babzog
Well-known member
So my Waterfurnace screwed the pooch over the winter. Seems the heat exchanger leaked the R22 and contaminated the system. And the compressor is shot. And the air dyer is corroded. And my ins. co. is probably not going to cover it.
Repairs are over $5k and a replacement unit is just over $14k!
And since it's a replacement only, I would only qualify for $1700 in grants (for which I'd have to pay $350 to get the home energy audit).
Geothernal is nice and all, but they're pricey to install, they cost a lot to operate monthly and they're costly as hell to repair. Lifetime - well, the warranty is 10 years. Mine is 19 years old and is completely shot. The heat is also gradual - no nice blast of heat when you really want to feel it.
By way of comparison, a combination wood/oil unit will last years and years. If a part fails, it's probably the motor - easily replaced. We had oil for years growing up and never had more than a motor fail on it. Brother installed a combo unit a few years ago and loves it - tries to use wood as much as he can and use the oil to supplement. But, the installed cost would be probably only $2-3k less than a new geothermal unit (incl. the chimney, tank, furnace, air conditioner, ductwork alterations - the basic infrastructure, none of which I have).
Maybe a combination gas/wood furnace, but I don't know if those exist? Would save some by not having to put in an oil tank but then I'd be burning more expensive LP gas.
So, what do you guys think? Geothermal again or yank it and go with the tried and true? How do the operating costs of oil compare to geothermal?
Repairs are over $5k and a replacement unit is just over $14k!
And since it's a replacement only, I would only qualify for $1700 in grants (for which I'd have to pay $350 to get the home energy audit).Geothernal is nice and all, but they're pricey to install, they cost a lot to operate monthly and they're costly as hell to repair. Lifetime - well, the warranty is 10 years. Mine is 19 years old and is completely shot. The heat is also gradual - no nice blast of heat when you really want to feel it.
By way of comparison, a combination wood/oil unit will last years and years. If a part fails, it's probably the motor - easily replaced. We had oil for years growing up and never had more than a motor fail on it. Brother installed a combo unit a few years ago and loves it - tries to use wood as much as he can and use the oil to supplement. But, the installed cost would be probably only $2-3k less than a new geothermal unit (incl. the chimney, tank, furnace, air conditioner, ductwork alterations - the basic infrastructure, none of which I have).
Maybe a combination gas/wood furnace, but I don't know if those exist? Would save some by not having to put in an oil tank but then I'd be burning more expensive LP gas.
So, what do you guys think? Geothermal again or yank it and go with the tried and true? How do the operating costs of oil compare to geothermal?
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