How clean is your house?
"Part of my kitchen floor are thick with dust, grease, part of a broken mug, a few mummified oven-chips, a desiccated used teabag and a couple of pieces of cutlery", says Sandettie Light Vessel Automatic. To most people, that's filth. To some of us, that's dinner. Tell us about squalid homes or obsessive cleaners.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 13:00)
"Part of my kitchen floor are thick with dust, grease, part of a broken mug, a few mummified oven-chips, a desiccated used teabag and a couple of pieces of cutlery", says Sandettie Light Vessel Automatic. To most people, that's filth. To some of us, that's dinner. Tell us about squalid homes or obsessive cleaners.
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 13:00)
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Towering Inferno
Good idea to keep all that potentially inflammable stuff right next to the main fusebox.
Do the cleaners check the batteries in the smoke alarms, too?
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 16:20, 1 reply)
Good idea to keep all that potentially inflammable stuff right next to the main fusebox.
Do the cleaners check the batteries in the smoke alarms, too?
( , Thu 25 Mar 2010, 16:20, 1 reply)
well, technically:
It looks more like a distribution board lower down, and circuit breakers above. I don't reckon there's many actual fuses there; although you still have a valid point: Rubbish can be combustible, wet, and metallic - none are characteristics you want near switchgear.
( , Fri 26 Mar 2010, 1:09, closed)
It looks more like a distribution board lower down, and circuit breakers above. I don't reckon there's many actual fuses there; although you still have a valid point: Rubbish can be combustible, wet, and metallic - none are characteristics you want near switchgear.
( , Fri 26 Mar 2010, 1:09, closed)
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