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Home Owners: An Energy Question
If you would be so willing, I'd like to know what your average monthly electricity usage is for your home.
Thanks. |
$125
3000 square feet |
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No clue
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1.21 Gigawatts
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I don't know.
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We have a lot of variability in our bill, but druing the winter months (gas furnace) we use 750-1,000 kWh and in the dead of the summer (August) it's been as high as 1,800. A good summer average would probably be around 1,500.
That's for a 2,750ish SF house (750 SF below grade). Just my wife and I in the house, no kids. |
552kwh
I'll be the low end. not many would/do live like we do. |
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1900 sq ft. last month was bout 1100 KWH, and i wasn't running my pool pump at all.
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I'm looking at my bill for my business, which has about 4800sqft of shop space and 1200sqft of office space, and it says we averaged about 972 kWh a month. Heat is natural gas and the shop space is not air conditioned.
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It's actually 1027 kWh. |
Nice. KCP&L has a handy little tool on their site. The last 12 months we have averaged 959 kWh/month and it is 1,017 kWh for the last 24 months.
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Around 1700 kwh in the winter (I have a heat pump so that hurts the electric but the gas is virtually eliminated, except when really cold).
Around 1300 kwh in the summer. |
Someday, I'm going to build our final home, and I think I'll make a home Gobar Gas plant and say "damn the man"
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I didn't ask for SQF (didn't want to be that nosy) but it would be appreciated. Appliance types, too.
Thanks. |
Taking a stab in the dark, but in the winter and summer extreme months I think it is between 900 and 1100 and in the cooler months it is much less. About 750 IIRC. My house leaks like a sieve.
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40'x50' metal building on concrete slab building came insulated with 6" plastic back walls and roof, outside walls of the living area insulated again with paperback fibreglass 8' 2x2 drop ceiling with 4" paperback insulation laid on that heat with wood, propane back up. all new HVAC high efficiency stuff total electric 95% of lighting is the new fangled fluorescent curly bulbs. large fridge, 10 years old, and two small freezers we keep hot water off till we need it, and do dishes and shower at that time do laundry in cold water hang clothes on clothes line 9 months a year just me and DW, both 50 years old water is gravity fed from storage tanks, pump used to pump 500 gallons at a time from spring collection box to 3 storage tanks live in about 1400 sq. foot area. have a garage insulated and isolated from the living quarters. pantry/storage/laundry/summer kitchen room we don't heat or cool, but could 1 outside door in living area, 3 small double payne windows usage goes up in the summer with A/C, but it cools easy on a slab |
As a pig infested flu zombie I'm heading to sparkky's.
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we had the first flush toilet in our hood. my neighbor and friend lives in a 12'x12' stick "room". when he decided he needed more room several years ago, he bought a old school bus, about a 20', backed it up to the "house", cut a hole in the wall and caulked around it. said it would be nice to have toilet, so I gave him one I changed out in our old trailer. decided it used too much water. he went back to using a milk crate with a walmart sack in it to crap in. throws them out back into a pile and occasionally burns it. he's old single marine fella my age. WELCOME TO MY HOOD!!!! lol |
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My bill last month was for 657.0 KW. My house is 1100 sq ft and I have a wife and kid who are home all day long.
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he does serve to keep the "rifraf" out of the hood. |
Do you guys think it would be possible for you to reduce your electricity consumption by 20%?
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Sparkky sounds like a perfect candidate for a Gobar Gas unit.
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775 kwh
1310 Sq FT Highest was over 1400 kwh in August |
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$200/month, more or less, whatever that works out to in winter time. Summer is higher (don't know without going back in the checkbook) due to use of central air system.
Oil heat, but basement is on electric heat. Appliances are all electric. Cutting electric use by 20%? No. We're pretty efficient about turning off the lights etc. We might be able to use more efficient bulbs or soemthing, but I doubt that would get 20% savings. WE'd basically need to unplug the fridge and store stuff in the snow during the winter months, or do laundry by hand or something to save 20%. :D |
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We set our stat at 68 (drops to 60 during the day) in the winter and 75 (up to 80) in the summer. I do have a kegerator and extra fridge at the bar that are somewhat unnecessary I guess..... |
Folks may already be aware of this, but for every degree F that you increase your cooling setpoint, you will save ~4%
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Here's a breakdown of all those gadgets in the average home and watt they consume:
Watt-hours per one hour of use Central AC system (2.5 tons) 3500 Window unit AC, medium size 900 Refrigerator with door left open 358 Amount wasted by keeping the fridge door open 215 Desktop computer system 160 Refrigerator (normal use) 143 Ceiling fan (42", on high) 75 Television (19" CRT) 75 Four CFL lights 72 |
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Cooling at 64. I like even numbers for some reason. |
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I've installed 15 new windows, insulated and sided my home, caulked-foamed every space I could consider air getting in/out, upgraded appliances, changed light fixtures and switched to expensive light bulbs that don't last worth a damn, to save energy. I change filters on the furnace, and a plethora of other things. In the same time, I moved to a home office, so I'm home using light, heat and power that I wouldn't have previously. I should probably ask for a report that shows the energy usage for the year before I did the work and the year after(this fall). It won't be precise, but I can compare months to see how much E savings I'll get from my $xx,xxx expenditure. |
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My average monthly bill is $150. That's divided into about $100 for Natural Gas and $50 for Electricity.
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after Omama gets his "cap and tax" gig pushed thru, I and many others might be surprise what we could cut back on. |
1.21 Jiggawatts. :D
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Of course, during the summer times, we'll probably be in the basement more often than not, since it's much more cooler. |
My name is Jared Allen.
My huose is 6969 square feet. I keep my house temperature at 69 all year round. I use 6969 kwh/month. My utility bills come to $696.90/month. |
1205 last month, 2350 sq foot house with horrible efficiency.
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In winter you've decided that it MUST be 68 degrees for you to be comfortable. But in summer it MUST be 64 degrees. ?!?!?! |
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I'm almost identical - slightly smaller house ~2500, low months 700, high 1750 ish. Could probably save 20% in warmer months by completely replacing our 24yr old furnace/central air with a new super efficient one, combined with replacement windows, etc. I've replaced over half of our lights with CFL's, and am careful about leaving lights on, but hasn't made any difference in Kw usage. |
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