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After a Basement Flood: Immediate Actions & What to Avoid

  After a Basement Flood: Immediate Actions & What to Avoid A basement flood can escalate fast—standing water can damage flooring, wiring, and insulation within hours, and it can also carry contamination. The safest approach is a clear order of operations: protect people first, then stabilize the environment, then begin controlled cleanup and drying.   1) Make the area safe before you do anything else. If the flood involved sewage, storm runoff, or unknown sources, treat it as contaminated. Keep children and pets away, avoid walking through water if you suspect electrical hazards, and use protective gear (water-resistant boots, gloves, and a mask/respirator rated for particulates when drying and debris are involved).   2) Shut off power only if it’s necessary and safe. Turn off the electricity to the affected area at the main breaker if you can do so without approaching standing water. If outlets, appliances, or wiring may be wet, do not touch them— ... Read more »
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Radon in Drinking Water on Chicago’s North Shore

  Radon in Drinking Water on Chicago’s North Shore Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that can pose health risks when it accumulates indoors. While radon is widely discussed as an air-quality issue, it can also be present in drinking water. In the Chicago area—especially the North Shore, where homeowners often rely on groundwater—residents may wonder whether radon in water is a meaningful risk and what practical steps can address it.   Health authorities generally emphasize that radon in water is most concerning because it can escape from water into indoor air during everyday activities such as showering, washing dishes, or running hot water. Over time, inhaled radon decay products can increase the likelihood of lung cancer.   Is radon in water a North Shore concern?   Radon in drinking water depends on local geology and groundwater conditions. Areas that draw from groundwater sources are more likely to encounter radon than those relying on su ... Read mo...

Outside Cleanout Station: What It Is and Why Homes Need One

  Outside Cleanout Station: What It Is and Why Homes Need One An outside cleanout station is a dedicated access point in your home’s exterior plumbing system, designed to give plumbers a safe, straightforward way to reach the main drain line. Instead of guessing where a blockage sits or tearing into indoor walls, a properly installed cleanout lets professionals check, clean, and clear the line with less disruption.   While it’s easy to overlook, a cleanout can be a practical safeguard. When slow drains, recurring backups, or foul odors show up, having ready access to the main line often determines how quickly a problem can be diagnosed and resolved.   What an outside cleanout station does   In most homes, the main sewer or drain line carries wastewater from sinks, toilets, showers, and appliances to the municipal sewer or a septic system. Over time, that line can accumulate debris such as grease, hair, mineral scale, tree-root intrusion, or flushed waste that should ...

Selling a Home in Illinois: Plumbing Issues That Kill Deals

  Selling a Home in Illinois: Plumbing Issues That Kill Deals In Illinois, plumbing failures aren’t just inconvenient—they can become dealbreakers. When buyers suspect a property’s water or waste systems are unreliable, inspections often shift from “nice to know” to “stop the clock,” because fixing plumbing can be expensive, disruptive, and sometimes hard to confirm without opening walls or digging.   From a buyer’s perspective, several common plumbing issues repeatedly surface during due diligence and can lead to repair requests, credit negotiations, or termination of the sale.   1) Active leaks and recurring moisture   The fastest way to derail a deal is evidence of a current leak or persistent moisture. Buyers look for damp drywall, water stains on ceilings, pooling near water heaters, mildew odors, or signs of patchwork repairs that don’t match the rest of the home. Even if visible damage seems minor, buyers know leaks c ... Read more »

AprilAire Whole-House vs. Steam Humidifiers: Which Fits?

  AprilAire Whole-House vs. Steam Humidifiers: Which Fits? Humidification can make a noticeable difference during dry months—especially for indoor air comfort, wood furnishings, and overall HVAC performance. But not all systems humidify the same way. Homeowners comparing an AprilAire whole-house humidifier with a steam humidifier typically want clarity on operation, installation needs, ongoing maintenance, and how each system manages humidity safely and consistently.   How AprilAire whole-house humidifiers typically work   Whole-house units designed for integration with a home’s HVAC system usually add moisture through a distribution method connected to the ductwork. Many models use an evaporative-style approach (often involving a water panel or cartridge) and rely on a humidity control strategy to deliver moisture when indoor conditions call for it. The goal is steady, measurable humidity without excessive wetness in the home.   ... Read more »

Combi-Boilers vs. Traditional Furnaces in Illinois

  Combi-Boilers vs. Traditional Furnaces in Illinois Illinois homes trying to cut heating costs often compare two paths: upgrading to a condensing combi-boiler (which provides space heat and domestic hot water in one unit) versus installing a more familiar traditional furnace paired with a separate water heater.   The headline trade-off is straightforward: furnaces can be effective, but they frequently waste some energy through flue gas heat. Condensing combi-boilers are designed to capture more of that heat—turning it into useful warming and hot water—especially when conditions allow the system to run at efficient temperatures.   How efficiency is measured (and why it matters)   “Efficiency” isn’t a single number across all setups. Furnaces typically earn high ratings through steady performance under specific test conditions. In contrast, condensing boilers are rated based on how much heat they recover wh ... Read more »

Smart Thermostat Installation: Key Steps Before You Swap

Smart Thermostat Installation: Key Steps Before You Swap Smart thermostats can cut energy waste, improve comfort with scheduling, and add remote control through a phone app. But installation success depends less on the thermostat “brand” and more on whether your home’s wiring and HVAC setup match the new device’s requirements.   Before you remove your old thermostat, spend a few minutes checking compatibility. Many installation problems—like no heat, no cooling, or constant error messages—stem from mismatched wiring connections or an HVAC system the thermostat can’t properly control.   1) Confirm your HVAC system is supported Start by identifying what you have: central air with furnace, heat pump systems, boilers, or multi-stage heating/cooling. Smart thermostats often support specific configurations (for example, heat pumps with auxiliary/backup heat), and some models require particular settings to work correctly.   If you ... Read more »