do well   Basic leak detectors are usually straightforward devices you place under sinks, near water heaters, around toilets, or close to appliances. Most models focus on detecting moisture at the sensor and sounding an audible alarm (and sometimes sending a notification if the unit is connected to a home network).   For homeowners who want a low-cost layer of protection in a few high-risk spots, traditional detectors can be a practical starting point. They’re typically easy to install and don’t re ... Read more »