debodun
SF VIP
- Location
- way upstate in New York, USA
My furnace came on weeks ago - the joys of living in the northern U.S. I leave my thermostat on 65, but with the old windows in my house, it's like not having any windows. Drafts abound!
Recently some new houses built in Braemar (N. Scotland) had air source heat pumps fitted, but they had to be upgraded because they only worked down to -15 C. (5 Deg F). I was told that the efficiency drops off, the colder it gets.
I have an oil fired boiler (furnace has a different meaning in the UK) which provides central heating and hot water. This is very common in rural Scotland. Cost averages about £50 ($80) a month. Temp is about 10 C (50 F) at present and to maintain an internal temp of 18 C , the boiler runs for about 30 mins in the morning and evening.
I don't have any fancy computer controls on the boiler, just a timer and a thermostat.
we live in Michigan....we burn wood......we have had fires for several days......
Furnace??? what's that? last one I had was up in Massachusetts 15 years ago. Damn thing almost made me broke.
Now I have teenie,weenie space heater that heats this whole house in Florida.
We had -18 C one evening when we went to collect our daughter from the airport. The car still started first turn.
Over the years we have added a lot of insulation to the house and it's paid itself many times over.
"Only the hob is gas"
?? imp
We are milder on the west coast - Gulf Stream.
Perhaps, but we are much drier on the east![]()
C'mon, now, Davey! Our friends from Indiana have wintered in Gulf Shores, Alabama several winters now, and according to Vonda, they froze their a$$es off! Record cold, like 23 degrees, no insulation in their rented condo, pipes froze and burst! 'Course, the southern tip of Florida is, what, 200 miles further south? imp