Kid Ice
03-24-2005, 05:30 PM
Last week as part of my spring cleaning regimen I made some changes to my basement game room. My primary concern is flood. The area we are in is not flood prone, and after more than a year in the house we've not had any water in the basement* (almost, will explain later).
Here's what I changed:
-almost everything was at least a couple inches off the floor, but there were a few things (a minty Vectrex, my boxed Genesis games, and all my N64 carts) that I had to move to higher ground.
-all rare and/or valuable collectibles are now at least 3 feet off the floor.
-replaced the battery in the smoke alarm.
-all electrical devices now run through some type of surge prevention...nothing is plugged directly into an outlet now.
Here's what I'm still a little concerned about:
-Atari 7800 is the closest thing to the floor. There's just nowhere to move it.
-MAME machine is on a wooden block putting it a little more than an inch off the floor. It's an old computer, and I have everything backed up to a USB drive, but if that goes I'll have lots of configurin' to do (which isn't such a bad thing...is it?). Right now it is cleverly hidden away behind a very heavy desk, to preserve the arcade illusion...so it would be hard to shove something else behind there for it to sit on.
-My common NES carts are about 3 inches off the floor. Nowhere else to go.
-Our water heater is 11 years old and warrantied. I'd like to replace it, wife would like the warranty company to replace it when it breaks down.
Anything else I should do/think about, basement dwellers? It is a very clean, large, dry basement with no humidity problems...in fact it's really the most comfortable place in the house, temp and humidity-wise.
*There was one water incident. I went downstairs to find a water spot on the floor directly below the fire alarm. I reached up and touched the fire alarm and it was wet. Turned out after a really big storm, some water leaked through the garage roof, behind a wall in the garage, and through the hole where the fire alarm is. I put in gutter extenders to divert the water off, and haven't had water down there since. Scary though! I initially thought the water was coming up through the floor.
Here's what I changed:
-almost everything was at least a couple inches off the floor, but there were a few things (a minty Vectrex, my boxed Genesis games, and all my N64 carts) that I had to move to higher ground.
-all rare and/or valuable collectibles are now at least 3 feet off the floor.
-replaced the battery in the smoke alarm.
-all electrical devices now run through some type of surge prevention...nothing is plugged directly into an outlet now.
Here's what I'm still a little concerned about:
-Atari 7800 is the closest thing to the floor. There's just nowhere to move it.
-MAME machine is on a wooden block putting it a little more than an inch off the floor. It's an old computer, and I have everything backed up to a USB drive, but if that goes I'll have lots of configurin' to do (which isn't such a bad thing...is it?). Right now it is cleverly hidden away behind a very heavy desk, to preserve the arcade illusion...so it would be hard to shove something else behind there for it to sit on.
-My common NES carts are about 3 inches off the floor. Nowhere else to go.
-Our water heater is 11 years old and warrantied. I'd like to replace it, wife would like the warranty company to replace it when it breaks down.
Anything else I should do/think about, basement dwellers? It is a very clean, large, dry basement with no humidity problems...in fact it's really the most comfortable place in the house, temp and humidity-wise.
*There was one water incident. I went downstairs to find a water spot on the floor directly below the fire alarm. I reached up and touched the fire alarm and it was wet. Turned out after a really big storm, some water leaked through the garage roof, behind a wall in the garage, and through the hole where the fire alarm is. I put in gutter extenders to divert the water off, and haven't had water down there since. Scary though! I initially thought the water was coming up through the floor.