A Once-A-Year Guide to Home Maintenance
You know your house needs regular upkeep in order to stay in good condition. Not only can little maintenance issues become expensive and turn into major repairs, but nowadays problems can be huge liabilities when it comes time to sell. Good thing that most crucial maintenance tasks can be done just once a year, at a certain time. Use your stuck-indoors time to knock off some tasks.
- Clean the vents behind your dryer in the during winter; you’re drying heavier clothes now, and they generate more lint. Clean vents will help your machine dry clothes more quickly, last longer, and you’ll lower the risk of fires. Hardware stores carry kits that can help.
- Check your furnace filter once a month during the heating season for excess dust; you’ll want to change it once or twice a year so the unit operates more efficiently.
- Make sure your sump pump is clean and operating properly before spring rains arrive. Lift the lever on the sump to make the float go up and wait for the motor to click on. If you have a battery backup, unplug the unit and test the pump again.
- House seems cold? Remove and reinstall storm windows to make sure they fit properly.
- Vacuum the refrigerator condenser coils — usually located on the bottom or on the back of the refrigerator. (Unplug it first, then use your vacuum’s brush attachment.)
- Make sure your fire extinguishers haven’t passed their expiration date. Next, replace ground fault outlet circuit interrupters that aren’t working properly (when you hit the “Test” button the “Reset” should pop out; if it doesn’t, you can buy a new one at a hardware store).
- You need to change batteries in smoke detectors and carbon-monoxide alarms twice a year. An easy way to remember: Make the first switch on the same day you reset clocks to daylight saving time, and again in mid-October. At the same time, test your smoke detectors; use a smoke-in-a-can product or blow out a candle underneath them.