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How To
Winterize Your Manufactured Home
Is your manufactured home ready for the rigors of
winter? The maintenance steps you take now can eliminate expensive
repairs and make your home safer and more energy efficient when cold
weather sets in. With the right information, you can do the work
yourself instead of paying someone else to do it. It takes a little
planning and effort to winterize your manufactured home but it's not
as difficult as you may think. Take action now to protect your
manufactured home from leaks, heat loss, drafts and the danger of a
winter fire.
Preparing Your Home For Cold Weather
A simple tube of silicone caulk may be your best
investment this heating season. Polyurethane caulking is a good
all-around choice for sealing your manufactured home from drafts and
leaks. Places to be caulked outside the home include:
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Gutter and downspout seams.
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Plumbing and furnace vent pipes.
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Around flashing seams between roof and
siding.
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Around door and window frames.
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Along siding joints.
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Around the dryer vent.
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At the TV antenna or dish wire entrance.
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At pipe feed-throughs.
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Weather stripping exterior doors and windows
is an inexpensive heat-saver. To detect heat loss, just hold
your hand at the edge of a window or door frame on a windy day.
If you feel a draft, weather-strip the area.
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A well-maintained roof lowers your energy
bills and prevents costly water damage. The edges and seams or
expansion joints of a metal roof should be sealed every year.
Use a roof coating suggested by a local dealer or service
center, and apply to a dry, properly prepped surface. Make sure
you apply the recommended thickness. Put a good seal around vent
caps for the furnace, water heater and exhaust fans. Repair any
punctures, cracks or breaks in your roof. Remember to tighten or
replace any loose fasteners.
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The blocks or jacks that support your
manufactured home should be in good condition. If they're not,
have them repaired immediately to prevent sagging, which can
cause damage to windows, doors, joints and walls.
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Slightly loosen your home's tie-downs if you
live in an area where the ground freezes solid. Ground can
"heave" as much as three inches during the winter, and tie-downs
leave no place for the manufactured home to move. That can
result in serious structural damage. Remember to tighten
tie-downs again in spring.
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Check your home's skirting. It should be
secure, but not so tight that it stops ventilation or vertical
movement. Once winter sets in, be sure to shovel snow and ice
away from the skirting to avoid denting and cutting off the air
supply required by the furnace.
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Frozen pipes can mean big trouble. One of the
simplest methods to prevent water pipes from freezing is with
heat tapes. These contain a heating element encased in a tape
that is wrapped around water pipes.
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The heating element warms the pipes and
prevents freezing. If you install the heat tape, follow the
manufacturer's instructions carefully. If you have a heat tape
already installed, make certain it's still operative. If it is
worn or loose, replace it. Make sure you never overlap heat tape
as it can cause a fire.
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Be sure your storm windows and doors are in
place and in good repair; they keep your energy costs down. Even
if your window frames and doors are caulked and weather stripped
properly, heat can still escape. Properly installed storm
windows and doors can cut your home's heat loss by 50 percent.
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Check exterior doors for wear, tear, cracking
or fading. Look for signs of leaking around the sill and
threshold. Make sure weather stripping and seals are okay.
Inspect under your manufactured home for sagging, torn or water
spotted insulation. Carefully examine your exterior siding and
replace any missing or damaged fasteners or screws.
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To avoid winter water damage, be sure to
clean out and inspect rain gutters for leaks or holes. They
should be slanted so water runs away from your manufactured
home. Don't forget to check and repair downspouts and
extensions.
Home Heating Maintenance Tips
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It's very important to make sure your
manufactured home furnace operates safely and efficiently during
winter weather. You can perform many routine furnace maintenance
jobs, while other procedures are best handled by a qualified
heating technician. Most furnace manufacturers recommend a
professional inspection of fuel lines, safety controls, burner
and flue pipe every year.
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You should replace disposable furnace filters
regularly. Remove and wash, brush or vacuum permanent filters.
Remove the cover of the thermostat and vacuum away dust and
dirt. Check the exhaust vent from furnace. Clear obstructions
like leaves or animal nests from the vent pipe. Keep roof
exhaust vents clear of excess snow build-up.
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Inspect blower motor. Vacuum any accumulated
dirt. Inspect V-belt and pulleys for wear. If the belt moves
more than an inch when you push it, tighten it. Check air
intake. Most manufactured home furnaces draw combustion air from
beneath the home, so keep four to six vents in the skirting to
allow free air passage.
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Check flue assembly for alignment and
rigidity. It should run in a straight line from the top of
furnace through the ceiling. Be sure the flue is attached to the
furnace collar. Check to make sure there is no loose wiring near
the flue. If there is wiring in the flue area, move and secure
it well away from the flue pipe.
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Carpeting in furnace compartment should be
removed and replaced with fireproof material. Some manufactured
home furnaces have wire mesh in front of the stack to prevent
storage on top of the furnace. If this mesh is missing, replace
it.
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Clean out debris in furnace area, and don't
allow even small amounts to accumulate. Never use your furnace
closet for storage or drying clothes. This is a potential fire
hazard.
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Never attempt to repair gas lines in your
manufactured home. If you smell gas, call a professional heating
technician or your gas company immediately.
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In addition to your furnace check you should
also properly maintain your space heater, fireplace or wood
stove. Both electric and liquid fuel-powered space heaters must
be placed at least 48 inches away from anything combustible
unless manufactures installation instructions instruct
otherwise. If you have a liquid fuel-powered space heater, use
only the fuel recommended by the manufacturer. Never use
gasoline or any other substitute fuel. When refueling, always
turn off the heater and wait until it cools down before adding
fuel.
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Have your fireplace chimney inspected and
cleaned by a professional WETT Certified Sweeper before every
winter. Creosote, a chemical substance that forms when wood
burns, builds up in chimneys and can cause a chimney fire if the
chimney is not properly cleaned. Always protect your home and
family by using a sturdy fireplace screen when burning wood.
Remember to burn only wood - never burn paper or pine boughs or
coal. These can float out the chimney and ignite your roof.
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Chimney connections and chimney flues on wood
stoves should be inspected at the beginning of each heating
season and cleaned periodically by a WETT Certified Inspector.
Remove ashes as they accumulate, and be sure to follow any
additional maintenance instructions provided by the wood stove
manufacturer. Burn only wood and be sure the wood stove is
placed on an approved, fire-resistant surface to protect the
floor of your manufactured home from heat and hot coals (as per
manufactures instructions).
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Observe proper maintenance and safety rules
before starting your furnace, space heater, fireplace or wood
stove this winter.
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Finally, don't forget to check your fire
extinguishers and smoke detectors. Keep one fire extinguisher in
the kitchen and another near the furnace. Use a multiple-purpose
dry chemical extinguisher suitable for use on Class A, B and C
fires. Small home fire extinguishers operate only five to ten
seconds, so take careful aim before using. Test your smoke
detectors often to be sure they're operational, and replace
batteries before the weather gets cold. You should have one
detector located high on the wall or ceiling adjacent to your
bedroom areas and another in the kitchen.
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