How many people do you like in the house with a nice 69?A nice 69 if people are in the house, 64 overnight, and 60 when we are out. I tried spending a night at my mom's house, she keeps it 74 daytime and 68 at night. It was too much.
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How many people do you like in the house with a nice 69?A nice 69 if people are in the house, 64 overnight, and 60 when we are out. I tried spending a night at my mom's house, she keeps it 74 daytime and 68 at night. It was too much.
What it was when I grew up. Now it’s 71 when people are in the house and 66 at night and when people leave.We have our furnace set at 65 during the day and 62 at night. But then the floor heat is also set at 66 all the time.
I WISH.
Ours is set at 74 because she can't stand the cold. And it's boiler/radiant heat, so it doesn't go down at night and it's just too hot to sleep. Luckily its pretty efficient so its not really that expensive. Just too ****ing hot.
It's only for a couple days when it gets into the negatives. Just trying to extend its life through these cold snaps, it's not like I do that all winter.I'm not trying to be "that guy" but you are literally just tricking your furnaces thermostat into thinking your house temp is warmer than it is. And I know you know that already. But if you get a cheap Kill-a-watt plug off Amazon and check the energy usage of that space heater I think you'd be shocked what it costs you in electricity. A/C unit replacements are ridiculously expensive but furnaces are actually pretty cheap, I think you might have a pretty quick ROI on a replacement.
My wife is the one who wants it set that low lol. Our bed room is an upstairs loft area so it gets really hot up there (insert dirty joke here) if we don't have the temp set lower.Man this sounds amazing. If I could I would set the temp at 60 at night. I sleep so much better in the cold. I live in a house with my wife and 4 daughters who are always cold so I am SOL. I put it at 68 at night and I catch hell for that.
Get one of the portable ones that connects to your 12v outlet in the car, and then pump them up in the garage. Best $30 I ever spent.
You can get cheap 115 plug in for 50 bucks at harbour freight. They are cheap, I have to turn the tool knob off and let it air up or it will leak but the extra 2-3 minutes to air tires hear and there isn’t too big of a deal. Especially when the wife/kids will let them go a little too long.
I got a Ryobi 18V for the bikes. Works well for cars as well. Uses the same batteries as my trimmer and blower (and their tools if you have any of those)
Access to wood at reasonable cost (forest harvest permit) would be a major reason.Why don't Iowan's have wood burners, or for that matter, pellet stoves?
Ummmmm, access to plentiful and cheap amounts of firewood, maybe?Living in the NV mountains, at 7500, life w/o a wood burner is unheard of. We heat house only. Front and back porch - both enclosed, no heat whatsoever. Main house, just over 1000 sq. feet. Wood burner primary heat source, back up via electric baseboard heaters. High electrical bill? $80, during winter months.
Wood cutting permits - $25 (as much as one cuts).
4-6 cords gets us through our long winters (we've had snow, 12 months of the year).
Spent my first 30 years in Iowa. Don't recall anyone with a wood burner, though near everybody had a fireplace (pretty much btu worthless, compared to a wood burner).
Why don't Iowan's have wood burners, or for that matter, pellet stoves?
My parents had a wood burner until I, the youngest male child, left for my second year at ISU. Then they had a propane furnace within three months.Living in the NV mountains, at 7500, life w/o a wood burner is unheard of. We heat house only. Front and back porch - both enclosed, no heat whatsoever. Main house, just over 1000 sq. feet. Wood burner primary heat source, back up via electric baseboard heaters. High electrical bill? $80, during winter months.
Wood cutting permits - $25 (as much as one cuts).
4-6 cords gets us through our long winters (we've had snow, 12 months of the year).
Spent my first 30 years in Iowa. Don't recall anyone with a wood burner, though near everybody had a fireplace (pretty much btu worthless, compared to a wood burner).
Why don't Iowan's have wood burners, or for that matter, pellet stoves?
The folk I know that have easy wood access do have them.Living in the NV mountains, at 7500, life w/o a wood burner is unheard of. We heat house only. Front and back porch - both enclosed, no heat whatsoever. Main house, just over 1000 sq. feet. Wood burner primary heat source, back up via electric baseboard heaters. High electrical bill? $80, during winter months.
Wood cutting permits - $25 (as much as one cuts).
4-6 cords gets us through our long winters (we've had snow, 12 months of the year).
Spent my first 30 years in Iowa. Don't recall anyone with a wood burner, though near everybody had a fireplace (pretty much btu worthless, compared to a wood burner).
Why don't Iowan's have wood burners, or for that matter, pellet stoves?
I am older. The folks converted to propane from hand-stoked coal when I left for college.My parents had a wood burner until I, the youngest male child, left for my second year at ISU. Then they had a propane furnace within three months.
Living in the NV mountains, at 7500, life w/o a wood burner is unheard of. We heat house only. Front and back porch - both enclosed, no heat whatsoever. Main house, just over 1000 sq. feet. Wood burner primary heat source, back up via electric baseboard heaters. High electrical bill? $80, during winter months.
Wood cutting permits - $25 (as much as one cuts).
4-6 cords gets us through our long winters (we've had snow, 12 months of the year).
Spent my first 30 years in Iowa. Don't recall anyone with a wood burner, though near everybody had a fireplace (pretty much btu worthless, compared to a wood burner).
Why don't Iowan's have wood burners, or for that matter, pellet stoves?
Not true....way more forests in Iowa, where I grew up - alongside the DM River valley. Maybe the difference being, private lands vs. 85% Nevada BLM. The latter encourages cut, cut, cut, namely invasive Juniper..Ummmmm, access to plentiful and cheap amounts of firewood, maybe?
Iowa ain't brimming with forests, ya know??
I know a lot of people with corn stovesMy parents have a corn stove. It doesn’t replace one of their furnaces (they have 2 due to a house addition) but it does really cut down on its use. I know someone who had an actual corn furnace.