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Full Member
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Jan 16, 2009, 11:00 PM
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Whooo. It is COLD
Who all is in the artic blast?
You up there in the north are used to this stuff, I understand, but down here in VA, zero degrees just happens every once in a while, couple that with the fact that we haven't had a real winter in 15 years... and well... our homes and wardrobes just kind of grew out of it.
I have found weaknesses in my homes windows.
Out commeth the duct tape!
Electric furnace runs a lot. Expecting a $400 light bill next month. Appalacian Power is grinning ear to ear!
The daytime high is getting back up in the 30's tomorrow. Still no snow though. Hasn't really snowed in years. Only one snow last year (about an inch), and none so far this year.
If it's going to be this cold, it might as well snow.
But that just don't happen anymore. So it will be another dry summer.
In the west, Earthquakes and flooding are the big disasters.
Up north, it's the blizzards...
Down south it's the hurricanes...
Over here where I'm at we don't get any of that, we just get drier and drier every year. Drought, the silent killer. It doesn't carry the fan fare and news coverage that other major disasters carry, but it wreaks havoc on the water supply, and causes all kinds of problems.
All because it doesn't snow anymore.
It may be cold, but make no mistake, there is something wrong with our climate. It's not like it used to be.
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Uber Member
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Jan 16, 2009, 11:10 PM
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Hi, andrewc24301!
Up around where I am, it was -27 last night. It was a record! Hasn't been near to being that cold around here since the mid-1980's.
Thanks!
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Ultra Member
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Jan 16, 2009, 11:55 PM
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Thanks for the update from Southwest Virginia. The weather has been really weird this year. We had drought conditions from lack of snowfall a few years ago. Now we have flooding.
Our gas and electric bills reflect a 30% increase (from the company!) So, we ordered some new windows. My front room has two huge windows, one is over 11 feet wide. I hope the window replacement helps with the heating bill.
I asked someone who knows if the unusual weather patterns are part of global warming. He said, "partly."
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 09:14 AM
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Dad says that when he was a kid in the 60's, it would start snowing in October and you wouldn't see the ground again until April.
Yet this stout die hard republican completely denies global warming.
When ask why we haven't seen six inches of snow in 15 years...
"It's just a pattern" is the answer I get.
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 09:17 AM
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And -27 is very cold.
I think if it ever got that cold down here, we would just stop heating every room in the house except for the living room.
Hell 27 degrees is cold or a daytime high, -27 is a 54 degree drop from that. I can't imagine, I have never expirenced that kind of cold.
And can't say that I want to.
As far as my windows goes, some of them are drafty, and I taped them up. Others are not drafty, but it seems that cold air just pushes through the glass. In other words, you put your hand down by the window sill and you can just feel the cool air falling on your hand. (cool air drops, warm air rises)
I don't know what to do about this. It works like a deep freezer, where the sides of the box get cold thus the cool air falls and cools the inside of the box.
Glass may be a good insulator from high voltage, but my windows don't seem to be a good insulator of heat.
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 10:38 PM
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After some consideration of this problem. And also considering my tightening budget, I may have come up with a simple solution to this cold window problem.
It only seems to effect windows along the back side of the house that overlooks the hill. My home sits on a hill, the rear of the house overlooks the hill and the front of the house is facing the hill, as such, the hill in the front greatly reduces wind current on the front windows. The rear of the house also faces west, the direction all of our weather comes from including wind.
So I decided that I will round up some afgan blankets and drape them over the windows in the rear of the house for the season. I will begin working on this tomorrow.
It will look a little tacky, but so does duct tape. And when it gets down to heating bills, to hell with tacky.
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Senior Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 10:50 PM
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Weather has been a bit brisk here in NW Indiana the past few days. Woke up Friday morning to -17 and with the wind chill it ranged from -30 to -50 and I work outside a lot :p.
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:04 PM
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 Originally Posted by MarkwithaK
Weather has been a bit brisk here in NW Indiana the past few days. Woke up Friday morning to -17 and with the wind chill it ranged from -30 to -50 and I work outside a lot :p.
Well, we don't have anything on you. Never really felt below zero temps. However the temp we are expirencing now, down in the teens and single digits is pushing the limit of what some of our older houses are built to heat and still be efficient. A more average daytime high is in the upper 30's to 40's.
In my job, whether I work outside or not is a crap shoot. I may get a service call indoors, or I might be outside working on the roof of a school freezer condensing unit.
Friday I was fortunate to be in a university dining hall all day working, good steam heat in those buildings. Very warm.
Just a side story, working outside, reminds me of the time I had to go to Applebees one time to work on a walk in freezer that had went down. Friday evening, it was a warm day. But a tropical system was working its way up the valley. Wind gust of 60 MPH. Sideways rain.
Crawled up on the roof, wind took the panel right out of my hand and slung it across the parking lot. Almost lost the ladder. Pressure switch with bad on it. I was up there for about and hour in the wind and rain. Got so wet that I recall water soaking right though my underwear to where it was dripping off my... well, lets just say I was wet to the core.
Felt good getting home that day. To bad I was an hour away from home.
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Senior Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:08 PM
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I had something similar about 2 summers ago. I was on a roof of a restaurant diagnosing a ad compressor. The weather was bright and sunny when I climbed up there. Just as I was packing it up we were hit with hurricane like winds, pouring rain and lightning. I was literally pinned down on that roof with nowhere nonmetallic to hide! I had to ride it out.
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:21 PM
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Hum... are we in the same field? What do you do for a living?
I guess it's obvious, I repair commercial kitchen equipment and refrigeration.
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Senior Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:27 PM
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I am an HVAC/R technician. I specialize in commercial refrigeration, kitchen equipment, heating, A/C.
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:31 PM
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 Originally Posted by MarkwithaK
I am an HVAC/R technician. I specialize in commercial refrigeration, kitchen equipment, heating, A/C.
Right on... Good to see someone else on here does something similar.
Only we don't do heating and AC, we are stictly cooking equipment and refrigeration, including small reach ins and walkins. In addition to meat rooms, grinders, scales, fryers, mixers, dishwashers... etc..
To bad they don't have a "commercial maintenance" board or something, then we could be bonafide "experts" :)
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Senior Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:38 PM
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 Originally Posted by andrewc24301
cooking equipment and refrigeration, including small reach ins and walkins. In addition to meat rooms, grinders, scales, fryers, mixers, dishwashers... etc..
All that and then some. Ice machines are another. It's kind of funny. I went through HVAC/R school and never once was any kitchen equipment mentioned. I've had to learn it all out in the field lol.
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:44 PM
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HA, for me it was opposite!
They sent me to dishwasher school, mixer school, grinder school, scale school, but aside from the EPA test they gave me, I had no formal refrigeration training, it was all out in the field.
I've been to a few ice machine seminars, but I hardly count that as a "school".
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Senior Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:45 PM
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Ice machines are easy after the first 50 or so :p
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Full Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:54 PM
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Yea, steamers always suck though...
I've been on call this weekend, got a call this morning to a fryer that shorted out.
They had cleaned the vat so it was nice and cool and clean, sitting in the back room, however the box that had shorted was on the underside. Where they sprayed it down, it made all of the caked up grease under the fryer cold and wet...
Nothing like trying to find a screw in what looks like a big box of cold snot.
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Expert
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:55 PM
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I grew up in NW Indiana, now live in Texas, haven't had a real coat since I left. No longjohns either. But the summers are a beeyatch!
Imagine 50 degrees in freakin January!
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Senior Member
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Jan 17, 2009, 11:58 PM
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 Originally Posted by andrewc24301
Yea, steamers always suck though...
Yup. Nothing like chipping years of accumulated calcium and sediment out of the element chamber. I'm on call this weekend myself. Had one truck stop with multiple units down and then a gas station with a serious design problem lol.
 Originally Posted by talaniman
I grew up in NW Indiana,
Really? What part?
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Full Member
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Jan 18, 2009, 12:05 AM
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 Originally Posted by talaniman
I grew up in NW Indiana, now live in Texas, havent had a real coat since I left. No longjohns either. But the summers are a beeyatch!
Imagine 50 degrees in freakin January!
Thing is, two weeks ago is was in the mid 60's here! And the way our weather is here, two weeks from now it may be 80! Then a cold front comes through and drops it down to 30.
Crazy stuff...
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Senior Member
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Jan 18, 2009, 12:08 AM
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Honestly I love it here, cold weather and all. I moved down to Florida for a while and couldn't stand it.
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