[AT] OOOPS - Do as I say not as I do - now rambling off topic

George Willer gwill at toast.net
Fri Jul 29 06:33:15 PDT 2005


Charlie,

The large home I built for my step-sister-in-law about 30 years ago has had 
the original air to air system replaced by just such a system.  Because of 
her husband we have become estranged so I don't have first hand knowledge, 
but AFAIK it does the job.  The reason for the conversion was the abnormally 
high rates of their power company along with their abnormally high usage. 
The house is secondary to the farming operation... they have a 400 amp 
entrance panel in one of the barns.

George

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "charlie hill" <chill8 at cox.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Friday, July 29, 2005 8:02 AM
Subject: Re: [AT] OOOPS - Do as I say not as I do - now rambling off topic


>I have toyed with the idea of placing a long coil of plastic pipe in a coil 
>about 10 feet in the ground with insulated and filtered air shafts coming 
>to the surface from each end of the coil.  Then using some sort of air to 
>air heat exchanger.  That is just a thought at this point.  I haven't tried 
>to actually figure it out.
>
> I actually like oil heat.  Fuel is getting fairly pricey there is always 
> fuel oil available in one form or another even if you have to buy diesel 
> fuel with the road tax on it.  The new high efficiency oil furnaces (and 
> gas too for that matter) have a very high conversion rate and some of them 
> even to the point that they use pvc pipe for an exhaust stack.  They can 
> be run on a small generator in the case of power outages.
>
> By the way Spencer seems to have a 15k limit on messages these days so we 
> need to start cropping off the previous messages some.
>
> Funny thing is that I never saw the first and part of the second sentence 
> of Roger's message until I read it in Al's reply.  Somehow it was cut out 
> when it came to me from the list.  I figured it out but I had to read 
> ..before... the lines.  grins.
>
> Charlie
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Al Walker" <alwalker at gvtel.com>
> To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" 
> <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> Sent: Friday, July 29, 2005 3:27 AM
> Subject: Re: [AT] OOOPS - Do as I say not as I do - now rambling off topic
>
>
>> Roger Welsch wrote:
>>
>>>Sorry, but no.  That was almost 20 years ago and I can hardly remember 
>>>what
>>>my name was back then.  I do recall a guy down the road had one and built 
>>>a
>>>huge pond for all the discard water.  The gallonage per hour did seem 
>>>huge.
>>>His pond never got wet.  I have an old bathtub sunk at the end of the 
>>>yard
>>>for ours and there is a small wet seep.  It's amazing how little water it
>>>uses.  It is about the size of a small furnace and we have a huge, 
>>>3-story,
>>>seive-like, 9-room house.  We have a back-up electric coil that comes on 
>>>if
>>>the heat exchanger can't keep up but the only time it has ever come on is
>>>when we turn up the thermostat beyond a point and it needs to crank out 
>>>the
>>>heat.  I'd never do anything else now.
>>>
>>>
>> <snip>
>>
>> When we built this house two years ago, we wanted to use a ground source 
>> heat pump. However, the system would have cost an additional $14,000.  We 
>> looked at "pump and dump" but with our below freezing winter weather, it 
>> causes problems, not the least of which is erosion.  I don't remember the 
>> amount now but the gallonage was quite significant, since we need a lot 
>> of heat in winter. An option to that is to bury hundreds  of feet of 
>> coiled plastic pipe below frost level and circulate an anti-freeze 
>> solution through that. Not cheap to do either.  Elected to use off-peak 
>> electrically heated radiant heat in the floor, with an LP gas forced-air 
>> furnace as back up. Plan to add an outdoor corn burner in the future. We 
>> added an electric central air unit to that for internal climate control. 
>> We also have an air exchange system that uses the heat from the out-going 
>> air to warm the incoming air to reduce total heat loss from that system. 
>> It helps control the humidity and keeps fresh air in the house.  Oh, and 
>> there is a gas fire place for my dearly beloved.,
>> Al in beautiful northwest Minnesota.
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>
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