You know it’s cold outside when Florida gets snow.
Which is exactly how 2018 began, thanks to a “bomb cyclone” that
slammed the East Coast with heavy snow and temperature. Meanwhile,
Embarrass, Minnesota won the unofficial title of “The Last Place in the
Freezing Midwest You’d Want to Go Skinny Dipping” by hitting a low of 45
degrees below zero on New Year’s Eve.
While you’re imagining the rising heating bills in winter (and with
winter not yet over), the following tips might help you lower your own
energy costs.
• Easiest money-saver ever. “Aside from the furnace,
a laser printer uses the most standby power in the house at $131.07
watts,” SaveOnEnergy.com reports. And yet, even though that translates
into about $131 a year, a new survey found that only 14 percent of
respondents unplugged their printers when not using them.
• Pellet stoves aren’t just for environmentalists.
This OldHouse.com likens them to the family pet because “they require a
regular feeding schedule” — but Fido won’t heat a 3,000-square-foot
ranch house, say, for perhaps less than $120 a month. And with the
weather turning colder in most places, curling up with a glass of wine
in front of one of these babies in the living room could be as appealing
to romantics as their eco-friendly heating is to greenies.
What does a “regular feeding schedule” mean? Depending on the size of
the hopper and how often you use the stove, you’ll need to load in
pellets — made from concentrated sawdust — every four or five days.
• Make sure your attic is properly ventilated. By
not doing so, homeowners might as well just send their utility company a
blank check if they lack what GAF’s Jason Joplin, program manager for
the Center for Advancement of Roofing Excellence, calls “a continual
flow of air to help protect the efficiency of your attic’s insulation.”
The culprit working against achieving that? Excess moisture buildup
that clings to your roof’s underside in winter from seemingly benign
sources, such as appliances, showers and cooking vapors, before
ultimately soaking the insulation when the condensed moisture falls.
Don’t be one of the 86 percent.
Joplin’s suggestion to help ward off the problem? A properly balanced
ventilation system consisting of Cobra Ridge Vent (installed at the
ridge) and Cobra IntakePro (installed at the eave) by GAF (gaf.com),
North America’s largest roofing manufacturer. “Both products work in
tandem to allow cool, fresh air to enter at the eave edge while forcing
moist, super-heated air out of the ridge vent,” he explains.
• Adjust door thresholds. “Sneaky” is the word Popular Mechanics
magazine uses to describe this hint, the theory being that if you can
see daylight beneath your front door, it means the indoor air –which
you’re paying to heat or cool — is escaping outside.
“A little light in the corners is okay, but don’t raise the threshold
so high that it interferes with opening and closing the door,” the
magazine notes.
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