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[email protected] trader4@optonline.net is offline
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Default Oil vs. gas heat in this scenario?

On May 19, 11:05*am, ransley wrote:
On May 19, 9:03*am, Dairy Godmother wrote:





Hi there,


Just bought a house in CT and am navigating options (my first house).
The house has an oil tank (which I find hard to wrap my head around,
I'm from CA and we didnt have oil tanks) which works fine, though it
has been patched and the inspector told me it could not be insured as
a result. *So it got my mind to thinking about the options and I
realized I had no experience to even begin to have an opinion, so here
I am. *Here are the facts:


-- Stamford, CT house built in 1925
-- gas lines run into basement but not used
-- oil tank and boiler (not sure of boiler age, I'm thinking not that
new but not too old)
-- radiators in each room
-- electric appliances (but would love gas one day)
-- no central a/c (would love that one day too)


I'd like to know what scenario would make the most sense if I want to
be economical in the long run. *Here are my questions if anyone is
interested / can help:


-- If we put in central air, would it require gas or is electric
possible?
-- if C/A requres gas, does that mean the heat should be gas as well?
I prefer radiator heat, but is it lame to have a sep. system for
cooling and heating? (oil heat and gas a/c)
-- can you run radiators with gas (vs. oil)? seems inefficient
-- given that we dont like it too warm (60-65) and are happy to heat
only those rooms as we need them, is there an electric-based option
that saves money (short of portable space heaters)?


Lastly, anyone from the area able to comment about price of oil vs.
gas vs. electric?


I really appreciate any commentary -- I see other entries along these
lines but some are old and some are not from the Northeast. *thanks!


You buy insurance, you are insured unless the insurance co tells you
you are not.


Yes, that's true. But what the policy covers and excludes is a big
factor. Many insurance companies have exclusions for buried oil
tanks. I'd carefully read the policy regarding oil tanks period.




*Look into spacepack AC.

Your utility rates are local to you, you have to run the numbers,
nobody knows where Ng oil prices will be in a year or 2, but likely Ng
might be cheapest, but then maybe electric will be.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -