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Alternatives to heating the house

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    #31
    blimey I got it wrong who would have thought it.

    100w it is.

    I'll have to tell the wife to run round a bit more so I can turn down the heating.
    Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

    Comment


      #32
      Some suggestions.

      1. Move south. South coast of England or if you are able to leave Britain, somewhere sub-tropical. No more heating bills.
      2. Move house. Buy a modern built house that has modern insulation, modern heating system and good quality double glazing.
      3. Only heat the rooms you are in. Leave all other spare rooms, hallways unheated and keep the doors closed in the heated rooms.
      4. Fill the house with lodgers. Each one pays rent towards the heating and adds 100w of body heat. Perhaps 3 or 4 Tai ladies to keep you warm at night (you can let them stay rent free ).
      5. Fit solar panels and get £1200 a year in feed in tariffs. Welcome to SunShare | Profit from Solar Power & FiT | SunShare
      6. Get some wood burning stoves. I like the modern ones: Panoramic fx1 stove - future fires stoves uk or La nordica fortuna contemporary stove and then find a free source of wood.
      7. Fit a heat pump. Air source heat pumps - Generate your own energy - Energy Savint Trust or Ground source heat pumps - Heat pumps & ground loops - Energy Saving Trust.
      8. Wear some thermal underwear and a sweat suit when in the house Swelter Premier Sweat Suit Sauna Suit for Guaranteed Weight Loss Results During Exercise - £49.99 : Sweatsuits, Specialised clothing to assist with weight loss
      9. Switch energy supplier. You might save some money on the bills to pay for some of the above. Comparison sites for gas & electricity, car insurance & more | uSwitch.com
      10. Use an electric blanket at night and don't heat the bedrooms.


      Hope this helps.

      Comment


        #33
        Originally posted by Cliphead View Post
        Not much chance of cavity wall insulation here as the walls are three feet thick. There's no loft as such but an apex gap of about four feet that should be properly insulated as the conversion was only done about five years ago. All helps of course.
        If you have a very high celling, you could try to recirculate the hot air from the roof back down to ground level.
        Fiscal nomad it's legal.

        Comment


          #34
          Originally posted by Cliphead View Post
          Having just paid a £600 gas bill for the quarter I need to think about some other way of heating the house in winter. Weird and wonderful suggestions welcome.
          £600? You should invoice that for one days work. Not worth worrying about.

          Comment


            #35
            Originally posted by rightfluff View Post
            £600? You should invoice that for one days work. Not worth worrying about.
            That's my approach. Heating is on in every room, 24/7 365 at a constant temperature (unless we are away on holiday or the like). If the bills go up, a small rate increase (just a £1 an hour increase would cover it easily) is all that's needed.

            People are too scared to put up their rates and yet companies are making the biggest profits ever and inflation is rampant.

            Put your bloody rates up people!

            Don't starve and sit in freezing homes.

            Comment


              #36
              Moving south is your best option.

              Southampton

              BBC Weather | Southampton

              Inverness

              BBC Weather | Inverness

              Comment


                #37
                Might want to read this (finally published yesterday) before installing anything

                Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) Scheme - Department of Energy and Climate Change

                Basically, financial incentives for generating heat, much like those already available for generating electricity.
                Back at the coal face

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