Home of the San Francisco Chronicle

Subscribe to the weekend Chronicle

powered by
Ideabooks
Photos
Products
Ideabooks
Discussions
Professionals
Users
1. Have your chimney cleaned. Hire a professional chimney smith to clean and inspect your chimney. Brad Smith the Chimney Smith, shown here, performs a multi-point inspection with each cleaning. This will help prevent house fires and carbon monoxide leaks.

Get Your Fireplace Cold Weather Ready
by Clark Harris
2. Install carbon monoxide detectors. Place them near areas that use natural gas, such as the garage, furnace, chimney, gas fireplace, gas range and water heater. Most security system companies offer carbon monoxide detectors. They can also be hard wired into your home, meaning they connect to a constant power source. You can also install a battery-operated detector, like the one shown here. I make sure to place a detector on each level of a home.
by Clark Harris
3. Change the batteries in your smoke detectors. I recommend changing the batteries once a year, no matter what condition they're in. The building code in Atlanta requires all smoke detectors to be hard wired. It also states that all smoke detectors in a house must be tied together, so that if one goes off they all will sound the alarm. I recommend having these tied into your security system as well.
by Clark Harris
4. Install an attic door blanket. Attic stair openings are a main source of heat loss in the winter. There are many versions of this product, but I like this one because it has a radiant heat shield that deters heat from entering the home during the summer and prevents heat from escaping during the winter. It has an easy-to-use zipper.
by Clark Harris
5. Adjust your water heater temperature. Here's a really simple way to save energy: Adjust the knob on the face of the water heater to a lower setting. Of course, if your water temperature is not as hot as you would like it, simply turn it up a few notches.

Warning: The gauge allows you to make your water scalding hot. If you have young children or elderly people living with you, please keep it on a lower setting.
by Clark Harris
6. Replace your furnace filter. Change out your filter every two months. This will give you better air quality. A dirty filter will cause your furnace to work harder and shorten its lifespan. A furnace will actually shut down if the filter is too dirty.
by Clark Harris
Tip: Write the filter size on the front of your furnace. This will give all of you procrastinators one less excuse to buy new filters. Yes, I know this from experience.
by Clark Harris
Tip: Keep fighting the procrastinator within by purchasing filters in bulk and leaving them next to your furnace.

Warning
: Keep these filters a safe distance from anything combustible.
by Clark Harris
7. Install a pan under your washing machine. A leaking washing machine can be catastrophic to your home. Pans for underneath the machine are available at home repair stores or online. They have a spot in the back where a drain pipe can be connected. Run this drain to the exterior of your home.

Warning
: Do not attach the drain to your home's plumbing. Installing it improperly can cause sewer gas to enter your home.
by Clark Harris
8. Install metal braided hoses to your washing machine. These hoses are much less apt to burst or leak than the traditional rubber hoses.
by Clark Harris
9. Clean your gutters. Clogged gutters can cause myriad problems, including rotten exterior wood and leaks to the interior. Clogged gutters also cause water to spill over the top, leading to flooding and erosion. You can eliminate the need for gutter cleaning entirely by using a gutter cover.
by Clark Harris
10. Change your spotlights. While you're up there cleaning gutters, take the opportunity to change the bulbs on exterior lights.
by Clark Harris
11. Shut off the water supply to exterior faucets. This will be necessary if you live in a climate that has freezing temperatures. If you leave standing water in the pipe, there's a chance it will freeze, which can cause the pipe to burst, potentially flooding your house.

Find the water shut-off valves for your faucets, and turn them off. The shut-offs are usually a short distance from your exterior faucets, most often in a basement. Remember: "righty tighty" to close them and "lefty loosey" to open them. After shutting them off, go outside and turn on the exterior faucet to remove any excess water.
by Clark Harris
12. Install a faucet cover. When the weather starts to warm up again, you can install an insulated faucet cover. This way, you won't have to shut the water off to the faucet entirely, but you will be safe if the temperature drops again.

Note:
These covers won't work well if your region is constantly near or below freezing.
by Clark Harris
Faucet cover installation: Simply slip the ring over the spout, place the cover against the house, and pull on the cord. It takes less than 10 seconds and costs about $2.50.

Tell us: What do you do to prepare your home for the winter?
by Clark Harris

Comments

State Wide Construction & Remodeling Great tips and reminders!!
6 months ago · ·
Karen Grundy Don't assume that the previous owners of the house actually wrote the correct filter size on the AC unit! We kept putting a too-small filter in our system, allowing dust and crud to clog the system.
5 months ago · ·
thebeatonpath Please shut off exterior water sources! We had one on the deck freeze and bust open spraying water everywhere! It was a costly lesson learned. Also use the faucet covers. So cheap and easy to use. We plan on replacing our attic door with an insulated one (we currently have a regular interior uninsulated door to our walk up attic). Ever seen "The Money Pit" movie? That's how I feel about all of the updates that need to be done to our home.
5 months ago ·
Becky Harris Clark when are you going to come over and do all this stuff at my house?
5 months ago ·
Sign Up to comment
The content on this page is provided by Houzz and is subject to the Houzz terms of use, copyright and privacy policy.
Copyright claims: contact the Houzz designated agent.