โDec-06-2018 12:30 AM
โDec-06-2018 10:59 PM
โDec-06-2018 07:59 PM
โDec-06-2018 07:45 PM
โDec-06-2018 04:00 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Prove it to yourself.
Even if electricity was dirt cheap at ten cents a kilowatt hour just your two heaters would mean thirty cents per hour -- ten hours three dollars -- ninety dollars per month.
But ten cents per kWh is like the days of the buck and a quarter breakfast special and grocery store Ten For A Dollar chicken pot pies.
The actual cost is more like three times that. I remember my aunt in Seattle hooting "We pay three cents per kWh for power!" That was sixty years ago.
Your propane furnace probably has 500% more heating power available.
โDec-06-2018 08:30 AM
โDec-06-2018 08:27 AM
โDec-06-2018 08:22 AM
larry cad wrote:
Cost difference is small, but convenience factor makes a difference. I use both, but because of convenience, I use electric more during times when it is above freezing. However, when the temp goes down below freezing, I use propane more in order to keep the basement warm, to prevent pipes there from freezing. Electric heaters don't heat the basement.
By using a combination of both, it makes my propane last longer.
โDec-06-2018 08:19 AM
โDec-06-2018 08:07 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:E WA is still very cheap.. maybe a little over 4ยข. Grand Coulee Dam, I guess.
I remember my aunt in Seattle hooting "We pay three cents per kWh for power!" That was sixty years ago..
โDec-06-2018 07:50 AM
westernrvparkowner wrote:x2. I'd go for comfort.
You won't have to heat the living room to 110 degrees to get the bedroom above freezing.
โDec-06-2018 07:42 AM
Sea Six wrote:
We get 40-50ยฐ temperatures at night typically. Occasionally it will get into the 30's and we will have a few days of subfreezing weather per year.
I have a heat pump in the main ac but the reversing valve has failed so it's just an ac for now.
โDec-06-2018 07:37 AM
โDec-06-2018 07:19 AM
โDec-06-2018 07:13 AM