Eddie
1) What is the problem with both electric pad and electric blanket together?
2)The heating was either steam or hot water. When I visited the apartment it still had one of the radiators and the landlord mentioned the apartment had radiators under all windows and a coal/wood burning stove in the living room next to the entrance door when it was originally built. It was a bulky cast iron thing, dated 1920's. The only thing left was a tiny hole on the floor in one of the bedrooms and the old rusty pipes that were cut but are still in the garage ceiling. One of the garages still have the radiator in place, but the pipe was cut.
The front house looks like a furnace show room. It has a giant octopus heater (coal), radiators under the windows (also deactivated), gas floor heaters (a giant square in the middle of the living room floor and also those jurassic ones that go part on the floor and part up the wall, two tall Williams wall heaters like mine, a shorter one that looks like a radiator but "square" and finally a forced air gas furnace which was installed 4 years ago. The landlord says the old furnaces were left because of the holes on the walls if they were removed. The coal burning furnace the incinerator and the original water heater weren't removed because the landlord thinks they're "cool" (I have to agree with him)
If someday the landlord decides to reactivate all the heating systems, we'll probably have heat enough for half los angeles.
I love and hate my apartment. It's nice and it has lots of potential, it would be awesome after a remodeling. The bathroom was brand new when I moved in (so new that the bathtub, toilet and sink still had the stickers in them) but i hate the "victhomedepotorian" style. The kitchen was one of the reasons I chose this home, I loved the "vintage" kitchen. It didn't take long to discover a vintage kitchen doesn't really match the modern world. It's a pain! Cramped, small, horribly ventilated, even worse to keep clean, the cabinet doors don't close perfectly, the drawers are tiny and narrow and a side by side fridge and a portable full size dishwasher simply took the space. My Kitchenaid mixer, coffee maker and blender have to stay on the window because they don't fit under the upper cabinets. Using the mixer, only on the top of the dishwasher or the dining room table and as you know, a professional KA IS very heavy. Nowadays I hate my kitchen so much that I even stopped cooking and I feel absolutely no pleasure at all when I have to walk in it.
3) I'm actually trying to run away from electric. During the summer, electricity is more expensive because of the air conditioners (2 brand new 12k btu Kenmore smart window units) that run almost 24/7. They work beautifully, but if I touch the external walls in the summer i can feel them cold (so my temperature loss is absurdly high because of the lack of insulation). During the winter the gas bill skyrockets. So if I can manage to reduce or eliminate the use of electric heating sources, it can be great.
One thing I though was buying one of those fans that look like a floor dryer and place it under the furnace, blowing upwards (45°). In the living room I have one of those tower fans and in my bedroom i have one of those tiny Honeywell desk fans. of course, noise is kinda concerning, but if i can boost the living room side, It would indirectly help heating the bedroom.
I saw that Dyson heater fan and I loved the heat output. I also loved the fact it can be also used in the summer but that price is cost prohibitive for me.
It's interesting that you mentioned the power outage. I hate my wall furnace, but I always think about that. If someday there's a power outage, at least I won't freeze to death because it uses no electricity at all, except for the milivolt thermostat, but it generates it's own electricity.
1) What is the problem with both electric pad and electric blanket together?
2)The heating was either steam or hot water. When I visited the apartment it still had one of the radiators and the landlord mentioned the apartment had radiators under all windows and a coal/wood burning stove in the living room next to the entrance door when it was originally built. It was a bulky cast iron thing, dated 1920's. The only thing left was a tiny hole on the floor in one of the bedrooms and the old rusty pipes that were cut but are still in the garage ceiling. One of the garages still have the radiator in place, but the pipe was cut.
The front house looks like a furnace show room. It has a giant octopus heater (coal), radiators under the windows (also deactivated), gas floor heaters (a giant square in the middle of the living room floor and also those jurassic ones that go part on the floor and part up the wall, two tall Williams wall heaters like mine, a shorter one that looks like a radiator but "square" and finally a forced air gas furnace which was installed 4 years ago. The landlord says the old furnaces were left because of the holes on the walls if they were removed. The coal burning furnace the incinerator and the original water heater weren't removed because the landlord thinks they're "cool" (I have to agree with him)
If someday the landlord decides to reactivate all the heating systems, we'll probably have heat enough for half los angeles.
I love and hate my apartment. It's nice and it has lots of potential, it would be awesome after a remodeling. The bathroom was brand new when I moved in (so new that the bathtub, toilet and sink still had the stickers in them) but i hate the "victhomedepotorian" style. The kitchen was one of the reasons I chose this home, I loved the "vintage" kitchen. It didn't take long to discover a vintage kitchen doesn't really match the modern world. It's a pain! Cramped, small, horribly ventilated, even worse to keep clean, the cabinet doors don't close perfectly, the drawers are tiny and narrow and a side by side fridge and a portable full size dishwasher simply took the space. My Kitchenaid mixer, coffee maker and blender have to stay on the window because they don't fit under the upper cabinets. Using the mixer, only on the top of the dishwasher or the dining room table and as you know, a professional KA IS very heavy. Nowadays I hate my kitchen so much that I even stopped cooking and I feel absolutely no pleasure at all when I have to walk in it.
3) I'm actually trying to run away from electric. During the summer, electricity is more expensive because of the air conditioners (2 brand new 12k btu Kenmore smart window units) that run almost 24/7. They work beautifully, but if I touch the external walls in the summer i can feel them cold (so my temperature loss is absurdly high because of the lack of insulation). During the winter the gas bill skyrockets. So if I can manage to reduce or eliminate the use of electric heating sources, it can be great.
One thing I though was buying one of those fans that look like a floor dryer and place it under the furnace, blowing upwards (45°). In the living room I have one of those tower fans and in my bedroom i have one of those tiny Honeywell desk fans. of course, noise is kinda concerning, but if i can boost the living room side, It would indirectly help heating the bedroom.
I saw that Dyson heater fan and I loved the heat output. I also loved the fact it can be also used in the summer but that price is cost prohibitive for me.
It's interesting that you mentioned the power outage. I hate my wall furnace, but I always think about that. If someday there's a power outage, at least I won't freeze to death because it uses no electricity at all, except for the milivolt thermostat, but it generates it's own electricity.