English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Okay, I'm buying a house in one of the last economically healthy parts of North America. What important bits of maintenance (cleaning the furnace, for example) should I undertake every year, every two or three years and every 10 years, for example?

2007-12-10 11:45:20 · 3 answers · asked by Willster 5 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

3 answers

I hope you got a home inspection, whether brand-spanking new or previously owned, because too often things get overlooked. An inspector can also shed some light on maintenance for you.

Without knowing WHERE you live (miracle of healthy economy!) your climate as well as particulars of your house will make a difference. (If you have a flat roof, the maintenance issues are different from a pitched roof, for example.)

Generally speaking, whatever kind of HVAC (heating/cooling) system you have should receive maintenance at least annually. If you have a heat pump, once a year probably suffices as it's one unit. If you have an actual AC and a furnace, could be (like for me) that the AC is electric, the furnace is gas, so those are independent systems. I have the AC maintained regularly, haven't worried about the furnace, partly because AC has parts OUTDOORS and the furnace does not.

If you have a fireplace, it depends on how often you use it and what kind it is.

Depending on how handy you are, many maintainance things can be done by you. IF this is a new house, it comes with a limited warranty--you can grill the service people who come out to do the check you should have done while you're still covered by the builder (usually 2 years).

I'm always concerned about the roof--type (composition, tile, etc.) makes a huge difference--each kind has a lifetime expectancy--and you probably want to consider getting a pro to check it now and again after say 5 years for compostion or such, probably can go 15 at least for tile (and yes, tile roofs can break, leak, etc.). Should be able to get an inspection for free or limited cost if you shop around. I don't do heights, so that's a reason I have concerns about roofs always. Plus damage there is always expensive and usually you notice it in conjunction with a storm when EVERYONE else notices and no one can come out for weeks--or they just throw a tarp up for weeks.

Drain your water heater annually.

These are NOT maintenance issues, but I think they're important. I have a whole house water pressure regulator--you want good pressure but not so high that it damages anything in the house. Plumbing problems are hell. Just pay the $100-350 it could run and get one.
Whole house surge protectors--one that can handle lightning strikes is intelligent--again, similar price range and very smart.
If you live where the water is hard or such, consider something like a whole house water filtration system. Honeywell's site description:

"A Honeywell Whole-House Water Pre-Filtration System provides clean, clear water to your entire home. It filters incoming water as soon as it enters the home and automatically flushes dirt, sand, scale and rust down the drain. The result is clean, filtered water flowing from your faucets.

Honeywell uses the ultimate in water pre-filtration technology, including a unique reverse-rinsing system that safely flushes captured sediment and particles. The permanent, stainless steel filter eliminates the need for routine maintenance, as is required with typical sediment filters.

Removing sediment from your water will help protect your appliances, pipes and other plumbing infrastructure from scale and dirt build-up.

Key Features
No replacement filter costs. Permanent stainless steel filter.
Durable construction for long life. Solid brass fittings, durable plastic moldings.
Set it and forget it. Rinsing takes place automatically.
3-year warranty"
http://yourhome.honeywell.com/Consumer/Cultures/en-US/Products/Water+Solutions/Water+Quality/Default.htm

I don't have one of those yet--was very hard for me to get this house (6 years ago, fixed mortgage, I've NEVER been late on a payment, so I did balance this right, but there were limits on what I could afford) so it didn't make the list.

BTW, most houses could use more insulation, especially in the attic. Use this to see what's recommended by DOE for YOUR zip:
http://www.ornl.gov/~roofs/Zip/ZipHome.html

This will help save you money on energy costs if you have a good level of insulation.

BTW, be VERY careful when planting or doing anything NEAR the house. The termite treatment to remain effective REQUIRES that the "band" NOT be broken. That would be about 36 inches out from your foundation. Frankly, if I had been able to prevent my father from planting things TOO CLOSE to the house, I'd feel better about things. I would measure out 40 inches from house and not plant in that area (you could do container gardening, etc. if you really had to have something that close to the house).

Also make sure that you have dirt or gravel or such up around your foundation (assuming a slab built home) for proper drainage. Too many people have dips along the foundation area and water (or snow) builds up there and you get foundational cracks, etc. If you get a lot of heavy rain or such, you should check that every few months, at least annually. Will save heart ache down the road.

Houses are way more expensive than people realize so tuck some funds away for the inevitable replacement of appliances and such. CONSIDER after your builder warranty is up (if you have a new home) getting a home warranty. I've had American Home Shield for 15 years and am glad I did--I've needed them at times. Remember you don't ever want to file a homeowner's claim if you can help it--premiums up, dumped, harder to sell house, etc.

Houses are NOT assets. They are liabilities. People need to "get" that. Robert Kiyosaki ("Rich Dad, Poor Dad") uses the SENSIBLE definition of an asset: anything that puts money in your pocket. A liability? Anything that takes money out of your pocket. He also gets what I've been arguing with real estate agents about for years: increased home values are a BAD thing. Your property tax goes up. Your homeowner's insurance goes up with increased value. "Equity" is worthless--the only way to realize it is (A) borrow against it--now there is more debt and finally people see housing values CAN and DO go down and (B) SELL the house. Now where are you going to live?
What most people CLAIM about housing is inaccurate, so don't let them keep telling you about how going into debt will increase the value of your home. Do what is necessary and affordable from people who GET what I just covered about ACCURATE definitions of assets and liabilities. Accounting is one thing, reality is another. (Remember, for tax purposes rental property depreciates, yet cash flow increases. The paper stuff doesn't always jibe with REALITY.)

ENJOY YOUR HOME!

2007-12-10 12:17:39 · answer #1 · answered by heyteach 6 · 1 0

Well for starters it is great to have a maintenance plan. Once you move in then it is time to look around and see what is important. First since you are in snow country. It is a good idea to keep an eye on your roof and gutters, Clean them out and off every spring. Make sure you keep your landscaping away from the house. Be sure your water heater system is clean and serviced every year. Be sure to set aside money for replacement of some major items that may need replaced. (roof= 20 years etc) Best of luck in your new home. There are so many other items i would need a book for you.

2007-12-10 11:55:06 · answer #2 · answered by Big Deal Maker 7 · 0 0

i'm answering this off the belief you're in a countrywide guard unit, and have not been in very long. Your unit has its coaching schedule laid out for the subsequent 3 years. In tough words, it is laid out over the subsequent 5 years, however the subsequent 3 years are notably lots sturdy. the subsequent 3 hundred and sixty 5 days are inflexibly locked with the workplace of the TAG. What happens is your Brigade and Battalion command team have a Quarterly coaching assembly the place those days coaching schedules and events are locked in. So at any time, interior the coaching 3 hundred and sixty 5 days, the complicated calender is locked in 12 to 18 months out, and is extra rigid interior the 12 month era. it incredibly is obtainable to you thru your coaching Room NCO, who's an AGR. you may desire to have the skill to ask him what the each year drill schedule is and he has it. Your area/Platoon Sergeant/First Sergeant even have it. If the coaching Room NCO says he would not, he's the two pulling your leg or would not might desire to be interior the job! certainly one of my positions became the AC/RC BN team chief. each quarter we had this assembly on the Regimental Headquarters the place the Battalion and Regiment shown the subsequent 5 quarters of educating schedules and reviewed the previous quarter. Your each year drill dates additionally are required to be published on your coaching room. in the event that they at the instant are not there, then do your enterprise a want and locate out what desires to be completed to get the drill schedule published, earlier the guy working there who has the job I used to do is obtainable in and identifies the deficiency. My suspicion is those schedules are published, you in elementary terms might desire to locate the sumptuous place to look to locate them. As a prevalent rule, the weekend you you drilled on earlier, as in first weekend, 2nd weekend or etc, is the weekend you drill on for the 300 and sixty 5 days. there may be some exceptions, incredibly for MUTA 5s or MUTA 3s, yet they attempt to proceed to exist that schedule. It makes it balanced around the state and the Brigade/Regiment.

2016-11-14 09:03:27 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers