Tuesday, December 27, 2011

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Saturday, December 10, 2011

The Ways An Air Conditioner Compressor Can Fail, and What To Do About It

!: The Ways An Air Conditioner Compressor Can Fail, and What To Do About It

Air conditioner compressors usually fail due to one of two conditions: time and hours of operation (wear out), or abuse. There are some failures that can occur elsewhere in the system that will cause a compressor failure, but these are less common unless the system has been substantially abused.

Usually abuse is a result of extended running with improper freon charge, or as a consequence of improper service along the way. This improper service can include overcharging, undercharging, installing the wrong starter capacitor as a replacement, removing (rather than repairing/replacing) the thermal limiter, insufficient oil, mixing incompatible oil types, or wrong oil, installing the compressor on a system that had a major burnout without taking proper steps to remove the acid from the system, installing the wrong compressor (too small) for the system, or installing a new compressor on a system that had some other failure that was never diagnosed.

The compressor can fail in only a handful of different ways. It can fail open, fail shorted, experience a bearing failure, or a piston failure (throw a rod), or experience a valve failure. That is pretty much the entire list.

When a compressor fails open, a wire inside the compressor breaks. This is unserviceable and the symptom is that the compressor does not run, though it may hum. If the compressor fails open, and following the steps here does not fix it, then the system may be a good candidate for a new compressor. This failure causes no further failures and won't damage the rest of the system; if the rest of the system is not decrepit then it would be cost effective to just put a new compressor in.

Testing for a failed open compressor is easy. Pop the electrical cover for the compressor off, and remove the wires and the thermal limiter. Using an ohmmeter, measure the impedance from one terminal to another across all three terminals of the compressor. Also measure the impedance to the case of the compressor for all three terminals.

You should read low impedance values for all terminal to terminal connections (a few hundred ohms or less) and you should have a high impedance (several kilo-ohms or greater) for all terminals to the case (which is ground). If any of the terminal to terminal connections is a very high impedance, you have a failed open compressor. In very rare cases, a failed open compressor may show a low impedance to ground from one terminal (which will be one of the terminals associated with the failed open). In this case, the broken wire has moved and is contacting the case. This condition - which is quite rare but not impossible - could cause a breaker to trip and could result in a misdiagnosis of failed short. Be careful here; do an acid test of the contents of the lines before deciding how to proceed with repair.

When a compressor fails short, what happens is that insulation on the wires has worn off or burned off or broken inside the compressor. This allows a wire on a motor winding to touch something it should not touch - most commonly itself a turn or two further along on the motor winding. This results in a "shorted winding" which will stop the compressor immediately and cause it to heat up and burn internally.

Bad bearings can cause a failed short. Either the rotor wobbles enough to contact the stator, resulting in insulation damage that shorts the rotor either to ground or to the stator, or end bearing wear can allow the stator to shift down over time until it begins to rub against the stator ends or the housing.

Usually when one of these shorts occur, it is not immediately a hard short - meaning that initially the contact is intermittent and comes and goes. Every time the short occurs, the compressor torque drops sharply, the compressor may shudder a bit visibly as a result, and this shudder shakes the winding enough to separate the short. While the short is in place, the current through the shorted winding shoots up and a lot of heat is produced. Also, usually the short will blow some sparks - which produces acid inside the air conditioner system by decomposing the freon into a mixture of hydrochloric and hydrofluoric acid.

Over time (possibly a couple of weeks, usually less) the shuddering and the sparking and the heat and the acid cause insulation to fail rapidly on the winding. Ultimately, the winding loses enough insulation that the inside of the compressor is literally burning. This will only go on for a few minutes but in that time the compressor destroys itself and fills the system with acid. Then the compressor stops. It may at that time melt a wire loose and short to the housing (which can trip your house main breaker) or it may not. If the initial cause of the failure was bad bearings causing the rotor to rub, then usually when the thing finally dies it will be shorted to the housing.

If it shorts to the housing, it will blow fuses and/or breakers and your ohmmeter will show a very low impedance from one or more windings to ground. If it does not short to the housing, then it will just stop. You still establish the type of failure using an ohmmeter.

You cannot directly diagnose a failed short with an ohmmeter unless it shorts to the housing - a shorted winding won't show up with an ohmmeter though it would with an inductance meter (but who has one of those?) Instead, you have to infer the failed short. You do this by establishing the the ohmmeter gives normal readings, the starter capacitor is good, power is arriving at the compressor, AND an acid test of the freon shows acid present.

With a failed short, just give up. Change everything, including the lines if possible. It is not worth fixing; it is full of acid and therefore is all junk. Further, a failed short could have been initially induced by some other failure in the system that caused a compressor overload; by replacing the whole system you also will get rid of that potential other problem.

Less commonly, a compressor will have a bearing failure, piston failure or a valve failure. These mechanical failures usually just signal wear out but could signal abuse (low lubricant levels, thermal limiter removed so compressor overheats, chronic low freon condition due to un-repaired leaks). More rarely, they can signal another failure in the system such as a reversing valve problem or an expansion valve problem that winds up letting liquid freon get into the suction side of the compressor.

If a bearing fails, usually you will know because the compressor will sound like a motor with a bad bearing, or it will lock up and refuse to run. In the worst case, the rotor will wobble, the windings will rub on the stator, and you will wind up with a failed short.

If the compressor locks up mechanically and fails to run, you will know because it will buzz very loudly for a few seconds and may shudder (just like any stalled motor) until the thermal limiter cuts it off. When you do your electrical checks, you will find no evidence of failed open or failed short. The acid test will show no acid. In this case, you might try a hard-start kit but if the compressor has failed mechanically the hard-start kit won't get the compressor to start. In this case, replacing the compressor is a good plan so long as the rest of the system is not decrepit. After replacing the compressor, you must carefully analyze the performance of the entire system to determine whether the compressor problem was induced by something else.

Rarely, the compressor will experience a valve failure. In this case, it will either sit there and appear to run happily but will pump no fluid (valve won't close), or it will lock up due to an inability to move the fluid out of the compression chamber (valve won't open). If it is running happily, then once you have established that there is indeed plenty of freon in the system, but nothing is moving, then you have no choice but to change the compressor. Again, a system with a compressor that has had a valve failure is a good candidate for a new compressor.

Now, if the compressor is mechanically locked up it could be because of a couple of things. If the compressor is on a heat pump, make sure the reversing valve is not stuck half way. Also make sure the expansion valve is working; if it is blocked it can lock the compressor. Also make sure the filter is not clogged. I once saw a system that had a locked compressor due to liquid lock. Some idiot had "serviced" the system by adding freon, and adding freon, and adding freon until the thing was completely full of liquid. Trust me; that does not work.

Should diagnosis show a clogged filter, then this should be taken as positive evidence of some failure in the system OTHER than a compressor failure. Typically, it will be metal fragments out of the compressor that clogs the filter. This can only happen if something is causing the compressor to wear very rapidly, particularly in the pistons, the rings, the bores, and the bearings. Either the compressor has vastly insufficient lubrication OR (and more commonly) liquid freon is getting into the compressor on the suction line. This behavior must be stopped. Look at the expansion valve and at the reversing valve (for a heat pump).

Often an old system experiences enough mechanical wear internally that it is "worn in" and needs more torque to start against the system load than can be delivered. This system will sound just like one with a locked bearing; the compressor will buzz loudly for a few seconds then the thermal limiter will kill it. Occasionally, this system will start right up if you whack the compressor with a rubber mallet while it is buzzing. Such a system is a good candidate for a hard-start kit. This kit stores energy and, when the compressor is told to start, dumps extra current into the compressor for a second or so. This overloads the compressor, but gives some extra torque for a short time and is often enough to make that compressor run again. I have had hard-start kits give me an extra 8 or 9 years in some old units that otherwise I would have been replacing. Conversely, I have had them give only a few months. It is your call, but considering how cheap a hard-start kit is, it is worth trying when the symptoms are as described.

And this, in a nutshell, is what can happen to an air conditioner compressor and what you can do about it.


The Ways An Air Conditioner Compressor Can Fail, and What To Do About It

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

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Friday, November 18, 2011

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Thursday, November 10, 2011

Air Scrubber - How Does It Clean?

!: Air Scrubber - How Does It Clean?

What do you use an air scrubber for? Air scrubbers are a reliable method to remove airborne gaseous contaminants from any indoor area. Many manufacturing plants, businesses, workshops and even homes use air scrubbers. There are two processes which an air scrubber can utilize to clean the air of gaseous contaminants. The first process commonly used with an air scrubber is called adsorption. Adsorption is a process in which one substance is drawn to and stuck on the surface of another. The words adsorbent and adsorbate relate to the act of capturing molecules. The adsorption process can be done easily when a material uses attractive force to overcome the kinetic energy of a gas molecule.

A more clear example of how adsorption works is the way cigarette smoke is absorbed quickly into a car's interior lining. It's really incredible how the gas molecules of the cigarette can leave the air and go into the car's interior lining. When you enter a vehicle of a smoker you always can tell immediately that they smoke because of the gas molecules held fast in the vehicle's interior lining. Air scrubbers adsorption process works much in the same way as the cigarette smoke in the car does. Instead of interior lining adsorption uses granular activated carbons (GAC's) or sorbents such as activated aluminas to attract gas molecules. An air scrubber also uses the a resistance to airflow, the adsorbent bed depth, temperature, gas velocity, and the characteristics of the contaminants which need to be cleaned out of the air to more effectively rid the air of gaseous contaminants. The adsorption process is one of methods an air scrubber utilizes to clean the air of pollutants.

Another process an air scrubber can use to remove airborne gaseous contaminants from the air is called chemisorption. Chemisorption consists of adsortpion and irreversible chemical reactions. Most adsorbent materials do not eliminate all gases equally. It can be ineffective at time if you are seeking complete removal of pollutants. Chemisorption improves on the adsorbent process by incorporating various chemicals into the equation. During the chemisorption process certain chemicals are mixed with the less-adsorbable gases which reacts by forming a new more stable chemical compound. These new chemical compounds are bound to the application as organic or inorganic salts. This new compound is sometimes released back into the air as CO or water vapor. Chemisorption is the result of various chemical reactions on the surface of the adsorbent.

It is a two stage process. The adsorbates are physically adsorbed onto the adsorbent. Then they chemically react to the adsorbent and a chemical impregnant is added into the mix. The most common chemical impregnant used during this method of an air srubber is potassium permanganate. The chemisorption process of an air scrubber can effectively help clean the air of gaseous contaminants such as toxic gases, corrosive gases, irritant gases, odorous gases, and (ETS) environmental tobacco smoke. The air scrubber process you select to use it totally up to you and your air cleaning requirements.


Air Scrubber - How Does It Clean?

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Monday, November 7, 2011

Propane Generator - How to Quickly Determine If a Propane Generator is Right For You

!: Propane Generator - How to Quickly Determine If a Propane Generator is Right For You

A few years back, one of the greatest drawbacks to buying a propane generator was the price of the unit itself and the cost associated with getting it professionally installed. Thankfully, those days are over! The propane generator has become affordable even for the most finicky of buyers. Unbeknownst to most people the propane generator now packs a very powerful punch both in cost and in features.

As you have probably gathered, in today's economy going without electricity for an hour simply won't cut it; let alone being without power for days or weeks. As you know, power outages can happen anywhere, anytime and can occur due to any number of circumstances or situations. They power can go out due to inclement weather, equipment malfunction, software malfunction, an accident somewhere in the power grid or a host of other reasons.

The most critical question that everyone asks is, "How long will the power be out?" Unfortunately, in most cases no one can really answer that question with any absolute certainty. It could be out a few hours, or it could be out for weeks as we saw in the 2009 Ice Storm.

With some generators, that timeframe becomes extremely critical because of the fuel source. For example if your generator is fueled by gasoline and you have enough fuel capacity to last a total of only twelve hours, that means you will need to refuel before that twelfth hour deadline. But what happens if the gas stations are shut down and you have already exhausted your gas reserves? What happens if the roads won't be cleared for another ten to twelve hours? At that point, your backup power will be effectively shut down.

If you select a propane generator, you have the option of having an underground tank installed with a capacity of anywhere from 200 gallons to 500 gallons. This provides you with three important benefits. The underground tank is protected from the elements, meaning you won't have any concerns about inclement weather negatively impacting your fuel source. Secondly, when you use fuel sources such as gasoline or diesel, you must go through the refueling process every so often.

Even if you have a 35 gallon reserve gas can, you'll still need to refuel after 48 hours. By adding a underground tank to your propane generator, you can sit back and enjoy the fruits of your labor without any concerns. Here are some additional questions to ask yourself to help you determine if a propane generator is right for you.

Are you living in an area prone to power outages?
Are you living in an area prone to prolonged power outages?
Do you have a home medical device that is powered by electricity?
Do you have medicines or other health-related products that require refrigeration?
Do you have any elderly individuals, infants or anyone else that will be susceptible to extreme cold or heat due to power outages?
Do you have valuables in home that are protected by a security system?
Do you run a home-based business that requires power for office equipment?
Do you rely on an electrically-operated well, electric water purifier or a sump pump?

If you answer YES to any of the questions, a propane standby generator will be the best investment for you and your family's safety and security. Suffice it to say, if one of your major concerns is how much back up power time will you have, this is the only type of standby generator that will provide you with the power you need over a long period of time without needing to refuel.


Propane Generator - How to Quickly Determine If a Propane Generator is Right For You

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Friday, November 4, 2011

Cascade® 1500 Canister Filter for up to 200 Gallon Aquariums, 350gph

!: Last Minute Cascade® 1500 Canister Filter for up to 200 Gallon Aquariums, 350gph Buy Now

Brand : Penn-Plax
Rate :
Price : $138.99
Post Date : Nov 05, 2011 02:03:37
Usually ships in 24 hours



Cascade® Canister Filters from Penn Plax® offer heavy-duty multi-stage external filtration for your fresh or salt water aquarium. The Cascade® 1500 Canister Filter can handle aquariums up to 200 gallons efficiently providing up to 350 gph of flow. These filters allow you to combine the benefits of several types of media delivering powerful mechanical, chemical & biological filtration for crystal clear water in fresh or marine environments. Easy to install, these filters come with all the necessary accessories to connect to your tank and begin filtering in approximately 30 minutes and see visable improvement in less than a day! A quick push-button primer makes start-ups easy and the two independent directional 360-degree rotational valve taps make placement worry-free. Flow-rate control valves and swimming pool-style hose clamps make setup and adjustment easy. The popular cobalt blue color will look attractive next to your tank and the sturdy rubber mounted tip-proof rubber base keeps the unit in place. Each pump comes with large filter trays, start-up filter media & input/output tubing. The large filter trays mean you can use more media and have longer periods between replacement. An air-tight seal assures proper flow rate while maintaing ultra quiet operation. The easy-lift clamps make it simple to release the vacuum and remove the top for changing media or other maintanance. Directional returns help to suspend waste matter so it can be taken in by the filter leaving nothing but clear, clear water. Use any combination of media including bio-floss, bio-sponges, activated carbon and others to accomplish a wide array of aquarium filtration needs.

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

RV Converters

!: RV Converters

Just when I thought we thoroughly covered RV electrical systems I get another good question about something I failed to discuss in my previous articles. I received one of these good questions the other day and thought there would be many other RVers who would like to hear the answer.

Question: In one of your previous articles you list the RV converter as drawing 5 amps. Since, I believe, the converter is operating any time you plug into a 120 volt AC system (30 Amp), does this mean that in reality you only have 25 amps to work with (30 minus 5 = 25, and not considering clock draws, etc.)? I am developing an electric amp chart to hang inside a cabinet and I need to resolve this question as this would make a significant difference.

First of all let's talk briefly about what your RV converter does. When you plug your RV into an electrical source, or when you use the onboard generator, the converters job is to reduce 120 volts AC down to 12 volt DC to supply power to all of the 12 volt appliances and accessories in the RV. If you weren't plugged into an electrical source your RV battery(s) would supply the power to all of the 12 volt appliances and accessories in the RV. The converter basically prevents your RV battery(s) from draining when you're plugged in.

There are two types of amperage draw concerning your RV. The AC amps we are using and the DC amps we are using. I'll try to explain. When you plug your RV into an electrical source and use 120 volt appliances like the roof air conditioner, the microwave and a TV you are drawing amps from the available supply at the campground, usually 30 or 50 amps depending on your RV electrical system and the electrical supply you are plugged into. When you're plugged into an electrical source and you use DC appliances and accessories like fans, lights, pumps or the TV antenna booster you are drawing amps from the converter. Are you more confused now than when we started? Let's try wording this a little different.

Let's say you plug your RV into a 30 amp electrical supply and you only use 120 volt appliances. You're using available amps from the 30 amp electrical supply for whatever 120 volt appliances are running, but the converter is drawing almost 0 amps because you're not using any DC accessories. It will use a small amount for items like the LP gas leak detector, clocks or maybe an aisle light, but not enough to really affect the amperage you are plugged into.

Your RV converter is rated for a certain amperage i.e. 30 amps, 45 amps, 55 amps. In other words a 45 amp converter is capable of running 45 amps worth of 12 volt appliances in the RV. When your RV converter is working at its maximum capacity, which in this case is producing 45 amps for 12 volt appliances and accessories, it is drawing around 5 amps out of the 30 amps available from the campground electrical supply.

Let's say you're plugged in and you're using a couple of 12 volt overhead lights (2 amps) and a ceiling fan (4 amps). In this case your converter is drawing very little from the campgrounds 30 amp electrical supply. In another scenario let's say you're using a lot of 12 volt overhead lights (8 amps), you're running the furnace fan (11 amps), water pump (4 amps), 12-volt television (5 amps), range hood fan (2.5 amps), and the battery is being charged by the converter charger (3 amps). Now, when the converter is running close to its full capacity it draws the full 5 amps from the campgrounds 30 amps, leaving you with 25 amps for other 120 volt appliances and accessories. As you can see it's unlikely that all of this would be happening at one time. The bottom line is the converter amperage draw will fluctuate depending on the 12 volt demand placed on it.

Another question I was asked was; I know my converter is also a battery charger so why won't it bring my discharged batteries back to a full charge? RV converters do provide a charge to your RV house batteries, but only a small portion of the converters amperage rating is used for this. Normally 3 to 5 amps, which are not nearly enough to charge batteries that are discharged.

The converter battery charger is designed to keep the house batteries topped off with this trickle charge. Another problem with older RV converters is they charge at a fixed voltage in the range of 13.5 volts. If your batteries are fully charged this can be too much for a float charge and over time it will deplete the water level in the batteries cells. This is why it's important to check the water level in your batteries on a regular basis, especially when you leave the RV plugged in for extended periods of time. You need a three stage charger that can provide a bulk charge then an absorption charge and finally a float charge. Newer RV converters on the market are capable of charging the batteries this way.

Now, to help you out with your amp chart I am including some typical amperage draws for appliances and accessories commonly used in RV's. Keep in mind I'm not an expert on electricity by any stretch of the imagination. This is just a basic guide to assist you in how many amps you are using at any given time. If you need to know exact amperage ratings you can check the data plate on any motors, appliances or electronic equipment you are using. If you can't locate a data plate with this information check the appliance or electronic equipment owner's manual. This information might provide wattage requirements rather than amps. Here are a couple of simple formulas to help you convert some common electrical terms.

Wattage % Volts = Amps
Amps X Volts = Wattage

One other thing to keep in mind is many RV appliances require more amps to start the appliance than they do to run the appliance. A roof air conditioner can draw 16 amps to start, but may only use 13 amps once it is running.

120 Volt AC Amp Ratings:

Appliance or Electronic Equipment Estimated Amps

Air Conditioner (X number of A/C) 12-16 Amps

Blender 5-6 Amps

Coffee Maker 5-8 Amps

Compact Disc Player 1 Amp

Computer (Laptop) 2-3 Amps

Converter 1-5 Amps

Crock Pot 1-2 Amps

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RV Converters

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Is it Possible to Build Homemade Windmills?

!: Is it Possible to Build Homemade Windmills?

Some people have made a lot of homemade windmills in their backyard that do not even look like the traditional ones that you have probably seen, though the concept is the same and it does a more efficient job. Building one and installing it in your home can really save you a lot in power costs. You may also opt to use solar panels. They have no movable parts, but they take longer to store power and may not work that efficiently during cloudy days.

First, let us discuss the concept of a windmill. Windmills are mechanical machines which catch the wind force through blades to generate power directly or store it in a battery. A smaller system can be used to pump water, having a direct drive shaft which is connected together by sets of gears. From the blades, the gears increase the number of times the pump moves so that it will take little turns for more pumping of water. This can be stored in a water tank. If you have no need of water, all you must do is free wheel the blades from the gears through a lever. This will detach the connection between the blades and the pump. Or there are some systems where they collapse the blades so they do not catch the wind. This is useful when there are storms with strong winds.

The speed of such a mechanical device is determinant on its height, length, and pitch of the blades. The height will allow you to catch a range of winds. You may not need that big a machine. You just need to elevate it through the use of a tower. The length, the number, and the angle of the blades are computed based on the speed of the winds that you expect.

Larger ones can be used to power some electrical appliances in your home. These work by generating current then storing it into a series of car or truck batteries. You can either use a battery inverter for you to be able to convert these to 110V or your appliances have to be in 12V or 24V so you can plug it directly to the battery.

Try searching the Internet for designs of your windmill. There is even a design that looks like a coiled egg, and it works more efficiently than most modern blade type designs. There are also some vendors for these and some may not be that expensive. If you do not have any idea about the installation, do not try it on your own. There are computations and factors for making cheap and efficient homemade windmills.


Is it Possible to Build Homemade Windmills?

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Monday, October 24, 2011

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Friday, October 21, 2011

3 Tips for Decorating a Fish Pond

!: 3 Tips for Decorating a Fish Pond

A fish pond, adjacent to any outdoor living area of the home, can provide a tranquil refuge in which to unwind from the day to day stress we all seem to encounter.

The pond area can be a place of general use for the entire family, a personalized getaway, with a theme which appeals to the individual's taste, or used in conjunction with other landscaping to provide an unusual, but beautiful appeal to the home.

In any event the desired atmosphere must be created by decorating the environment in such a manner as to achieve the desired effect. As themes, ponds and ideas are a varied and numerous as the people creating the area, we'll demonstrate three possibilities of decorating methods.

Nature always has a way of outperforming any man made idea when it comes to pleasing the inner being of a person whether it be for beauty, calming or motivation.

Therefore, using nature as a theme is an excellent place to begin our project. Whether the in-ground pond is constructed of plastic, concrete or natural clay you'll want to finish the perimeter of the pond, not only to prevent possible erosion, but to create a theme.

You can buy a certain type or color of rock at any rock supply quarry or pond supply store, but the use of rocks found along the roadside or creek bed close to home will afford a more area specific feel of nature.

Simply decide how wide you want the rock perimeter around the pond and mark this area, with a cheap white spray can of paint. Buying a weed retardant ground cover material, cut the matting to conform with your desired shape and secure it. Always buy a black colored material as it won't be as noticeable if not completely covered by the decorative rock.

Simply place the rocks onto the matting, stacking it to the desired height and arranging it in a manner to hide the ground cover mat from sight. The use of gravel, colored or otherwise will also provide an excellent decorative coloring.

Lighting can accentuate or create any type of environment you wish. The only limits to what you may create with the usage of lighting is normally the financial aspect.

Direct and indirect lighting when used in conjunction can provide a romantic or mysterious atmosphere. The least expensive, yet very effective method of lighting, is to use cheaper low voltage lights. The lighting sets come in various styles, which normally include indirect lighting, mushroom style, direct lighting, spot light style, low voltage electric wiring and a timer.

The number of lights are important, but additional lights can be bought separately, but pay special attention to the control box in order to know if it's timer set or dust to dawn. Either type of timer requires 110v electric, but a dust dawn activated timer obviously keeps the lighting on from dust till dawn. A timer which can be programmed can turn the lighting on and off at desired time intervals.

The use of moving water always presents a calming effect and does not have to include an expensive or labor intensive waterfall. You'll have to purchase a water pump in order to keep the water moving and filtrated for cleanliness. Buy a slightly larger pump, they are rated by GPM, with an attachment which will direct a portion of the water passing through the pump into a spraying fountain. The water can be adjusted as to the height and desired shape of the spray depending on different attachments.

These three decorative steps will allow you to create a ground, light and water scene which provides the exact atmosphere you're trying to create.


3 Tips for Decorating a Fish Pond

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Friday, April 22, 2011

Flojet 18555-000 Waste Water Pump

!: Used Flojet 18555-000 Waste Water Pump This instant

Brand : Flojet | Rate : | Price : $214.19
Post Date : Apr 22, 2011 19:06:28 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Flojet Waste Water Pump helps to drain the waste tank easily. It connects directly to the RV waste outlet, eliminating the need for the 3 inch sewer hose. Features a garden hose discharge port and fresh water rinse capability. USCG and CSA listed.

  • Easy clean up and storage
  • Plastic storage case included
  • Run dry protection
  • Ability to drain holding tanks at home
  • Minimal user contact with waste

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Friday, April 8, 2011

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Friday, March 25, 2011


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