Modern home materials & technologies discussion thread

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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
AR Plan:

Measure any room and generate its 3D plan




Furniture measurements too!

 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
Qoldfusion residential walk-in fridge & freezer:



* All-fridge, all-freezer, or dual fridge/freezer
* Dual unit has a freezer in the fridge
* Grab & go door (acts like a traditional fridge)
* Fully-integrated look
* Custom panel finishes & interior layouts
* Fully-articulating concealed hinges
* Multiple entrances optional
* Window option
* Touchscreen control panel & smartphone app
* Customizable LED lighting
* Up to 4 tap faucets
* 3" thick commercial-grade using polyurethane shot-in-place foam insulation
* Condensation elimination through an internal heating networks strategically placed around the doors, windows, and floor
* Less energy per cubic foot than a traditional fridge
* Refrigerated air curtain & air dam
* Non-slip & fungi-resistant flooring
* rPod remote condensing unit (the compressor and condenser coil - the parts that make noise & dissipate heat - are located outside in a separate, insulated, ultra-quiet housing)
* The typical lead time for manufacturing, delivery, and installation is 16 to18 weeks from when your design is finalized and measurements are approved



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Micrornd

Golden Member
Mar 2, 2013
1,375
233
106
I'm sure you and your wife need a 300 cubic foot fridge, you just don't know it yet.
Actually we have 43 cubic feet of refrigerator and 42 cubic feet of freezer here (no icemaker, that's a separate undercounter unit) and we're looking for ways to increase that without increasing floor space.
 

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,339
6,486
136
Actually we have 43 cubic feet of refrigerator and 42 cubic feet of freezer here (no icemaker, that's a separate undercounter unit) and we're looking for ways to increase that without increasing floor space.
That's a common setup and relatively inexpensive, though you have about twice what I would consider "normal". But in a residential setting a large walk-in box isn't really going to help. You can't store meat and vegetables in the fridge for weeks at a time. If you're buying beef by the side, a chest freezer will easily do the job.
A home walk-in is just a cool gadget for people with tons of disposable income. The only time it would be practical is if you have a very large family. But you're still limited to 5 or 6 days of storage in the fridge.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
Where does the information for the parts of the building not in the picture come from? The output contains far more information than the input.

Hallucinations! Although architecture has some pretty standard themes, so you get some reasonably accurate results (outside of Zillow Gone Wild haha)

I see these tools as more for client design communication, as opposed to construction-accurate tools.

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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
Enphase debuts a new US off-grid solar and battery system:



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Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,339
6,486
136
They need to loose the cloud garbage and have a simple hard wired control point in the building. The only reason they have a cloud link is so they can charge a monthly fee.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
They need to loose the cloud garbage and have a simple hard wired control point in the building. The only reason they have a cloud link is so they can charge a monthly fee.

"off-grid"

"cloud"

:p

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Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,339
6,486
136
That absolutely screams monthly subscription along with their ability to shut down your system.
I'm all done with crap that needs an app or internet connection to work. It started out as a method to appear high tech and make a product seem interactive, now it's a profit center that gives the seller the ability to charge whatever they want to allow us the use of the product we paid for. The truly insane part of that is the number of people who want it.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
That absolutely screams monthly subscription along with their ability to shut down your system.
I'm all done with crap that needs an app or internet connection to work. It started out as a method to appear high tech and make a product seem interactive, now it's a profit center that gives the seller the ability to charge whatever they want to allow us the use of the product we paid for. The truly insane part of that is the number of people who want it.

I'm a HUGE fan of smarthomes, but I always want the ability to fall back to run things locally. My current system is designed around Alexa, which is useless without an Internet connection, but all of my stuff still runs just fine offline:

1. Lutron lights
2. Schlage smart lock
3. Anova Precision Oven

etc. The funny thing is, 99% of my Alexa usage is to turn the lights off & play Spotify LOL.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
Heated carpets sound like heaven!


Death by outgassing & allergies probably tho lol

Electric Heating Systems for Carpet
The most commonly used floor heating solution with carpet is the Warmup Foil Heater. Foil Heater is specifically suitable for use with floating floors and large and regular shaped areas. The super-thin, fully earthed, flat aluminum foil will not raise the floor levels visibly, hence why it makes a great solution for renovations.

Foil Heater System
The Warmup Foil Heater is an electric underfloor heating system for carpet but also vinyl, wood and other floating floor finishes. The Foil Heater is made up of a fiber reinforced foil wrapped around a thin multi strand, dual core heating cable that is insulated with an advanced fluoropolymer. The foil provides a continuous earth layer within the floor construction whilst diffusing the heat away from the heating cable.

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Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
22,339
6,486
136
Now you're just working at making me crazy. Why would anyone want this? Complexity without benefit isn't sane. There is also the issue of paying $8 for a standard breaker or $98 for a smart breaker. That's near $4k to fill that panel you linked.
If this stuff is a hobby you get a kick out of then have at it, but the vast majority of people just want reliable systems that work for many trouble free decades.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
51,810
7,346
136
Now you're just working at making me crazy. Why would anyone want this? Complexity without benefit isn't sane. There is also the issue of paying $8 for a standard breaker or $98 for a smart breaker. That's near $4k to fill that panel you linked.
If this stuff is a hobby you get a kick out of then have at it, but the vast majority of people just want reliable systems that work for many trouble free decades.

Why pass less when you could pay MORE and have it break MORE often?!

But really 2 reasons:

1. Power usage data

2. Remote on/off

I used to a TED system for power monitoring, worked well but it was messy:


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