Plumbing Repairs Central MA: Do It Yourself or Call a Pro?
August 28, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
The faucet is dripping, the toilet won’t stop running, and there’s a smell coming from the kitchen sink drain that’ll knock you out. As an Central Mass homeowner, you’ve got a choice: can you do these plumbing repairs on your own, or is it time to call in a professional? It’s not an idle question. If you’ve got decent do-it-yourselfer skills, you can save yourself a good chunk of change handling some basic home plumbing repairs. However, some jobs aren’t as easy as they might appear to be. Bite off more than you can chew, and expensive mistakes can be the result. How do you make the call?
The first step may not be what you think.
Before you start running for your screwdrivers and plumber’s putty, step back and ask yourself three questions. Are you a handy person? The homeowner who has already mastered some basic fix it skills can confidently tackle some home plumbing repairs, but if you’re a total novice, having some help might be a good idea. Do you have the tools it will take to do the job? Your Central MA plumber already owns all the tools of the trade – but unless you have your own wrenches, pliers, pipe cutters and more, you’ll have to buy them. This can be quite an expense – particularly if you’re not planning on doing plumbing repairs on a regular basis. Finally, is doing this plumbing repair yourself the best use of your time? Paying a plumber $50 to fix a dripping faucet may seem excessive – until you realize that you’ve spent six hours of your precious weekend stuck under the sink, staring up at a tangle of pipes.
If you’re confident in your home repair skills, equipped with the right tools, and at peace with spending your time fixing the plumbing, the next step is to look at the particular plumbing problem you have and determine if you’re ready to take it on. The four most common home plumbing complaints are dripping faucets, leaky pipes, clogged or overflowing toilets, and stinky drains. The typical homeowner can address some of these issues while others require calling in a plumber.
The constant drip, drip, drip coming from a bathroom or kitchen faucet is a noise all too many (ANYTOWN) homeowners are familiar with. Do you need a plumber to fix a leaky faucet? The answer is typically no – depending on the type of leak we’re talking about. Stopping a dripping faucet may require nothing more than replacing the washer. Leaks that appear at the base of the faucet often mean that the rubber o-ring has worn out. Once you’ve obtained the right replacement parts, it’s a relatively easy repair.
Leaking pipes, on the other hand, generally mean it’s time to call in the pros. The problem with leaking pipes is that often the leak goes undetected for a long time. Water can damage walls, floors – even your home’s support structures – if the leak’s not stopped. In addition to fixing the leaky pipe, you have to address the water damage. Leaks at the pipe’s joints may be addressed by tightening the joints or applying a sealant. Splits, holes, and cracks in the body of the pipe generally require replacing the pipe and that means calling in your Worcester area plumber.
Overflowing toilets are impossible to ignore! Obstructions in the sewer pipe can create a homeowner’s worse nightmare. Grease, hair, and foreign objects – including the toys and clothing toddlers love to send down the toilet – can lodge in the pipes, preventing your system from functioning properly. If the plunger’s not fixing the problem, you need a plumber. Clearing sewer systems requires specialized equipment. This is a job that can be done much faster by the professional than the homeowner.
The kitchen and bathroom sinks are the sight of the next common plumbing problem. So much more than water goes down our drains – from food scraps, grease, and dish soap throughout shampoo, hair, and other cosmetics and toiletries – that clogs are almost inevitable. These clogs trap water in your home’s drain system, and the result is a foul odor and drains that don’t let water out quickly – if at all. Don’t be fooled by the claims of discount-store drain cleaners: while these chemicals can address relatively minor problems, really solving the issue means calling in your Central MA plumber. Having your drains cleaned annually can completely eliminate this issue for most homeowners, saving you time and money in the long run!
Heating Worcester: How to Tell Your Furnace Needs Service
August 16, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Unseasonably early cool nights have left some Worcester area residents unexpectedly shivering in their beds. “You never think about your heat until you need it,” said Lynda Martineau, a local mother of four. “But then the baby starts saying she’s cold, and you’re waiting for the furnace to kick on, and nothing! Then it’s all you can think about.” Colder weather is definitely in the forecast, and you don’t want to discover your heating system isn’t working the hard way. Having your furnace or home heating system serviced annually is a great idea. Additionally, you want to keep your ears and eyes open for these five common ‘red flag’ signs that something is wrong.
Uneven Temperatures Within Your Home
Is it toasty warm in your kitchen and chilly in your bedroom? Do you need to wear a sweater sitting in your living room, while your kids complain the bathroom’s too hot? Your home heating system should be delivering consistently comfortable heat throughout all of the zones in your home, all day long. Uneven temperatures create more than discomfort. For the elderly and those with compromised immune systems, it can be difficult to maintain a healthy body temperature, critical for optimum health. Fluctuations in the ambient temperature
Thump, Bump, Clunk, Kapow!
Failing furnaces are noisy furnaces. Under ideal circumstances, your home heating system should be operating quietly. Often, a system will have a few familiar knocks or rattles that the homeowner’s accustomed to hearing; flexing ductwork or noisy blower motors that merit no special attention. However, if you start hearing new noises, particularly coupled with any of the other signs on this list, it’s time to call your Worcester area heating repair professional.
The Furnace Never Stops Running!
If your home heating system is operating continually, you have a problem. Heating systems are designed to run intermittently; producing heat for a short period of time – until the space being warmed has reached the desired temperature – and then shutting off. The ‘rest period’ during which your furnace isn’t running helps you conserve fuel and energy. This time off also prolongs the useful life of your heating system. If your furnace isn’t shutting off, you’ll see your fuel use go through the roof – costing you a lot of extra money you didn’t need to spend.
Cool Air Being Forced Through Vents
Heating systems can fail in stages. For example, your furnace’s blower can be functioning perfectly, sending air careening through your Worcester area home’s ductwork – but if everything else isn’t working the way it’s supposed to, the air can be cool or even cold! The last thing you want on a chilly fall afternoon is cool air coming through the vents. The situation gets worse when it’s the middle of the winter – or more likely, the middle of the coldest night you’ve ever experienced. Changes in temperature are worth paying attention to as well: if your thermostat is set at 68 and the furnace that used to reliably warm it up now struggles to keep up, it’s time to call for service!
Utility and Fuel Bills Skyrocket
We’re all accustomed to seeing our energy bills constantly get higher and higher and higher. Home heating bills are particularly troublesome, as the price of home heating oil, kerosene, propane, and other common fuels is tied to events over which we have no control – politics, consumer demand, even distant hurricanes can raise the prices we pay. That being said, if you see your utility and fuel bills rise steeply, suddenly, for no identifiable reason, there may very well be a problem. If you can’t attribute the change to a change in your habits – such as running the heater more during a stretch of sub-zero weather – or to an external event, which your fuel company would normally inform you of, it’s a good idea to have your home heating system inspected to identify and remedy the problem.
Act Quickly!
If you suspect there’s problems with your Worcester area heating system, don’t delay. Call your Worcester area plumber or heating technician right away. Heating problems don’t get better on their own, and letting your home heating system run when it’s not operating properly can create larger issues – even fire! Your home is too important to put on the line!