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Do Heat Pumps Work in Illinois Below-Zero Winters?

  Do Heat Pumps Work in Illinois Below-Zero Winters? In Illinois winters, heat pumps are often promoted as an efficient alternative to gas furnaces—especially because they move heat rather than create it from combustion. But many homeowners still worry about the same question: what happens when temperatures plunge below zero?   While heat pumps don’t “stop working” at extreme cold, their efficiency generally declines as outdoor temperatures fall. The key variable is how the system is designed and managed—particularly its capacity range, defrost strategy, and whether a supplemental heat source is available.   How heat pumps behave as temperatures drop   Most air-source heat pumps use electricity to transfer heat from the outside air to the home. As the outdoor air gets colder, the heat available to capture decreases and the system has to work harder. That increased workload can reduce heating efficiency (often measured by metrics like COP o ... Read more »
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How to Read a Sewer Video Inspection Report

  How to Read a Sewer Video Inspection Report Sewer video inspections use a camera pushed through your drain or sewer line to document the inside condition of the pipe. The resulting report typically combines still images, video segments, measurements, and a scoring or description of defects. Learning what you’re looking at helps you ask the right questions and make informed decisions about repairs.   Although each company formats reports differently, most follow the same logic: identify where problems are, describe what the camera sees, grade severity, and recommend actions. Below are the most important sections—and how to interpret what your plumber is actually showing you.   1) Locate the problem: footage, distance, and direction   Most sewer reports reference footage that corresponds to a known point along the line—often using distance markers such as “distance from cleanout” or a similar measurement. The plumber may also indica ... Read more »

Tree Roots in Sewer Lines: Signs, Inspections, Repairs

  Tree Roots in Sewer Lines: Signs, Inspections, Repairs Tree roots are a common cause of sewer line problems in older homes and neighborhoods, especially where mature trees sit near buried pipes. While roots may initially enter through tiny cracks or weak joints, they can grow over time, forming blockages that restrict flow.   When a sewer line is affected, homeowners often notice symptoms first—sometimes long before a complete blockage occurs. Early recognition can reduce the risk of sewage backups, odors, and emergency repairs.   Warning signs of root intrusion   Clues that tree roots may be invading a sewer line include recurring or persistent clogs, especially in the same location. You may also notice slow drains across multiple fixtures, gurgling sounds from toilets or sinks, or foul odors near drains or cleanouts.   In some cases, toilets back up during heavy rainfall or after water use spikes, suggesting the line is partially restricted. ... Read more »

How to Choose a Toilet for Illinois Homes

  How to Choose a Toilet for Illinois Homes Choosing a toilet sounds simple until you compare models side by side. In Illinois homes—where weather swings and varying plumbing setups can affect comfort and maintenance needs—the “best” toilet depends on how you use your bathroom and what you want to optimize.   Three popular options are rimless toilets, comfort height toilets, and smart toilets. Each targets a different pain point: easier cleaning, better seating height, or hands-free features.   Rimless toilets: cleaner design with less scrubbing   Rimless toilets remove the traditional rim where waste and residue can collect, leaving a smoother opening for water flow. That design often makes routine cleaning faster and may help reduce the build-up that can lead to tougher stain cycles over time.   For Illinois households, rimless toilets can be a strong fit in busy bathrooms or for anyone who dislikes frequent deep- ... Read more »

Shower vs. Bathtub Plumbing: Key Installation Differences

  Shower vs. Bathtub Plumbing: Key Installation Differences When planning a bathroom remodel, choosing between a shower and a bathtub isn’t just about aesthetics—it can significantly affect how the plumbing is laid out. Differences in drain routing, fixture rough-in requirements, pressure and flow expectations, and waterproofing methods can change both the timeline and the budget.   Below are the practical plumbing differences homeowners and contractors commonly account for when installing or upgrading either option.   1) Drain location and rough-in measurements   The most visible plumbing distinction is where the drain needs to be placed relative to the finished floor or base. Shower installations typically use a smaller footprint and a drain centered on the shower pan or within a specific layout depending on the pan style (including linear drains). Bathtubs require a drain at a standardized position for the tub model, often with the overflow positioned as part o .....

What a Water Test Shows—and When Illinois Homeowners Should Order One

  What a Water Test Shows—and When Illinois Homeowners Should Order One For many Illinois homeowners, “getting a water test” sounds straightforward—but the results can be nuanced. A test can show which contaminants are present, often at concentrations measured against health and safety guidelines. It can also clarify whether an issue originates from the public water supply, a private well, or plumbing inside the home.   Understanding what a water test actually measures—and when it’s worth ordering—can help you avoid unnecessary costs and take targeted action if something is off.   What a water test can reveal   Most home testing falls into two broad categories: tests for specific contaminants (such as lead, nitrates, arsenic, or microbes) and tests for indicators of water chemistry (such as pH, hardness, and certain metals). The exact panel varies by lab and by local conditions, but common results typically fall into three buckets.   ... Read more »

What Is an Overhead Sewer, and Why Illinois Homes Use It

  What Is an Overhead Sewer, and Why Illinois Homes Use It Home plumbing terminology can be confusing, especially when homeowners start comparing “overhead” drainage options. An overhead sewer (often described as an overhead drain or above-ground drainage system) is designed so waste and wastewater piping travels through a home’s upper areas or along accessible interior/exterior routes rather than being buried underground from the start.   For Illinois homeowners—particularly those in older homes—plumbing upgrades are frequently driven by concerns about reliability. Many properties face aging drain infrastructure, intermittent backups, water intrusion in basements, and the high cost and disruption of excavating yards or reworking buried lines.   How an overhead sewer works   While designs vary by home layout and local code requirements, overhead systems generally route drain lines above grade using properly sized pipe, fittings, and slope where ... Read more »