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Handyman Mews and Renovations LLC

2.50(
2
)

Handyman Mews and Renovations LLC

2.50(
2
)
Customers say: Quality work
9 years of experience

Complete Renovations of home repairs, upgrades and new construction. Free estimates and timely repairs. Fully licensed and insured Wisconsin. We accept all forms of payment. We have references gladly given out.

"Paid him over 12k for a job he said would take 6 weeks. It has been over 6 months and only completed some stairs to the camper. Has lied saying work has been completed. Still owes us over 9k and refused to pay us back. We now will be taking him to court. The picture provided is proof of his lies. I have him texting me saying he completed painting the roof. Well you can see he did not."

Rich K on November 2020

Complete Renovations of home repairs, upgrades and new construction. Free estimates and timely repairs. Fully licensed and insured Wisconsin. We accept all forms of payment. We have references gladly given out.

"Paid him over 12k for a job he said would take 6 weeks. It has been over 6 months and only completed some stairs to the camper. Has lied saying work has been completed. Still owes us over 9k and refused to pay us back. We now will be taking him to court. The picture provided is proof of his lies. I have him texting me saying he completed painting the roof. Well you can see he did not."

Rich K on November 2020


Tater's Total Home Improvement

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Tater's Total Home Improvement

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33 years of experience

I am a general contractor with 22 years of experience. I don't just do it all I do it all WELL, and I take my time to make sure that the customer is happy with the end result. I generally work on a half down, half when the job is completed basis, but I will look at each situation individually and determine what is fair to the customer.

I am a general contractor with 22 years of experience. I don't just do it all I do it all WELL, and I take my time to make sure that the customer is happy with the end result. I generally work on a half down, half when the job is completed basis, but I will look at each situation individually and determine what is fair to the customer.








May Electric LLC

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May Electric LLC

No reviews yet
Emergency services offered

May Electric is your full service electrical contractor in the central Wisconsin area. Providing 24 hour emergency service. No job to big or small. Free Estimates and free home electrical inspections.

May Electric is your full service electrical contractor in the central Wisconsin area. Providing 24 hour emergency service. No job to big or small. Free Estimates and free home electrical inspections.


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Ceiling Fans questions, answered by experts

There’s no reason why you can’t install a ceiling fan anywhere in your home, such as in living rooms, offices, bedrooms, and dining areas. Most bathrooms already have ventilation and don’t need a ceiling fan. For safety purposes, avoid installing a ceiling fan where the blades will be less than eight feet from the floor, near bunk beds, or anywhere else they may hit nearby objects.

Ceiling fans provide a number of advantages for your home. They help circulate air throughout your home to avoid stagnant environments, and they can help lower utility bills if they keep you from switching on your air conditioning. Between built-in lighting and modern styling, ceiling fans can also add aesthetic appeal to your space.

The direction you want your ceiling fan to move in depends on the season you’re in. During summer, you want it to move counterclockwise to produce a cooling downdraft. During winter, you want it to move clockwise to circulate warm air throughout the room.

Fan power is measured by CFM, or cubic feet per minute. For every 1,000 feet of square footage in your attic, you need a minimum of 700 CFM. Steeper roofs may need larger fans or about 840 CFM.  You can figure the size of attic fan you need by multiplying the square footage of your attic floor by 0.7. (multiply by 1.2 for a steep roof and 1.15 for a dark roof). That number is the CFM required for your fan to run efficiently.

If the fan doesn’t have a switch, connect the white wire from the ceiling to the white wire from the fan; connect the green wire to the ground wire; connect both black wires; and connect both blue wires. If yours has a switch, the white and green wires are connected the same way. However, connect the ceiling’s red wire to the light’s black wire and the ceiling’s black wire to the fan’s black wire. 

The Princeton, WI homeowners’ guide to ceiling fan services

From average costs to expert advice, get all the answers you need to get your job done.