
29 December 2018 | 51 replies
And central air has different considerations than window units with central air being more desirable as long as it is paid for by the tenants.

29 October 2018 | 98 replies
50 percent of being a successful landlord is having an air tight lease.

13 April 2019 | 34 replies
@Todd PowellI might be able to air b n b one unit.

31 October 2018 | 7 replies
- One interior unit will be 12,000 BTU for a large living room/kitchen space, and a smaller 9,000 BTU for the bedroom.the total system capacity has to be able to cool both inside units at the same time so 21,000 BTU or larger for the outside unit.The beauty of these is that they can be installed DIY (provided you get your 608 certification card), as long as the line sets don't need to be shortened or lengthened, as there is no brazing/welding involved, just connect the lines and purge air, etc.my dual zone costs comes in at around 2.6k to 2.8k for my 800sqft structure.
28 October 2018 | 5 replies
In July I completed a lot of updates to the house (new well, new 200 amp electrical service and panel, new windows, replaced forced air ductwork, added a bathroom.

29 October 2018 | 5 replies
We have a small air force training base named Laughlein.

1 November 2018 | 3 replies
I would like to learn more but when I look up articles it mainly comparision of standard rentals vs air bnb.

1 November 2018 | 6 replies
Good day,I recently listened to the air b & b podcast and wanted to get any feedback on experience anyone has had.

2 November 2018 | 2 replies
The one you are thinking of using air B&B will have utility expenses.

12 November 2018 | 2 replies
Off street parking, low maintenance, open floor plan on main level, central-air, fenced rear yard.