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#1
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I'm receiving mixed messages, and browsing with Google for an hour has
only left me more confused. I have a 1984 moderately-well insulated house with an existing well-based heat pump for heating and cooling. The heat pump is broken, and no one will fix it (it's a mongrel that the original owner hand-crafted). I've been planning on converting to oil or propane. Two companies that can do either alternative told me that oil and propane are equivalent in price per therm delivered. NOW my impression is that (1) propane is substantially more expensive than oil and (2) I should probably simply replace my heat pump with a modern system. I live in southern New Hamphire, by the way, where residential electricity is something like 15 cents/kwh. Opinions? Referrals to web sites with cool calculators? Advice? Thanks, Gerome |
#2
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Gerome wrote:
I'm receiving mixed messages, and browsing with Google for an hour has only left me more confused. I have a 1984 moderately-well insulated house with an existing well-based heat pump for heating and cooling. The heat pump is broken, and no one will fix it (it's a mongrel that the original owner hand-crafted). I've been planning on converting to oil or propane. Two companies that can do either alternative told me that oil and propane are equivalent in price per therm delivered. NOW my impression is that (1) propane is substantially more expensive than oil and (2) I should probably simply replace my heat pump with a modern system. I live in southern New Hamphire, by the way, where residential electricity is something like 15 cents/kwh. Opinions? Referrals to web sites with cool calculators? Advice? Thanks, Gerome you will get more definitive answers in alt.energy.renewable, alt.energy.homepower and even alt.solar.thermal |
#4
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On 6 Oct 2003 15:13:26 -0700, someone wrote:
I have a 1984 moderately-well insulated house with an existing well-based heat pump for heating and cooling... Wow! I'd keep a ground source heat pump if I could. This eliminates the limitation on air source heat pumps in cold climates. The ground source is usually quite an investment. Is this a recirculating well system, or a pump it and dump it (not sure if the latter is worthwhile, depends on how much lift you need to pump I suppose). I suggest you get prices on replacing the heat pump apparatus. Right now there is not enough price info for comparison. -v. |
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