Sealed window units are part of an advanced glazing system that features two or more sheets of glass separated by an adhesive spacer and filled with air, argon, or krypton. The whole unit is then sealed along the edges to prevent a vacuum or gas from leaking.
They have enhanced insulating and energy-efficient properties when compared to single-pane glass. The more panes of glass, the more insulation the sealed window unit provides. For this reason, sealed window units are also known as thermo, thermal units, insulated glazing, or insulating glass units (IGUs).
Check your sealed window units for drafts, which is another clear indication that the seal is no longer working as it should. This situation can be solved by weatherproofing your windows or getting new replacement IGUs, depending on how bad the damage is.
Another sign that your sealed window units have been compromised would be water dripping or pooling around your windows or window frame. This should be taken seriously before it leads to expensive water damage and root rot.
No. As far as obtaining a new sealed window unit is concerned, it is not a DIY job. We do not recommend DIY installation of the glass either. Replacing sealed window units is a tedious and technical process best left to professionals.
If, aside from broken sealed window units, your wooden or aluminum window frames are showing signs of deterioration due to old age and constant exposure to extreme weather, it may be time to swap them for a brand new window replacement. This is why many homeowners opt to get vinyl window replacements; they offer excellent insulation and are virtually maintenance-free.
Please choose the picture below that best describes the shape of your glass. The picture does not have to match your piece exactly. In the next few steps, you will have a chance to tell us more about your piece. What shape is your glass?
This product consists of two panes of tempered glass separated by a spacer. The space between the two panes of glass is filled with air, which provide insulation. These are most often used in residential window applications.
These are custom manufactured dual pane window units, meant to replace existing windows in your home. You can select glass pane thickness and overall sealed window unit thickness. These can be purchased with or without the white grid between the panes.
There are several benefits associated with dual pane windows. The most well-known is energy savings, as they are the most common type of energy-efficient residential insulated windows on the market today. Originally intended to protect homes from extreme weather conditions, other benefits have been convincing people to install them with increasing frequency.
Dual pane windows keep the heat out during the hot months and cold out during the cold months, cutting down energy use. To see the best results, select to have glass with a Low-E coating. This coating will significantly boost the efficiency of your replacement window. Additionally dual pane windows help with noise reduction and can update the appearance of a house while also increasing resale value.
Trusting One Day Glass to build your units ensures that you receive your windows quickly, since we build them in-house. We understand that a broken window needs to be fixed quickly. Using us ensures that you will never miss closing a deal as a result of a broken unit.
Yes, a tempering logo is a small etching that is made in one corner of each piece of glass indicating that it has been tempered and meets government standards for tempered glass. We can add our logo to any piece(s) in your order if your building department or project specifications require it. The default for us is to not logo the glass so you will need to specify on the Order Form if you wish to have us logo your glass.
Insulating Glass Units (IG Units) can be made with air or other gases between the two sheets of glass. We use air-filled because the seals have a longer life with air. While we can provide Argon gas filled windows at an increased price, we caution that this could result in reduced life due to seal failure.
Capillary tubes are used in insulated glass in order to equalize pressure between the inside and the outside of the unit. During transit the insulated unit can travel the a variety of altitudes and the unequal pressure can weaken the seals, therefore shortening the life of the insulated unit. These tubes are to be removed prior to install and to be sealed with a silicon based sealant.
It sounds like (and please correct me if I am missing anything) that you are out of space on your Disk Library, and that you have a corrupt store (likely the ddb that tracks the jobs using this same library. Checking the jobs for that store/storage policy, you are seeing several jobs showing BASIC CYCLES as their reason as not pruning.
The i have 3 sealed (status:offline) and 1 active DDB (status:ready), all of them have corrupted partitions as when i try to run data verification job, the error mentioned previously happens [62:2483].
I searched for DDB prune process, and i must wait for the data age to age out naturally the jobs from the DDB, but that will take at least 6 days OR another full backup to increase the cycle count, and in the meanwhile no backups are running, am I reading this situation right?
I could set the retention policy to 0 cycles so it gets pruned and the get back to 1 cycle?
A nice trick I use is to set the cycles to 0 (this works for any retention change you are considering), then run the Data Retention Forecast and Compliance report. If you like what you see as far as which jobs will age and which will remain, then go ahead and kick off data aging.
But if I set the cycles retention to 0, wont I lose full backups that are over 6 days of age?
I think they are stored in tapes by running auxiliary job, so i can probably restore if needed...
The process of freeing up disk space lags behind Data Aging because Commvault uses a distributed approach to identify deduplicated data to be physically pruned. The Job/Object Level Data Aging is done on the CommServe SQL Server DB, and the Commserve will communicate to the MediaAgent SIDBEngine regarding the status of aged deduplicated jobs/objects. Blocks held in the Primary (Single Instance) table that have been aged get picked up by the SIDBPrune process that moves them into the Zero Reference table. The SIDBPhysicalDeletes is the process that is used to physically delete the storage blocks.
The .PRUNABLE generally means something will be deleted in that folder if not the entire thing. I would suspend any jobs that are running to this library as well as running jobs will hog up the DDB related resources (things are FAR BETTER in v11).
That said if in the time since you adjusted retention that you are not seeing any data reclaimed on storage libraries, and your Data Forecast Report is shown that you should be reclaiming space then (if you are using Commvault Simpana and not just DDB that is V10), the log files that would be used to troubleshoot are SIDBEngine, SIDBPruning and CVMA. The CVMA log will inform you on the progress of physical deletes.
We are new to MSC and currently have an aft balcony booked on a 12 night on the Splendida . We just got an upgrade offer for a forward suite. The minimum bid is $200 pp. I looked thru the threads but didn't find any information. Anybody stayed in these rooms? What did you think? We have been on lots of Royal sailing and I have seen their forwards but they are only outsides and not suites. Thanks so much for your help. Candy
An "upgrade" to one of those cabins is in reality a downgrade from any balcony, even the aft ones on deck 13 with Juliette balcony and the mid ship smaller two person ones. They are high end ocean view cabins with a hefty price that MSC can barely book and they are always left unsold near sail date. Also remember the Aurea and associated suite perks do not come with upgrade bids. Definitely keep the balcony, especially if its aft facing.
There should be 3 forward suites on deck 12. IF the 12001 or 12003 are available and IF they are Yacht Club THEN you can book. These suites are wonderful. They are bigger than the Royal Suite in the YC and they have the best bathrooms onboard the ship...big walk-in shower and double vanity. Contrary to what you read, these suites are true suites with two rooms, dressing and makeup areas, plenty of closet space and two safes. Contrary to what you hear, having a balcony is not the be-all-end-all. I would take one of these suites over any balcony in the YC. Remember...They must be Yacht Club in order to be worth the upgrade. Even though they are not in the YC proper they are great value if they are connected to the YC. You WILL receive the YC upgrade benefits if you are listed as YC.
If the upgrade is Aurea then you will not receive the Aurea benefits. IMO...the forward two room suite is still a wonderful alternative. IMO...12001 is the best suite as it does not have the connecting door to the 12002 middle suite.
The $200pp (Aurea) Suite with panoramic sealed window upgrades the OP is talking about are for the forward facing center cabins on decks nine through eleven. The Yacht Club Executive & Family suites on deck twelve are clearly marked as such in the bidding system and are way more per person to bid on. Additionally, you can't choose your cabin with the bidding system.
Does anyone else find it odd that you dont get the Aurea experience with that bid upgrade but you do get the YC experience with that bid upgrade. I like where I am and have no plans to upgrade at this time but this just seems strange every time I read it. If its about money you'd think they would offer two possible Aurea upgrade, one with and one without the experience.
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