gusherb
Well-known member
Electric baseboard
It's funny that some are preferring the stuff. I've always hated it because it usually reaks of burning dust the first time you turn it on in awhile, plus the idea of electric resistance heating has never sat well with me because to me electric resistance = electrical fire. I'm not really afraid of it anymore though.
What I don't like now is that it costs a fortune to run compared to just about anything else.
My sister rents a two story duplex in Colorado, built in the early 80s on the cheap, and it has baseboard heat throughout. The first winter they were being frugal and still had a $350 power bill for January. Now they're even more frugal with it and have kept it no higher than $300. They also had a warm winter last year so they didn't need a lot of heat. This year it's supposed to be real snowy in CO so they probably won't get off easy now, plus they have a baby now. So comfort will be more priority now. My sister inquired to the landlady about inquiring to the gas company if gas service even ran past the building and apparently the answer was no, but the house just a few places down on the corner has natural gas. If they could heat with natural gas, they could keep the whole place 70 degrees all the time and not pay more then $150 a month to do so.
Also by comparison, our house is 3 times the size of theirs, heated with natural gas and kept at 70 all the time and our bill is still lower then what they pay in electric.
It's funny to me when I hear someone's reaction to the idea of gas appliances that hasn't lived with them their whole life. They seem to think they'll explode or kill you with CO. In reality electric or gas could kill you. What keeps it all safe is proper installation, and performing preventative maintenance routinely.
It's funny that some are preferring the stuff. I've always hated it because it usually reaks of burning dust the first time you turn it on in awhile, plus the idea of electric resistance heating has never sat well with me because to me electric resistance = electrical fire. I'm not really afraid of it anymore though.
What I don't like now is that it costs a fortune to run compared to just about anything else.
My sister rents a two story duplex in Colorado, built in the early 80s on the cheap, and it has baseboard heat throughout. The first winter they were being frugal and still had a $350 power bill for January. Now they're even more frugal with it and have kept it no higher than $300. They also had a warm winter last year so they didn't need a lot of heat. This year it's supposed to be real snowy in CO so they probably won't get off easy now, plus they have a baby now. So comfort will be more priority now. My sister inquired to the landlady about inquiring to the gas company if gas service even ran past the building and apparently the answer was no, but the house just a few places down on the corner has natural gas. If they could heat with natural gas, they could keep the whole place 70 degrees all the time and not pay more then $150 a month to do so.
Also by comparison, our house is 3 times the size of theirs, heated with natural gas and kept at 70 all the time and our bill is still lower then what they pay in electric.
It's funny to me when I hear someone's reaction to the idea of gas appliances that hasn't lived with them their whole life. They seem to think they'll explode or kill you with CO. In reality electric or gas could kill you. What keeps it all safe is proper installation, and performing preventative maintenance routinely.