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Things to purchase for energy savings


GlockSpock

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Posted

The compact flourscent lightbulbs burn out significantly faster than advertised.  They are also highly toxic and difficult to dispose of properly.  I think we will regret having these things in our landfills one day, which is where I suspect the majority of them wind up after burnout.   I think LED cluster lights will be the true way of the future. 

 

I am not saying to not use the things, I am just saying that one day we will regret having a few billion of them busted in our landfills.  

 

:confused: I bought LED's, not CFL's? 

Posted

I will be interested to see what my heating bill is this winter.  I have been absolutely stunned at how low my electric bill runs.  The highest my bill has ever been is $119.32, and the lowest was around $82.00.  Not bad for a 3500 square foot house.

 

That's hard to believe. My 1300 sq. foot house runs around $150 but we're in Florida and the house gets hammered all day by the sun. 

Posted (edited)

The only thing to watch with LEDs is not to buy the ones "for decorative use". The light they put out is useless for general lighting.

 

I do have an LED spot I'm evaluating right now. Seems to be OK but a little pricey up-front.

Edited by tnguy
  • Moderators
Posted

I also ended up purchasing a 12 pack of air filters on Amazon. I admit, I'm they guy that goes 2-3 months between air filter changes on the HVAC because I forget about it. The good news is that 12 of them costed $18, and my Nest will remind me each month to replace the filter. From my research, a dirty air filter can increase your electric bill anywhere from 5%-15%.

 

Even if I only save 2% by changing the filter each month, based on $100 bill, I will net a few cents to dollars. Something to consider everyone!

Posted

I also ended up purchasing a 12 pack of air filters on Amazon. I admit, I'm they guy that goes 2-3 months between air filter changes on the HVAC because I forget about it. The good news is that 12 of them costed $18, and my Nest will remind me each month to replace the filter. From my research, a dirty air filter can increase your electric bill anywhere from 5%-15%.

 

Even if I only save 2% by changing the filter each month, based on $100 bill, I will net a few cents to dollars. Something to consider everyone!

 

2-3 months? I'm more like years? When I opened the holder last time, I had to fight it off with a pointy stick.

 

It doesn't help much that the downstairs returns are decidedly non-standard.

Posted

2-3 months? I'm more like years? When I opened the holder last time, I had to fight it off with a pointy stick.

 

It doesn't help much that the downstairs returns are decidedly non-standard.

 

 

Using a quality pleated air filter with MERV rating of 7-12 can improve indoor air quality considerably.  Lower than 7 doesn't really do much, above 12 restricts airflow too much is systems not designed for that type of filter.

 

You can buy them in bulk (modest quantities) online.  http://www.filtersfast.com/Filtrete-Micro-Red-6Pack-Filter.asp

Guest Lester Weevils
Posted (edited)

I change filters monthly and also run several room-sized hepa air filters. With dogs (aka mobile hair factories) plus a floor return vent, I have to vacuum the filter weekly and change monthly or it would burn up the air handler motor.

Edited by Lester Weevils
Posted

Unfortunately the downstairs returns are in the floor and, well, I'm sure they don't make em like that anymore. Replacing filters involves a session with the scissors.

 

It probably is about time though.

Posted

How about taking that hundred bucks and using it for a down payment on a pellet stove. Nobody has brought that up.

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