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Alternative Heating for Winter
Hi All,
So I know a lot of you are part of the northern climate and will be dealing with the ridiculously high heating costs this winter. This has made me consider alternatives to see if, long term, I could save some money. I know you can get a pellet stove for about $3000 installed and that will save you some considerable money on heating costs. Of course, it's $3000 out of pocket.... I was looking at these quartz infrared heaters that supposedly are supposed to do a good job heating a good portion of a house. Any thoughts on these? http://www.infrared-heating.com/ What are other people doing (besides lowering the thermostat, lol) to conserve and save a few bucks? Chris |
We installed updated double pane windows, and a ceiling fan. That helped a lot.
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hv u looked at geothermal heating?i still cant make up my mind about it but read somewhere it costs around 12000 to install and serves as an AC/heater
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Our house is superinsulated, and the thermostats for our FHW/BB system usually stay around 65º. We just installed an instant-hot water heater, so this way, the house won't keep heating water when we aren't using it.
That said, we need a new house. (I want radiant, dammit! ;)) |
Budget billing on oil delivery LOL.
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It's a tough situation....I'll see if anyone else has any thoughts. It's going to be a tough winter no matter which way you look at it. If we get any hurricanes this Fall oil is going to skyrocket. |
We have the quartz radiant heaters and they are really good for a small area - like a single bedroom or office - they are not that effective in a larger room but they are a very warm heat - nice.
Try an outside wood burning boiler - larger up front cost - but the fire stays away from the house and they are very efficient with wood use. Of course the cost of seasoned wood is going......guess now......up! |
CF,
We did 15+ years NW of NYC, and 4 full time years on the Mtn in NC; both houses had/have a decent wood stove, installed at build time. We had access to all the wood we could cut/buck/drag/split and stack, so the "fuel" was simply our tools and hard work. Imo, when people do post installs of a stove burning wood/pellets/coal etc., they tend to go overboard in sizing the stove too large. I realize you live in Mass, (from memory), but unless one is trying to turn that stove room into a sauna and blow out the rest of the house, bigger ain't better. A reasonably sized, decent, non-foofoo stove, with good dbl wall pipe and trpl wall where code requires, will provide exc. heating for your normal living space(s). One must be prepared to get up to a cool house and then fire up that bastard when you get home and run the hell out of it on weekends, when home. But again, a stove to heat 4,000 sq ft, when you are really trying to be comfortable in room(s) of 400- 1200 ft sqd, is a diff consideration and that jumbo, super efficient, doorway to hell stove may not be the deal. No clue on pricing, as it's been 7 yrs since our last stove buy and install, but there are a lot of decent brands out there. Be sure to get any unit with the UL approval and that unit's install specs also meet your local building code specs. I like wood; some like pellets but you are paying a couple steps for the processing. Coal is a whole other animal... Do some web hunting and good luck. My 50Cent is up... BR,mD |
I don't know about whole house heating with Infrared. I bought the Infrared heating dish from Sam's Club and I can tell you it is not that effective. It produces heat, but not like those regular personal heaters do. Just my 2 cents.
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