ranger101ran
Well-known member
Does anyone on hear heat their house with propane and if so what do you think of it.
Heat Pumps these days are doing much better at low outside temperatures. One example is Mitsubishi HyperHeat. I'd be doing that or something similar with propane as supplement. I traded out an oil fueled boiler for propane when I was living in upstate New York in order to get away from the maintenance associated with an oil fired boiler. It came at a cost. I'd rather have propane than oil.Around these parts, where natural gas is not available, new houses are all being heated with propane instead of heating oil.
Our house was built in 2016. The forced air furnace is fueled by propane. I usually try to lock in the price in April or May. This year I forgot to lock in until October. Not my best decision.Around these parts, where natural gas is not available, new houses are all being heated with propane instead of heating oil.
yes, and i love it. let me know if you have anymore questionsDoes anyone on here heat their house with propane and if so what do you think of it.
Right now I heat with oil and the furnace is 18 years old and it still operates well the oil tank is old and I need to replace it. Got estimates between 3500 and 5000. I like the idea of having no oil tank and the oil furnace. The last 5 years I have replaced the roof and windows. The heating system would be my last big upgrade. Do you have your tank underground or above ground.yes, and i love it. let me know if you have anymore questions
I have a 1000 gal, above ground. if i could have got my hands on an underground i would have went that way. Just cuz it would not have been as an eye sore.Right now I heat with oil and the furnace is 18 years old and it still operates well the oil tank is old and I need to replace it. Got estimates between 3500 and 5000. I like the idea of having no oil tank and the oil furnace. The last 5 years I have replaced the roof and windows. The heating system would be my last big upgrade. Do you have your tank underground or above ground.
Shocked ????. Seems like an odd comment ?I've seen a few here use it as primary. I was shocked.
Many places use LPG as a primary heat source.I've seen a few here use it as primary. I was shocked.
I have 2 fire places and a whole house generator. I have someone coming out to give me a price tomorrow on a propane furnace , they deal with Rheem furnaces.I have a 1000 gal, above ground. if i could have got my hands on an underground i would have went that way. Just cuz it would not have been as an eye sore.
I hate oil, to dirty. to much maintenance.
Anything you go with, make sure you have a back up heat when the power goes out
I have a 1000 gal, above ground. if i could have got my hands on an underground i would have went that way. Just cuz it would not have been as an eye sore.
I hate oil, to dirty. to much maintenance.
Anything you go with, make sure you have a back up heat when the power goes out
Natgas prices have also spiked……….doubled over the last year.Propane prices have spiked in the last ~12 months. Some areas have seen prices double.
If you go propane, buy your tank, don't rent it. If you rent it, you're locked into your supplier and can't shop around pricing.
I was initially planning on heating my shop with propane until the prices spiked. Ended up going electric. Cost per BTU ended up about the same, electric boiler was cheaper. Plus here, the price of electricity is regulated, if not expensive. Propane prices are not and they were forecasted to go higher. Right now, they are forecasted to drop a bit, but it's still ~55% higher than it was last year at this time.
Thanks for your reply, so those mini splits are heat pumps. I have the company coming out Thursday to give me an estimate. It will consist of removing the oil furnace and tank and installing the new furnace, they sell Rheem furnaces. I'm not sure if I should buy or rent the tank , what's your idea on the tanks.I switched my shop from fuel oil to a propane boiler. Best improvement I made to the shop. Clean, reliable, and zero maintenance.
The house went to a propane boiler from electric resistance. Big operating cost reduction there too. I do run the heat pump mini splits in the shoulder season, and use the wood stove until late October as supplemental heat.
One of the mini splits, in my wife’s tv room, is a hyper heat Mitsubishi. It struggles when the outdoor temperature drops below ten below. I couldn’t rely on mini splits to heat the whole house all winter.
Propane is the only viable alternative to fuel oil in my situation
Natgas prices have also spiked……….doubled over the last year.
GJ has 10 prior threads on the price increases.
I would check you calculations ………even with the recent increases electric boiler as NOT cheap to run and rarely less expensive than Natgas or propane.
Those electric rates will not stay low is the energy issues persist…….regulated or not they will be asking to rate increases.
WOW! 24 cents a KWH! That is like $6 LPG!The economics of one heating source vs. another are not constant. When I evaluated how to heat my new shop, choosing between a heat pump or propane, we were paying 15 cents/kw-hr. The heat pump won out. I did that evaluation over two years ago, and purchased my equipment about 1-1/2 years ago. My December electricity cost was 19 cents/kw-hr, and last months bill was at over 24 cents/kw-hr!
I still am very satisfied with my decision. No tank to monitor, propane delivery to schedule, or big lump sum bills to pay to fill the tank. I get all those pleasures from the heating oil we burn for our house.![]()
Electric resistance heat is cheap to install but very expensive to operate. Propane s the same price a natural gas to install, but more expensive than natural gas to operate and less expensive than electric resistance heat.Propane and electric heat generally are about the same price wise.
How is your cold weather performance, including below 0°F ?I still am very satisfied with my decision. No tank to monitor, propane delivery to schedule, or big lump sum bills to pay to fill the tank. I get all those pleasures from the heating oil we burn for our house.![]()
Generally, you are correct! But it wasn't that many years ago LPG prices went trough the roof! $6-$7 a gallon was not unusual.Electric resistance heat is cheap to install but very expensive to operate. Propane s the same price a natural gas to install, but more expensive than natural gas to operate and less expensive than electric resistance heat.
Generally, you are correct! But it wasn't that many years ago LPG prices went trough the roof! $6-$7 a gallon was not unusual.
Plus in my area you can get off peak electric heat rates for 4-5 cents a KWH so LPG would have to be under about $1.2 or less depending on the efficiency of your equipment.
Completely satisfactory so far. The coldest temp I’ve seen here was about -18F several years ago. Coldest it got here this winter was -1, and the heat pump was happy to just warm the shop up from its overnight setting of 45 to my daytime setting of 61 just like it has done most days since November. It’s an inverter split system with conventional air handler.How is your cold weather performance, including below 0°F ?
Not everyone has that option. there is lot more than residences running LPG.However, those who had large enough propane tanks to only fill once per year when prices were lowest, didn’t care or worry about the winter prices.
My oil tank is in the basement so I can easily see if it's leaking. If I don't end up going with the propane I'm replacing the oil tank right away because it's time.As you are currently heating with oil, check your homeowners policy to see if you have an “oil tank leakage” exclusion on your policy. There was a young couple in Wareham recently who have basically lost their house due to an oil spill and it was not covered in their homeowners policy. I pulled all the duct work out of my home. I installed mini-splits, two singles and a dual upstairs. I have a Rinnai DV and a small gas VT Castings DV on LP. We only use the LP when it gets cold. I just paid $3.15/gal on my 100# tank I run the shop off. I have solar on the place so the mini-splits are zero cost of operation.
So you are gone at working the morning, or on a trip, what ever, gone its gone. The tank decides that is the time to start leaking. Maybe the guy that flared the oil tubing to the furnace did a poor job and after a bunch of years it fails. So it leaks, and fuel oil runs down through the crack between the foundation and the floor. Maybe it is a small drip and you don't even notice it.My oil tank is in the basement so I can easily see if it's leaking. If I don't end up going with the propane I'm replacing the oil tank right away because it's time.
I'm retired so I'm home most of the time and if it does leak it's in the basement which is all cement with no wood any where near it. I am insured if anything happens. If I do travel my neighbor checks every day. Bought the house in 1972 and take good care of everything and I'm not really worried about it.So you are gone at working the morning, or on a trip, what ever, gone its gone. The tank decides that is the time to start leaking. Maybe the guy that flared the oil tubing to the furnace did a poor job and after a bunch of years it fails. So it leaks, and fuel oil runs down through the crack between the foundation and the floor. Maybe it is a small drip and you don't even notice it.
Look up residential fuel oil spills and see, but a small leak can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage.
There is cases where people have had their homes moved out of the way and excavators brought in and they keep digging down until the stop finding oil, then they fill the hole and build a foundation to set your house on.
If you have an fuel oil tank on your property, buy insurance that will cover any spills or leaks.
Make damned sure you are insured!I'm retired so I'm home most of the time and if it does leak it's in the basement which is all cement with no wood any where near it. I am insured if anything happens. If I do travel my neighbor checks every day. Bought the house in 1972 and take good care of everything and I'm not really worried about it.