Any experience with aquariumplants.club?
8 years ago
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- 8 years ago
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Any one have any experience with rats?
Comments (4)Doing wildlife control work and being a farmer I can tell you for every rat you see there are 10 more. Rats have always been with man and can live and thrive wherever people are, and unless there populations get large enough you will probably never know they were there. I cant tell you how many homes Ive been called to over rats and the people are upset because they believe you have to be dirty to have rats, but as folks know in the big city this just isnt so. That is why the rodent control industry is a billion dollar industry. Ive found that a good poison program is realy the most efficient way to deal with these critters, folks around farms, and public places like the Universities are always going to have larger than usal rat populations, the food and cover these areas provide are a welcome mat. Dont know Ive told you anything you probably didnt already know through your stdies but this is my 2 cents josh...See MoreAny Experience with Florida Hill Nursery?
Comments (62)DO NOT BUY FROM FLORIDA HILL NURSERY. I ordered 10 blackberry plants from them, 8 of which arrived virtually dead. Their refund policy on their website says, and I quote "Sometimes plants don’t survive and we here at Florida Hill Nursery understand that. If within a 30-day time period from the point of delivery your plants don’t survive use our contact form to get in touch with us*.For a full refund return the plants to the address listed below. Once the plants have been shipped back to us simply use our contact form to send us the delivery confirmation. Return the plants to:FHN Refund Department P.O. Box 530318 Debary, FL 32753* " I tried contacting them multiple timess via their contact page, email, and phone. They are completely unresponsive. A very bad experience, and loss of about $70.00....See MoreAny experience with Lumber Liquidators for flooring?
Comments (19)We did a DIY purchase-and-install of approx 800sqft of engineered Brazilian Cherry from Lumber Liquidators about a year ago (I think this is it). We have a LL under 45 minutes away, so we loaded up the pickup. It was all instock*, so we walked out the door with it the day we bought it. (There were samples that came home first, obviously!) Exception was two pieces of stairnose that we needed: those had to be ordered, and there was definitely a longer delay in getting those than I thought reasonable. Questions about how easy/difficult things are to install is going to vary by brand and what material it is. Solid hardwood will have more variations than, say, engineered. I don't think we had ANY pieces that were unusable due to poor quality (curves, bends, breaks in tongue/groove, surface marring, etc). The boxes looked pretty chintzy/cheap, but the product itself was beautiful. No kids, but three cats and ongoing construction (heh), and it only has a few marks - mostly from extreme circumstances (let's just say my husband is sometimes careless about where he THROWS a hammer. ahem.) Anyway. The actual installation is pretty straightforward, though the details again vary by what product. We rented a compressor and nail gun, because we did the nail/staple installation. We took turns being the "nailer" and the "feeder" - the "feeder" was responsible for mixing lengths of pieces, intermixing boxes, cutting end pieces to length, etc. It took us close to three full (12 hour) days to get it all down - again, 800sqft in four bedrooms and weird shaped hallway, and we had to shift furniture from room to room - so a living room should be a one-day project. There is some good information online, as far as installation instructions/tips/etc - including the LL website. It really only takes some basic carpentry skills (cutting to length, nailing neatly), and some forethought (which way should it run, marking parallel lines occasionally, etc)....See MoreExterior fan for hood-- any experience with Abbaka? Any others?
Comments (2)There is a Wolf 1500 cfm that would be suitable, but the one I have has some vibration that I attribute to an insufficiently balanced blade assembly. I am remiss in not pulling it and getting it balanced, although one might better direct a remission accusation to the manufacturer (which is actually Broan-NuTone). It may be worthwhile to pay the premium to go with Abbaka, although I haven't personally experienced any of their blowers. To get the 900 cfm (roughly) of actual air flow that your 10 sq. ft. hood aperture likely requires for good containment, your blower's nominal flow rate needs to be higher to compensate for baffle pressure loss, duct loss, transition loss, and imperfect make-up air pressure loss. I recommend a factor of 1.5x-ish between actual flow and blower rated flow (at zero static pressure). Better capture will be obtained with a hood that overlaps the range by a few inches on each side. Cooking effluent plumes expand as they rise from the hot parts of cooking surfaces. Having at least a 10-degree angle of overlap from hot surface to hood aperture edge is sufficient for most conditions. If hood width is limited to no overlap, greasy cooking should be limited to the inner burners, or side skirts can be used. Cross drafts can also affect capture; the risk of cross drafts will vary with kitchen layout. To reduce noise, go with an exterior blower. To minimize noise, add a silencer into the duct path. Note that a Fantech silencer for a 10-inch duct (the duct size that is appropriate for the desired air flow) is 14 inches in diameter. If interested, check out the Fantech web site. You may have to search for "silencer" because a direct link to the silencer page is not obvious. kas...See More- 8 years ago
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