
9 March 2018 | 6 replies
Despite the oil craziness, its survived and has done fairly well.

24 August 2022 | 5 replies
Try washing a door with Murphy's oil soap and see if it look more "new", or "new enough" to re-use, and maybe think about just working with the cherry or whatever color the manufacturer put on.Also if the cabinets are not luxury to start with, the finish probably won't make them so, as because as others have said, they lack the special slow close drawers, dovetails, special cabinets, wine rack, moldings, etc...

20 June 2017 | 6 replies
Has anyone had experience flipping a house with an oil furnace in in the Seattle area?

16 September 2019 | 112 replies
Snake oils salesman and gurus have always been here.
19 June 2018 | 7 replies
{Here our natural gas is not cheap {lots of times propane is less costly}, so a heat pump almost always pays for itself in short order}.If your forced air furnace is oil or electric, then a heat pump over an AC-only solution would be operationally cheaper.When the technician / engineer examines / measures your house to develop the model, specifically ask the question about air circulation to / from the upper stories.

5 June 2020 | 20 replies
This isn't even comparable to 2008 in the least bit, 2008 had record Unemployment and unemployed (there's a difference) Mortgage companies were financing 125% LTV Oil was High....

21 April 2023 | 44 replies
Any amount of bleach will bind with the oils left on the sheets and cause the yellowing.

16 August 2018 | 2 replies
One buyer I spoke to today asked if the water and sewer were public (no idea what that meant) and if the oil tank is underground.

3 August 2015 | 2 replies
I will be chasing carpenters, electricians, plumbers, oil and gas.