Spyke

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Yeah, they want to hang around you or at least someone else. At that age they don't want privacy, they want interaction. Now put a nice exhaust fan in there and your soon to be teenager will probably padlock the door and live down there.

diablo

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Diablo 4 - Sell or Salvage your Loot? The Breakdown

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Easy there, boomer. Kids these days can't following things without flashy graphics /s

FFS, the worst for me is coding tutorials?!? Really? You really expect me to retype all the shit you are showing in your IDE? I 100% can't get that shit. 2nd worst is those shits that post their code as screenshots in text so you can't cut and paste.

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Bathroom Exhaust Question

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100% on check valves; technically each fan has to have it's own vent per code. Decent fans have a check in them but better safe than sorry. I'd put a separate exhaust unless it's really hard to get to.

+1 on humidity sensors but they can make wiring more complicated especially if you have a light as well.

I love Panasonic's. Not cheap but humidity sensor, variable cfm and quiet.

Noisy fans make you feel better but all that higher pitched exhaust fan noise stays in the room to make you feel better but trust me the bass noise comes through outside!

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Other comment is great, but a lot of it flat out depends on your siding. Indside is all cosmetic, outside is important to get watertight. If in doubt throw feelers out for a contractor that will come by and just give you advice. Give em $100-200 for an hour one night after you have one window out and ready to replace and ask him if there are any things to look out for.

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I was putting in a bathroom and the panasonic fan I bought had a humidity sensor. As this was a guest bathroom off a porch, I broke down and reran the wiring to have that working properly. Is on a timer and will come on when humidity is too high. Love that piece of mind.

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That's an indent where the drywall has sagged and the nail is still holding. Not at all easy to pull that back up on a ceiling. Probably need 4 screws total, 2 on either side. Apply mud, level it down with a wet sponge (grout sponges work well), dab primer with a brush (think happy little trees) and roll over it after with a half roller to match (3/8 nap usually). Repeat any of the steps if needed. Don't skip primer as it will always show in a different texture since the mud will absorb the paint. Makes for minimal cleanup of brush and roller and done well, will just disappear.