Bidet
Bidet by far. <$60 USD, easy to set up, and my goodness have I never looked back. I do a lot of home improvement (and garden work) and every time I use the bidet I think, “this may be the best purchase I ever made”.
how do you get a 60$ bidet?
Online/ Home depot.
They aren’t super fancy (no heated seat/ heated water) but they spray where you need it and man is it nice!
deleted by creator
Lol, I have one coming tomorrow and the wife is dead set against it. I think she’s afraid she might like it :-)
Using an enterprise grade networking equipment in the house. My setup uses PFSense (free), which runs in a virtual machine on Proxmox (free) and Ubiquiti WAPs (2 X $100). I have not heard the “Dad the wifi is broken!” call from anyone for a while.
This is a great tip. The only thing you have to watch is enterprise grade networking is usually louder and uses more power. You can replace fans to make it quieter on some equipment, but sometimes it needs the airflow. I just got a brocade icx6450-48p network switch delivered for $85, 48 poe ports and 4 sfp+ ports. You can get some great used enterprise hardware for amazing prices.
undefined> Canopyflyer
Licensing fees can be a bear too. I would avoid true Enterprise gear, such as Cisco, Alpine, etc.
Ubiquiti makes very good enterprise grade gear that is more for the home. I’d call it “Prosumer” rather than enterprise, although I’d have no reservations running a small to medium office on it. My previous home router was a Unifi Security Gateway. Until I upgraded to 300/300Mbs fiber. The USG is only good to about 120Mbs. That’s when I put PFSense on a virtual machine on my Proxmox server. Picked up a 4 port server NIC and am running it all on a Dell Precision workstation that has a Xeon processor and ECC memory. I picked the workstation up off of Dell Refurbished, with a 40% off coupon for $300. Both the WAPs in the house are Unify AC Pro’s.
Since doing the above, our internet service has been rock solid. My wife was the president of a national non-profit for two years. One year, during the lockdown, she had to run the national yearly meeting for an entire week. Thousands of users all over Zoom. She had to stream video, audio, presentations for 6 hours a day for a week. The only things I did was take one of the WAPs, put it on its own isolated subnet, which only her computer connected to and gave the PFSense VM a bit more memory (which I was thinking of doing anyway). It ran rock solid that entire week. Even with me working from home and the kids having virtual school.
Oh this is interesting. Have any articles where I could learn more about setting this up?
Proxmox is a Linux distro, so if you’re familiar with Linux then setting it up is fairly easy.
Here is Netgate’s guide on how to do setup PFSense on Proxmox: https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/recipes/virtualize-proxmox-ve.html
It’s fun to do and while being a networking engineer helps, it’s not necessary.
deleted by creator
$100 hand truck. It has paid for itself many times over. Every single time I use it, I tell my wife, “I bought that for $100! It’s totally worth every cent”
I’ve done a few really great ones. I got the UBolt Pro for a fancy lock I can track who accesses, auto lock, unlock remotely if needed, etc. It’s very handy for visitors because I assign their access code as the last 4 digits of their phone number so they never forget. I got Zigbee smart bulbs everywhere, but if I were to do it again, I would do smart switches in any places I didn’t need dimming or individual bulb control. Here’s another great idea: FANS. Ceiling fans, desk fans, whatever. You can connect good Vornado desk fans to a smart switch so you can get cooling on demand without getting out of bed. Lastly, an Aquasana under sink water filter. Only filter I know of that removes PFAS and PFOAs and is third party certified to do so. Good delicious safe water.
Under the sink water filtration system. We spent maybe $300 on ours and couldn’t be happier. Clear, clean tasting water where before it was sketchy at best (farm country) and no more need to fill up the Brita pitcher every single day. Took maybe an hour to set up.
deleted by creator
I did a similar thing, but instead of under the filter system, I replaced the soap dispenser with a single hole faucet and added a faucet filter to it. Ended up a lot cheaper than under the sink filtration, and I can switch to a different brand/model without any trouble.
I think we might be talking about the same thing. My water filtration system is sitting under my bathroom sink, but the drinking water comes out of a tiny hole that we drilled (same as your soap dispenser) and a small spigot that came with the system. It’s great, right?
We have city water, so we added a whole house water filter instead. It wouldn’t be enough on its own for some, but for us it is plenty to make sure we don’t have any sediment in our water.
I said bidet in another comment, but if you are looking for some other suggestions.
- Bathroom fan timer switches: replace your switch for the fan with a timer. Best way to keep bathrooms less humid without having to remember to turn off. I used this one as it doesnt require a neutral
- French Door Fridge: not really home improvement, but man it makes a difference in qol. I meal prep for the week and can easily access food, store whole trays, and never had to bend over to get items on the bottom shelf.
- Bug screens for door: they have magnetic closing bug screens for doors. If you live in a temperate climate, it can be very nice to keep the doors open without bugs coming in. Also allows pets easy access to backyard without pet door.
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.
Peg board in the garage. Organizing tools is easy now
Stock Tank Pool
I have a tiny sloping backyard. A stock Tank pool was super cheap and just the right size to fit on my level ground
From most to least expensive:
-
Robot vacuum with autoempty station. Scheduled to run over different areas of the house at the right times. We have pets so this is major. Bit fiddly to automate so that it doesn’t clog itself on pet hair, but I figured out a good rhythm now.
-
Smart bulbs in some rooms, automated to dim at night and turn off in morning.
-
External sensor lights around the house and garage. And internal sensor lights in pantry and deep closet space.
They are small things that you feel the benefit pretty much daily.
-
My attic used to have 2 light bulbs with pull chains on them. Going up there was always a battle to feel around and find the string to the light. And it was barely lit even then.
I bought these 2 led bar lights from Costco that are motion sensing. They are super bright. Now, as soon as I pull down the attic stairs, the attic lights up like the sun. I’ve had many compliments on them from workers coming over for pest control or ac maintenance.
Keypad deadbolt lock for my front door. Not a “smart lock” (I try not to have anything online outside my house). I haven’t pulled a key out of my pocket in years.
If it died I would buy one same day.
Pertaining to Music – investing in some decent speakers and amp that wouldn’t break the bank. I leave our TV tucked away in a dark basement area and reserve the main living area for music. This turns our house into a relaxing environment. I’m not a #killyourtelevision person… but getting that out of the main space has been an unexpected stress reliever.
Fitting secondary glazing in addition to the existing double glazing. It entirely eliminates “normal” traffic noise (as in - you see cars driving past but don’t hear them) and people walking past. You still hear excessively loud exhausts, but they’re significantly diminished to not be a “jump out of your skin” annoyance.
An added benefit I’ve noticed with the recent sunny weather - a significant reduction in unwanted solar gain. Usually, I have to put up exterior solar mesh screens to shade the windows from April to September, but so far this year, they haven’t been needed. I imagine it’s a combination of both the UV-blocking properties of the secondary glazing (soft-coat low-e and laminated glass) and having the regular window blinds between the normal windows and secondary meaning that much of the energy gets reflected straight back out again before entering the room-side of the secondary glazing.
You couldn’t call it a sub-$1000 investment if doing the whole house, but doing just a bedroom or living room fits and the quality-of-life improvement if on a noisy busy road makes it worthwhile.
But also, solar mesh screens especially on south-facing windows - they’re a nice cost-effective way of controlling the summer sun.
i bought like a $20 small wall mounted trash can from ikea and mounted it in our mud room. it’s great for throwing something away when coming in or out, and also is next to our washer and dryer so all our lint goes there too.