I have one of these. Not as useful as everyone thinks, the door is VERY heavy and the one electric socket in it doesn't work so you need candles/flashlights. you also have to go down a ladder so a wine cellar'd be tricky because you'd need some sort of dumb waiter. that's what my roommate wants to do, wine cellar with a dumb waiter, but really it'd be cheaper and easier just to get a little wine refrigerator. plus there are cockroaches down there. I think people used to grow pot down there, there's a box of miracle grow.
the 17-24 year olds beat out everyone in turn-out, if I am reading the stats correctly (except you can't tell about the 60+ range). (assuming that every year of age has an equal % of population, which is probably not true either, and I know that the state has one of the lowest percentages of young people compared to other states)
I wish they would make the age ranges be equal in the number of years of age they represent; the stats would be more meaningful and I would have to do less math...
17-24 range = 8 years of people, @ 17% = 2.1 % per year represented, 25-29 = 5 yrs, @ 6% = 1.2 30- 44= 15 @ 18 = 1.2 45-59 = 15 @ 29 = 1.9
Not as useful as everyone thinks, the door is VERY heavy and the one electric socket in it doesn't work so you need candles/flashlights. you also have to go down a ladder so a wine cellar'd be tricky because you'd need some sort of dumb waiter. that's what my roommate wants to do, wine cellar with a dumb waiter, but really it'd be cheaper and easier just to get a little wine refrigerator. plus there are cockroaches down there. I think people used to grow pot down there, there's a box of miracle grow.
I wish they would make the age ranges be equal in the number of years of age they represent; the stats would be more meaningful and I would have to do less math...
17-24 range = 8 years of people, @ 17% = 2.1 % per year represented,
25-29 = 5 yrs, @ 6% = 1.2
30- 44= 15 @ 18 = 1.2
45-59 = 15 @ 29 = 1.9
way to go young people!