Cheap winter heating ideas

Kinja'd!!! "Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing." (granfury)
12/08/2017 at 23:31 • Filed to: None

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After nearly going broke during my first winter in the Midwest five years ago I’ve been setting my thermostat lower and lower every year. Right now I think I have it set to get the place up to a blistering 57 degrees during times when I’m at home and awake. As I write this there is currently a 15 degree difference between my home office and the rest of the house(72 vs 57), and since I tend to lock myself in this one room most of the time I’m home that works out just fine. I should probably relocate the wine cooler/second fridge in here thus giving me even less of a reason to leave.

For the most part I’m just using a couple of those oil-filled radiator heaters in the bedroom and office, and they do a surprisingly good job. One thing I have done is to place them right above forced-air vents, so when the main heater kicks on it blows the heat into the room a little quicker as the air passes over the radiator. Too bad much of the good hot air is trapped up high by these 9 ft high ceilings...

So, any good ideas on how to keep ones home warm on the cheap?


DISCUSSION (18)


Kinja'd!!! Steve is equipped with Electronic Fool Injection > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 00:19

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Unfortunately it only works once.


Kinja'd!!! winterlegacy, here 'till the end > Steve is equipped with Electronic Fool Injection
12/09/2017 at 00:35

Kinja'd!!!2

If you have any circulation issues with your home, however, this fixes them.


Kinja'd!!! Recovering Gaijin > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 00:37

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I used a portable propane heater at my old house. Best BTU/$ for supplemental heat imo. They also sell thermostatically controlled wall mounted propane heaters.


Kinja'd!!! Roadster Man > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 01:17

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I’m going to be buying a few space heaters. I figure electricity is a bit cheaper than oil. Or at least I hope so. I keep the house at 58 but kick it up to 62 when I’m home.

I’m thinking of buying a propane space heater, but I’m worried about fumes.


Kinja'd!!! RiceRocketeer Extraordinaire > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 01:58

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Back in college I’d leave my desktop churning away on some distributed computing program ( SETI@Home , Folding@Home ), and these days you could even mine Bitcoin or some alt-coin instead to try to offset the electricity costs.


Kinja'd!!! Sovande > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 02:35

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Get a fan, set it on low and aim it up at the ceiling and circulate the hot air down.

(Dad voice) Or get a sweater, it’s not that cold.


Kinja'd!!! Recovering Gaijin > Roadster Man
12/09/2017 at 05:40

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I never had noticeable fumes while running-unless a tank ran dry. Still minimal and not long-lasting.

I did buy a carbon monoxide alarm and set it up on a shelf >at just below< the level at which I slept. Futon back then, so basically floor-level. I also had a ceiling fan in there. Only real adjustment I made to having propane was acquiring a large humidifier to use while the propane was running. That has made me much healthier thru the winters: far fewer sinus problems.

ETA: use common sense: no paper lanterns above it! And I tacked sheet-metal to a piece of 5/8 plywood and set the heater on it to protect hardwood floor.


Kinja'd!!! Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing. > RiceRocketeer Extraordinaire
12/09/2017 at 05:45

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I do have one desktop running as a DVR and that’s probably helping to heat the room. When my old gaming rig was on I couldn’t have a space heater on at the same time, but then again, I didn’t really need the space heater...


Kinja'd!!! jimz > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 06:22

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what’s your energy source? even when it gets real cold my gas bill in the winter (in Michigan) rarely crests $40/mo.


Kinja'd!!! TheRealBicycleBuck > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 07:20

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If there’s hot air trapped at the ceiling, install a ceiling fan. To get the air down, put the fan on reverse so it pulls air up and put it on low so it doesn’t create a cooling breeze.

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Kinja'd!!! Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing. > jimz
12/09/2017 at 07:33

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Electric heat. I was getting $300+ bills when I was trying to get the temp up to 68. I learned quickly to dial back the temp, 63 then 60 and now 57.

I was getting gas bills of almost $50/mo year ‘round, and that was just for hot water and the dryer. They cut me off when I was unemployed a couple of years ago and I’ve learned to live without hot water even though I can afford to reinstate service. Gas prices here seem ridiculous compared to what I was used to in LA.


Kinja'd!!! S62B50daily > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 08:14

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Since you have 9' ceilings try installing a ceiling fan to redistribute the heat trapped up there


Kinja'd!!! Tekamul > RiceRocketeer Extraordinaire
12/09/2017 at 08:34

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You realize those ‘passive’ process increase the electricity consumption of an idle machine 10x, right? Or more than 100x of a sleeping machine.

Not a great way to save electricity.


Kinja'd!!! Tekamul > Roadster Man
12/09/2017 at 08:40

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It varies by where you live, and the rates you get, but heating by electric is about 60% more that #2, or about 3x as expensive as NG.

Do you have better options?


Kinja'd!!! TorqueToYield > Full of the sound of the Gran Fury, signifying nothing.
12/09/2017 at 08:57

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Pellet stove. The new ones have fancy recirculating fans and whatnot. If you’re handy you could probably set it up yourself, just need some tile under it and a chimney.

Or just get a natural gas furnace. NG is stupid cheap these days.


Kinja'd!!! dsigned001 - O.R.C. hunter > jimz
12/09/2017 at 09:21

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I’ll second the gas vs. electric.


Kinja'd!!! Roadster Man > RiceRocketeer Extraordinaire
12/09/2017 at 11:32

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I keep my gaming rig on in my room while I’m gone all day, and it’s about 5-10 degrees warmer than the rest of the house when I get home from work.

I just let it idle, I really should have it mining or folding.


Kinja'd!!! RiceRocketeer Extraordinaire > Tekamul
12/09/2017 at 23:23

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Oh of course. He didn’t mention his electricity costs though, and those oil-radiator heaters are power hogs too.