Minggu, 12 Januari 2014

Should I Be Scared To Get A Fire At My Home?

carbon monoxide detectors ontario on HAZMASTERS | Creating safe work environments
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Damian Kry


i heard that last week, a house on gage ave. Hamilton, Ontario, was caught on fire. the whole house was gone. and it was most likely caused by a gas leak. a woman had critical conditions. she is now in hospital. 2 girls 22 and 20 had escaped. (the fire started in the basement) and the mom was down there. and she was trapped. the firefighters took her out, she was pronounced dead, but she got revived. but the 2 daughters are still facing the fact that they may lose their mother. she may already be dead, im not sure. there are no updates that i can find. here's the full story: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamilton/news/firefighters-pull-woman-from-burning-basement-1.2444018

there was more than 1 link. there should be 1 or 2 more:

http://www.thespec.com/news-story/4249527-gage-street-fire-victims-starting-from-scratch-/

keep them in your prayers.


my question is "should i be scared that my house may get a gas leak? we have insurance, but still i dont want to lose my home. homes take a while to re-build. and im just worried that "what if we have a gas leak"? should i be scared? or should i not worry? are fires rare? are gas leaks rare? how can you prevent gas leaks? how can you be sure that your house wont catch on fire? i am scared now, because they are not far. gage is only 4 or 5 streets away. and i dont wanna lose my parents. we wont have clothes, water, food, furniture, shelter. please help. i will give 15 points to who answers this question. but can you explain to me how to give 15 points to best answer? idk how too. i was scared to even go to bed, i didnt want to wake up dead. so please. if its a really good answer. i will give 20 points. anything to get me to stop thinking that my house will catch on fire...

please answer right away!!!!!
Thank You.....
15 or 20 points not too who only answers it, to the best answer.



Answer
when things like this happen it does make you stop and think
we got carbon monoxide detectors fitted when there was a news article about people succumbing to fumes

its great that you are now vigilant, but you cannot let it rule your life
make sure everything is on good working order, a gas inspection is done and up to date
and relax

What do you do to save money?




circa 1980


I'm inspired to ask this from an episode of Oprah today. Supposedly one lady saved $200/month on her electric bill, simply by unplugging EVERYTHING not in use!
What are some things you do? At home? Grocery shopping? Saving on gas...etc?



Answer
I use a Kill-A-Watt meter to measure how much each electricity plugged-in device in my home uses. This meter measures watts of power used at a given moment, as well as kilowatt hours used over time. I found out that my coffee maker uses 2 watts constantly just because it's plugged in, my cable modem and router each use 15 watts constantly, my printer another 40 watts, and so on. All told I think I found around 300 watts worth of electricity that was being burned 24x7, which over the course of a month, assuming you're paying $0.10 per kilowatt hour (which was my rate at the time), adds up to $21.60 per month. I switched a plug-in carbon monoxide detector to a battery-powered one; lowered the brightness on a clock radio to its minimum setting; unplugged the DVD player and television, and only plug them in when in use (which in our house is only about twice a week for a couple of hours); and put the computer equipment on a second power bar, so I can have just the desktop computer on (one power bar), or just the router, modem, and printer on (other power bar) to access from my laptop, or both.

I also measured fridge and freezer power consumption with the Kill A Watt meter and then measured the temperature inside the fridge and freezer to make sure they weren't too cold. Turns out my kids had accidentally turned the fridge freezer setting down to about -20F, way too cold! So I adjusted that as well.

All told we were able to lower our electricity consumption by perhaps 4 kilowatt hours a day, to an extremely low 8-9 kwh, which is about a quarter to a fifth of what the average family uses in my area (province of Ontario Canada). We never paid anywhere near $200 a month for electricity, so we couldn't possibly save that much, but I would guess that someone paying over $200 in electricity could probably save three quarters of it by understanding where their energy is being used and by saving as much as possible.

I've tried to share some of my insights about saving energy with a little website I've developed, links to relevant articles provided below. Also a link to a site covering the kill-a-watt meter. Hope you find them useful.




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