Another great place to shop for Switch Hot products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
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Aroma AWK-115S Hot H20 X-Press 1-1/2-Liter Cordless Water Kettle
List Price: $30.99
Sale Price: $30.99
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The Hot H20 X-Press from Aroma provides boiling water in a matter of minutes. The 1.5-liter capacity is ideal for a variety of uses--hot tea, soups, instant coffees, oatmeal, hot chocolate, noodles, baby formula and more...
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Cuisinart DCC-1200 Brew Central 12-Cup Programmable Coffeemaker
List Price: $165.00
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A striking blend of retro style and modern technology. Programmable for brewing up to 24 hours in advance. Setting for 1 to 4 cups ensures full-bodied flavor and aroma. BrewPause feature lets you enjoy a cup before brewing is finished...
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RT600C Super-fast Water-resistant Digital Pocket Thermometer
List Price: $25.00
Sale Price: $19.00
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We've added another version of our popular RT600 series. The RT600C from ThermoWorks offers a Super-Fast, reduced-tip probe for 5- to 6-second readings. The sealed body of the thermometer features rubberized switch panels, a robust LCD window, and it withstands temperatures to 190°F so you can record peak temperatures in commercial dishwashers using the Min/Max feature...
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We Stitch These Wounds
List Price: $13.98
Sale Price: $8.48
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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Alive Or Just Breathing
List Price: $11.98
Sale Price: $6.61
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No Description Available.Genre: Popular MusicMedia Format: Compact DiskRating: Release Date: 21-MAY-2002
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Philips 409904 / 423343 Dimmable AmbientLED 12.5-Watt A19 Light Bulb
List Price: $39.99
Sale Price: $16.55
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Philips AmbientLED (TM) Dimmable 60W Replacement A19 LED Light Bulb - Soft Warm White
Philips AmbientLED (TM) Dimmable 12.5W A19 LED light bulb has earn Energy Star (R) qualification and offers light quality comparable to that of traditional general incandescent 60W light bulb...
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Holmes HAWF2043 Twin Window Fan
List Price: $49.99
Sale Price: Too low to display
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This double window fan draws in fresh, cool air from the outside or exhausts stale, hot air from inside. It can also do both simultaneously, because each of the two fans can be set independently to draw in or exhaust out, allowing the unit to exchange inside and outside air...
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The Holiday
List Price: $9.99
Sale Price: $5.04
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Fed up with the men in their lives, an L.A.-based movie trailer editor (Cameron Diaz) and a London journalist (Kate Winslet) meet online and agree to swap houses for two weeks, thinking a change of scenery will do them both a world of good...
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The X-Files: The Complete Fifth Season
List Price: $39.98
Sale Price: $17.95
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All 20 episodes from season five--including "Redux," "Unusual Suspects," "Emily," "Patient X," and "The End"--are collected in a six-disc set. 16 1/2 hrs. total. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital Surround, French Dolby Digital Surround; Subtitles: English, Spanish; audio commentary on selected episodes; featurettes; deleted scenes; documentary; TV spots; game...
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Quantum Leap: The Complete Fourth Season
List Price: $34.98
Sale Price: $15.90
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Take a trip through time with the daring Dr. Sam Beckett (Scott Bakula) and his hilarious hologram guide, Al (Dean Stockwell), in all 22 extraordinary, groundbreaking episodes of Quantum Leap: The Complete Fourth Season...
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Here are some more information for Switch Hot:

How to Prevent Pinhole Leaks, Slab Leaks and Mold and Conserve Energy by Controlling Your Hot Water Recirculation Pump
If you have had 1 leak, more will surely follow – you can do something about it before further damage is done and additional money is wasted.
Circulating hot water is the fastest way to wear out your pipes. In fact 90% of all pinhole leaks and slab leaks happen in hot water lines for the following reasons:
- Chemicals in water are corrosive
- Chemicals in water when heated are even more corrosive
- Chemicals in water when heated and circulated through copper pipes that bend around corners and turn up walls and curve around electrical conduit and sewer pipes and are reduced in size as water passes through a building is extremely corrosive
In order to understand the solution it is helpful to know what causes the problem. With a little insight into how domestic hot water recirculation lines or recirc loops are built and how they work we can see that the answer is as easy as flipping a switch.
Apartments, hotels and larger homes have recirc loops designed to move hot water to the farthest fixture from the boiler or water heater in a reasonable amount of time. Each loop has a pump pushing water through a copper pipe 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Each loop has multiple joints and fittings that obstruct the flow of water. Gate or ball valves and flapper checks and expansion tanks and whatever else the plumber had on his truck the day he built the line create disturbances in the flow path.
Water likes to flow in a nice straight line with no obstructions. This is called laminar flow – nice and smooth. Anything in the flow path can disrupt the flow and cause an eddy to form. Eddies are the bad boys, the unwanted visitor, the black sheep of the family.
Create a little friction, add in some turbulence and the next thing you know you have a leak.
As your reading this please keep in mind there are things you can do to reduce or even eliminate leaks. They are relatively inexpensive and I’ll tell you what they are in a minute.
When water pipes leak many things can happen – none of which are any good. Pinhole and slab leaks, mold, wasted water, wasted energy, property damage, resident/guest complaints and inconvenience all mean one thing.
It cost you time and money.
The only question left is how much? Please refer to Table 1 for an idea of how much a leak can cost.
Table 1: The Cost of a Leak
$200 You caught the leak early and it wasn't buried in a wall or under a slab
$1,000 The leak was in a wall and you caught it early and it was relatively accessible after tearing out some drywall
$2,000 Same as above except you didn't catch it early and mold and light structural damage had occurred
$10,000 The leak was underneath a concrete slab but you were able to pinpoint the exact location
$20,000 Same as above except you had to chase the leak into another rooms
$100,000 + The leak went unnoticed until someone got sick and you got sued
So there is the doom and gloom. What’s the solution?
Good question. The answer is there are a number of things you can do. As you go through my list keep in mind that people only use hot water 15% to 20% of the time (based on a study by the California Energy Commission).
First, check your water pressure. 40 psi is high enough for most 1 or 2 story buildings. Be sure to check it in several places to find the lowest pressure in the building. Typically that would be the point furthest from the water meter. If you don’t have a pressure regulator, put one in.
When implementing this strategy do it in stages. Drop the pressure by 5 psi at a time and wait to see if you have any complaints. Showerheads and aerators already restrict flow to 2.5 gpm or less. Newer fixtures like the Evolve line of low flow showerheads have pressure compensating technology built into them and work just as well at low pressure as they do at high pressure.
Second, turn off the pump when no one is using hot water. That’s right. I said turn off the pump. As I mentioned earlier people only use hot water 15% to 20% of the time. The pump only needs to be on when people need water.
There are 3 methods of implementing this strategy:
- The Manual Method
- The Guessing Method
- The Automated Method
Manual Method
Have someone go to the switch and turn on the pump when you need hot water and turn it off when you are done. Might be practical for a single family home (certainly not convenient) but impossible in an apartment or hotel.
The Guessing Method
Plug your pump into a timer and guess when hot water will be needed. This may be a practical solution if the number of people living in the house or apartment or with a limited number of guests in a hotel and everyone has the same predictable need for hot water. Unfortunately when hot water is needed during an off period the timer gets disabled and never turned back on.
The Automated Method
Think about your recirculation line as a closed loop. When there is no demand for hot water, no water enters or leaves the system. When a hot water faucet is turned on there is a “leak” in the system.
When water leaves the system more water is added from the city water line through a cold water make-up line (this is the technical name for the copper pipe that brings cold water to your water heater).
If a flow sensor is placed in the cold water make-up line, any indication of water movement would mean someone is using hot water.
If the sensor sensed a demand (i.e., someone turned on a hot water faucet) it could turn on the pump. The demand would be met and the pump could be turned off automatically when the demand ended.
That is precisely how an On-Demand Intelligent Pump Controller works. The pump is only on when there is a demand.
As it turns out, there are many benefits to automating your recirc pumps operation:
- Drastically reduces pinhole leaks and slab leaks – if the hot water is not moving, it is much less corrosive
- Energy is conserved – since people only use hot water 15% to 20% of the time, the pump will be off 80% to 85% of the time. That means the recirculation line isn’t full of hot water and no energy is being lost. California Energy Commission studies indicate 37% less energy is consumed when an On-Demand Controller is installed.
Note: A sufficiently high speed pump is required (2,200 rpm or faster) to implement this strategy. If you have a high speed pump you will only need an On-Demand Controller. If not you will need a full system including a high speed pump.
In conclusion, cut your risks, lower your losses, reduce your energy bill and extend the life of you pipes and water heater or boiler by turning off you recirc pump with an On-Demand Intelligent Pump Controller.
Contact me directly at the email address below to find out if this solution will work for you or what other options you might have. To purchase the On-Demand Intelligent Pump Controller click on the link below.
Do it now and sleep better tonight knowing that one of your biggest headaches just got cured.
About the Author
On-Demand Intelligent Pump
Mark Franklin is CEO of Saves You Energy, LLC a manufacturer and retailer of water and energy conservation products. As a civil engineer Mr. Franklin was involved in the design of multi-family and commercial projects worth in excess of $100 million.
Mr. Franklin has worked with companies ranging from the US Navy to Embassy Suites and Biltmore Hotels to Stanford Student Housing. Pinnacle Properties, United Development Group and ConAm are among the apartment ownership and management companies that have used his products. School Districts like the Blue Valley School District in Kansas and ESCOs such as Johnson Controls have utilized his technologies to reduce energy consumption.
Mr. Franklin can be reached at mark@SavesYouEnergy.com
The Energy Conservation Store
Was it a good decision to switch from business to engineering due to business not being hot today?
My friends recently convinced me to go into engineering due to the fact business isn't too successful nowadays. I basically switched for the goal of a more guaranteed job and a good salary and I know I'm too bad with math. I hear engineering is really hot as of right now. Ever since I switched majors, my grades have dropped a bit. The classes are much harder. I'd like to know if I really made a good decision.
Yes engineers do well in both good and bad times.
Calcutta Cup: Scotland v England - live!
Hit F5 to refresh, or switch on that really obvious button for some auto-refresh action. And email scott.murray@guardian.co.uk if you desire some hot chat
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