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Best way to heat a single room?

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    #61
    Originally posted by minestrone View Post
    I suppose he has a back boiler on it and it is heating the entire farm house off that. He fits boilers for a living as well.
    Ah well, if he's heating the whole house with it, including hot water, then it will burn a good deal of wood.

    My central heating is oil fired (AGA). It's chronic! Just to fill the oil tank costs me £1300.

    Being in the remotest sticks, there is no mains gas available.

    You've come right out the other side of the forest of irony and ended up in the desert of wrong.

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      #62
      Originally posted by bogeyman View Post
      Ah well, if he's heating the whole house with it, including hot water, then it will burn a good deal of wood.

      My central heating is oil fired (AGA). It's chronic! Just to fill the oil tank costs me £1300.

      Being in the remotest sticks, there is no mains gas available.
      That is a frightening amount of dosh. One wonders how much the treasury get from that. Probably the lion's share.

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        #63
        Originally posted by minestrone View Post
        That is a frightening amount of dosh. One wonders how much the treasury get from that. Probably the lion's share.
        Damn right. It's frightening me now, as I have to fill up for winter.

        You've come right out the other side of the forest of irony and ended up in the desert of wrong.

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          #64
          Best way to heat a single room?

          I hear that horizontal jogging is free
          'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
          Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.

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            #65
            Is there any advantage to a halogen heater over an ordinary resistive heater, they seem to be everywhere?

            Comment


              #66
              Heating a Home Office

              I'd suggest a 30" flat screen monitor.


              Games and work are just delightful and you get a lot of heat from it too.
              Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.

              C.S. Lewis

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                #67
                Generate body heat by having a good long hard shag. Better still, make it a 3 some!
                I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!

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                  #68
                  Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post
                  Generate body heat by having a good long hard shag. Better still, make it a 3 some!
                  dont be silly.

                  I too work in a small ice-box office. My solution -
                  post bollux un cuk whilst being pissed at night, read the posts next day whilst shivering and hey presto, a brightly glowing face that radiates more enrgy than a nuclear reactor



                  (\__/)
                  (>'.'<)
                  ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

                  Comment


                    #69
                    Originally posted by bogeyman View Post
                    Ah well, if he's heating the whole house with it, including hot water, then it will burn a good deal of wood.
                    I had a house with a similar system, except the stove was too small. The previous owner had a wife at home to feed the thing during the day but I didn't. I put gas central heating in and had the stove boiler connected into that, so heat it knocked out contributed. It worked well, but I wish I'd invested in a bigger stove at the same time. I had access to lots of free logs.

                    Originally posted by bogeyman View Post
                    My central heating is oil fired (AGA). It's chronic! Just to fill the oil tank costs me £1300.

                    Being in the remotest sticks, there is no mains gas available.
                    I had a mate with no chance of gas who put an LPG (?) tank in his garden so he could have gas central heating. All went well until oil prices shot up and so did his bill. Being on mains gas myself there was no corresponding increase. That was back in the 1990s though.
                    Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

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                      #70
                      We had a wood burner fitted last year. The hypnotic effect of the flames is very relaxing but they do have their drawbacks.

                      If you don't have access to free wood the cost of logs is quite high and has gone up in line with fossil fuels. Around here the logs we have delivered are a waste product from tree surgeons so the quality is variable and they are not always as dry as they should be. During the cold months we can get through a hilux load in a month or so (£85) we use the central heating in the mornings so the house is warm to get up and the wood burner in the evenings

                      You will need to stack the logs when the merchant dumps them on your drive, (hopefully it won't be raining) have somewhere dry but well ventilated to store the logs and you will need the chimney swept twice a year as creosotes form in the flue. The cost of this alone (about £100) might even pay for enough units of leccy to heat a small room over the winter.
                      Numbly tolerating the inequality as a way to achieve greater prosperity for all.

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