NBN Online for the week of March 27, 2006

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Green Home First to Use NAHB Guidelines in a Subdivision
Working Families With Children Locked Out of Homeownership
Find Employees Through New NAHB Online Career Center
Reader Survey: Tell Us What News Is Important to You
Coast to Coast
Slowing Home Market to Ripple Through Many Layers of Jobs
Economics & Finance
Canada Causing Builders to Find New Sources of Lumber
Slide Out West Cuts New Home Sales in February
Rise in February Home Resales Suggests Stabilizing Market
California Builders Want to Reverse the Tide on Home Prices
Eye on the Economy: Rebounding From a 'Soft Patch'
Tips
Builder’s Tip: Sharing Compressed Air
Business Management
Two Sure Ways to Improve Profitability
50Plus Housing
Former Del Webb CEO to Builders: ‘Do Your Homework’
Learn How to Market and Sell to the 50+ Home Buyer
Multifamily
Real Rents Slip in January as Energy Costs Rise
Attend Upcoming Multifamily Conference in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Remodelers
Extension of Comment Period Sought for Lead Paint Rule
Sales
26 Design Trends for 2006
Education
CAPS Credits Available at Pre-50+ Symposium Courses
Education Calendar
Commercial
Insurance Rates Are Going Down
Womens Council
Woman Builder Works Miracles for Katrina Shelter Victims
Labor
Sacramento BIA Participates in Workforce Development Grant
Building Products
Energy Star-Rated Appliances Save Water, Cut Bills
Builder's Engineer
In the Toilet, Part 2
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
$1 Million Gift From M/I Homes to Further Education
South Carolina Builders Help Feed the Hungry
Kentucky Students Graduate Pre-Apprenticeship Program, Get Jobs
Association News
NAHB Spring Board Meeting May 9-13
Spokesperson Training Still Available for 2006 Spring Board
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Builder’s Tip: Sharing Compressed Air

 

 

If you’ve ever had a nice set of air-hose splitters borrowed into oblivion (now who borrowed that from me?), you may appreciate this trick.

  • On the male end of each of my air hoses, I installed a brass T, as shown in the drawing.

  • In the perpendicular opening, I installed a female hose coupling.

  • Then I installed a male hose coupling in the remaining opening.

This setup allows me to plug in at any connection, at the compressor or in the field simply by unplugging someone else’s hose, plugging mine into where theirs was and plugging theirs back into the female coupling in the T-fitting.

This arrangement saves time, and you never irritate anyone else by stealing their air connection — at least for more than five seconds or so.

Shortly after adapting my hoses this way, it dawned on me that I ran the risk of getting dirt and debris into the female coupling when it wasn’t being used. So I ran a plug into a male coupling and drilled a hole in it for a small chain that attaches to a key ring at the end of the hose. Presto. A built-in debris barrier.

— Carl McFarland Jr., Berkeley, Calif.

Tips & Techniques provided by Fine Homebuilding.
©2005 The Taunton Press

To request a reprint of this feature, e-mail Mary Lou von der Lancken at Fine Homebuilding.



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