10 February 2015 | 18 replies
It had central air added and was painted inside, also the kitchen and bath were rehabbed.
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8 October 2020 | 9 replies
The house now has new plumbing, new and updated electrical and new furnace with central air conditioning.
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23 August 2015 | 9 replies
A hot water tank, furnace, satellite receiver, air conditioning unit, security alarm system or water softener, for example, could be rented by the homeowner.
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10 February 2015 | 1 reply
In fact, on a lot of these stations, you can buy blocks of an hour or more and put yourself on the air.
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13 February 2015 | 6 replies
Not only that, when I worked out of Ireland travelling to places like Shanghai and South East Asia to do deals I realized after a year clocking over 300,000 air miles (about 20 weeks of physical travelling between airport time and actual flying) that this was a unique form of lunacy, regardless of the profitability of these deals.So I came to fervently believe that we make our own deals, wherever we are, through vision, negotiation and hard work.
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12 February 2015 | 6 replies
Many of the houses in the north east are old enough that chimneys may not be lined - great source of gases in the house and chimney fires.Also, while an open hearth fireplace is ornamental, it is a lousy source of heat ... you would need to put an air-tight wood/pellet/gas insert into a fireplace to make it moderately efficient.
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12 February 2015 | 5 replies
Forced air heat is by far the best to have in a rainy locale like the Pacific Northwest, as it helps prevent mold and moisture problems.
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15 February 2017 | 18 replies
Haha - let's analyze this:I went on the Cardone Zone and analyzed a 12-unit in Columbus Ohio on the air.
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15 February 2015 | 10 replies
The panel may still be fuse blocks.2) significant new plumbing: you quite likely have a mixture of cast iron and galvanized waste lines (though copper is a possibility) and may have galvanized supply lines;3) envelope: the house will likely have no more than R5 insulation mineral batt insulation ... or worse, someone blew in UFFI in the 1970s ... and will not be air sealed;4) Roof: The roof will have been redone - likely 2-3 times ... multiple layers may still be up there ;-) There is also a good chance the roof is not correctly ventilated as closed soffits were the norm;5) Fenestration - If it has original windows and doors, they will be hugely inefficient (single glazed windows with storms)6) Interior: Our house was built in 1952 and they still used "Rock Board" with plaster over top on all the interior walls. 7) HVAC: Please tell me its not the original furnace or boiler;8) Landscaping : How have the grounds and outbuildings been maintained.You could be looking at a full gut to do this properly.
20 February 2015 | 19 replies
I'm an Air Force guy myself and just started buying property back in April.