
17 February 2022 | 15 replies
To be safe, you may wish to:- sell the property at a public sale- publish notice of the sale in a prominent place, including a newspaper with daily, local circulation, and-send the tenant a final notice that states where and when you will sell the property.If the tenant owes you money for back rent, property damage, or reasonable storage costs -- and the tenant’s security deposit didn’t cover everything -- you can take the balance out of the sale proceeds.

1 September 2021 | 20 replies
A lot of this extra money in circulation has made its way into the STR market so this could remain for years as just the price of doing business with inflated rates.The bad: There is no way around supply and demand.
31 May 2017 | 29 replies
Keep a dehumidifier running..and maybe a fan to circulate the air.

20 February 2017 | 8 replies
Paid 30k for "properly" removing and disposing it, with all the testing and insulation, that is how alarming it is, if you don't "touch" it, it is fine, and peeling something is more than "touching", right now asbestos fibers might be circulating in your house, it will be like that and you might inhale it.

4 December 2016 | 3 replies
Hey @Justin C.If you want a fan for just re-circulation, there's a product called Tile fan (http://www.alaska.com.tw/en/product_d.asp) that fits your dimensions.If you want a fan to exhaust air to the outside, you're going to have to find a way to brace the fan to the overhead structure.

2 May 2017 | 8 replies
You probably don't want to re-zone because of the time and money involved especially if you plan to rebuild apartments.A parking spot may only be 113 to 180 SF depending on layout compact or standard but you also need circulation unless you plan to do a valet lot.

17 November 2015 | 4 replies
Is there heavy furniture against the wall, which could inhibit air circulation against a cold wall?
23 November 2015 | 3 replies
The principal differences being:the electric baseboards (EBB) are install and controlled on a room-by-room basis; andEBBs rely on convection to permeate heat into the room (there is no fan circulating the air)In theory EBBs should have similar operating costs to a centralized electric forced air furnace (if not lower), however, in practice, that is usually not the case.Because of their reliance on convection, EBBs have slow recovery - i.e. if there has been a draft (someone opening an external door or window) or if the heat has been set back during the day and was turned up on the occupants return.

10 February 2016 | 4 replies
I hope your not paying for the hot water to be circulated 24 -7.

28 November 2022 | 40 replies
The cold air is produced in the freezer compartment and then circulates down into the fridge.