If you can't open them they're locked, it's that simple.I am a person I'd like to think has average intelligence, but I am always baffled by home maintenance. I can't even tell if windows are locked or not!
If you can't open them they're locked, it's that simple.I am a person I'd like to think has average intelligence, but I am always baffled by home maintenance. I can't even tell if windows are locked or not!
If you can raise the sash, the lock is open.I am a person I'd like to think has average intelligence, but I am always baffled by home maintenance. I can't even tell if windows are locked or not!
You aren't alone, when I lived in Nebraska I remember peering behind the latch while I turned it to try to figure out which way was closing vs opening.I can't even tell if windows are locked or not!


Not to my knowledge - only my bedroom window and it wasn't really damaged, just blown in. You'd think I'd hear a wind gust that strong, but I didn't. Of course that reading was in Latham NY, about 20 miles away. Weather conditions can be different just a few miles from each other. Whatever it was here, it was strong enough and blowing at the right angle to pop out the window.@debodun I looked at the wind gust map. The wind went from 20mph to 117mph in about an hour. Was there any destruction because of that enormous gust?
Depends on what you feel is outrageous. So far this year I've spent a little over $1700 on fuel oil. I keep my thermostat at 65F.30 year old windows ARE old. Your heating bill must be outrageous!
Are you talking the whole year since January.Depends on what you feel is outrageous. So far this year I've spent a little over $1700 on fuel oil. I keep my thermostat at 65F.
Also known as "Righty-tighty, lefty-loosey".My physics teacher always said: turn right (clockwise) is close. Turn left is open.