Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Home Maintenance”
Flushing Taps Doesnt Always Beat Legionella
You’ve probably heard the advice: after a long vacation, or when an empty rental has sat idle for a while, run every tap for a few minutes before you drink, shower, or brush your teeth. The logic feels airtight. Water that sits still goes “stale,” bacteria multiply, so you rinse the old water out and swap in fresh. Simple.
Except the science turns out to be messier than that. A handful of recent field studies — several prompted by the enormous natural experiment of COVID-19 lockdowns, when whole office towers sat unused for weeks — found that flushing sometimes increases the very bacteria you’re trying to get rid of, at least for a while. Whether flushing helps, hurts, or does nothing depends on your pipes, your water heater, and even whether your plumbing is copper or plastic.
Why Clean Laundry Smells: The Washer Biofilm Problem
You pull a load out of the machine, and something is off. The clothes are technically clean, but there’s a faint musty, damp-towel funk that no amount of fabric softener quite covers. Lean in toward the machine itself and you might catch it there too, hanging around the rubber door seal. It’s tempting to blame a bad rinse. The more accurate answer is ecology: your washing machine is a living habitat, and over time it can hand its own microbes off to everything you wash.
DIY House Settling Detection
DIY House Settling Detection: Early Warning Signs Every Homeowner Should Monitor
House settling is a natural process that occurs as your home’s foundation adjusts to soil conditions, moisture changes, and the weight of the structure itself. While some settling is normal, excessive or uneven settling can lead to serious structural problems that are expensive to repair. The key to protecting your investment lies in early detection through regular monitoring, something every homeowner can learn to do themselves.