9 | Extension Cords Everywhere
Extension cords are temporary helpers, not the cure for your old-house lack-of-outlet blues. Placed on the Consumer Product Safety Commission's Substantial Hazard List in 2015, some cords—especially the no-label, dollar-store variety—prompt constant recalls that cite electrocution and fire risk.
INSTEAD: Throw away old extension cords and any with loose plugs, split casings, or cheap-looking construction. Don't run cords under rugs or around furniture, as they can overheat or crack, sparking danger. Use the right cord for the job: a 16-gauge cord to power small household appliances, such as a fan, that draw up to 13 amps; a 14-gauge cord for large power tools, like a table saw, that use up to 15 amps; a 12-gauge cord for items that need 20 amps, such as a compressor. And consider upgrading to grounded receptacles where you need them most.
10 | Storing Stuff in an Over-the-Showerhead Caddy
Your morning refuge may need more perching places for shampoo and body-wash bottles, but a showerhead storage unit loaded with containers will stress the threaded connection behind the tiled wall, potentially causing leaks.
INSTEAD: Store jumbo bottles on the shower floor or tub surround. For lighter stuff, try shelves that attach with suction cups. Got a whole family's worth of bottles and soaps? Stick them on an over-the-shower-door caddy, which can hold about 10 pounds.
11 | Tossing Bleach Tablets in the Toilet Tank
Those handy blue toilet-tank blocks will keep the water fresh and the bowl clean —and cause premature brittleness or breakage to the flapper valve and other rubber and plastic parts.
INSTEAD: Go old-school with a toilet brush and an occasional dose of cleaner, or use a flush-by-flush product that puts the cleaner in the bowl, not the tank.
12 | Straining Circuits
With a "click, click" you might get the toaster browning bagels again, but repeatedly resetting tripping breakers is bad practice. Too many clicks can cause the safety mechanism to wear out, increasing the risk of an electrical fire.
INSTEAD: Unburden the breaker by running fewer items on the circuit. "Dehumidifiers, countertop convection ovens and microwaves, and air conditioners are often overload culprits," says master electrician Scott Caron. He suggests having an electrician replace a breaker that's tripped five times, and, for a long-term fix, upgrading the entire circuit to handle a higher load.
13 | Scrubbing Grout With Vinegar
If you, your jug of Heinz, and that old toothbrush are rendezvousing regularly with the bathroom grout, look out. Traditional white grout is a sand-and-cement mix; that cement is an alkaline compound and the acid in vinegar turns it yellow and crumbly.
INSTEAD: Choose a traditional alkaline hard-surface cleaner, like Spic and Span, or an oxygen-bleach-based one. Always rinse well; and to really lift dirt up and out, try a few passes of your utility vac to dry it.
14 | Closing Vents
Shutting the louvers on grills to force conditioned air to go where you want it might help control the temp in a room, but it causes a pressure imbalance in the ducts that can make the furnace work harder or the cooling coil freeze over.
INSTEAD: Have an HVAC contractor install branch dampers in the main runs of your ductwork. Use them seasonally to force cooler air to the second floor in summer and warmer air to the ground floor in winter.
15 | Mislubing Locks
A quick spritz with an all-purpose spray will improve the movement of most stubborn locks, but it won't provide long-term lubrication, which is why your rough-turning-key problem always seems to return.
INSTEAD: Your handy can of multi-lube is a quick answer for cleaning, de-rusting, and chasing condensation from inside the lock, but it's only the first step. After loosening a crotchety cylinder, latch, or dead bolt, use a silicone spray or a squeeze of graphite powder for lasting lubrication. Never apply household oil, which attracts dirt and can lead to an even greater gunk issue.
16 | Not Grounding a 'Cheater' Plug
Those orange or gray three-prong/two-prong adapters are handy when only two-slot outlets are available, but using them lazily by bending or breaking off the grounding tab results in an ungrounded connection and raises the danger of shocks or fire.
INSTEAD: Make sure that your two-prong outlet is a grounded one. A three/two adapter's wire or metal tab should be connected to the screw in the outlet's cover plate to ground the plug. Long- term, consider installing three-prong outlets housewide, if wiring allows.
17 | Using Drywall Screws for Everything
You risk having upper cabinets, open shelving, or even heavy mirrors come crashing down if they are hung with fasteners that are too brittle. Hardened-steel drywall screws break under heavy loads where other screws flex.
INSTEAD: Keep a variety of wood, cabinet, and deck screws on hand so that you're always prepared with the right fastener for the job. Wall cabinets will have ample holding power if you drive two 2½-inch (you guessed it) cabinet screws, with washers, through cabinet backs and into wall studs—never, ever into drywall alone.
18 | Hanging Dry Cleaning on a Doorknob
Four pairs of pants and eight shirts might weigh 8½ pounds. Hooking that load of dry cleaning on a door handle every week can strain the knob and even the hinges, pulling the door out of alignment.
INSTEAD: Walk directly to closet upon entering. Open door and hang dry cleaning on properly mounted closet rod (see No. 1). Repeat. Every week.