01-10-12, 07:45 PM | #81 |
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Saw an interesting article about energy & water conserving which had this information on annual American consumption:
Total Annual Household Energy use (with therms converted to kwh at onlineconversion.com) Average American household energy use 40300 kwh Water Average American household use 127,400 gallons Electricity Average American household electrical use 11,000 kwh Natural Gas Average American household natural gas use 1000 therms Gasoline use* 500 gallons per person per year average 1500 gallons Garbage disposal Avg: 40 pounds per household per week 2080 pounds -AC_Hacker
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I'm not an HVAC technician. In fact, I'm barely even a hacker... Last edited by AC_Hacker; 01-10-12 at 08:19 PM.. |
01-11-12, 09:00 AM | #82 |
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Wow, that is over double my electric usage, and almost double my total energy usage, sad... Especially considering the age and generaly inefficiency of my home.
FYI that is: 30 kWh/day electric usage (I'm at 12.6) and 110 kWh/day total energy usage (I'm at 62)
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01-11-12, 09:27 AM | #83 |
Less usage=Cheaper bills
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Don't forget those numbers are for a household so that would likely include a baby who demands higher temperatures in the winter than we would. Everyone that I asked who has a kid says that if they bundle their kid up any more than they do in order to keep the temperature below 72, then the kid gets too warm and sweaty after being too cold, its hard to regulate the temperature but at 72 they can have fairly normal clothing and still be fine. This would affect natural gas usage quite a bit.
Electric usage in terms of lights seems minimal to me to have a few extra rooms turned on with CFLs. Running more lights, another computer or a hair dryer, microwave, or toaster from time to time wouldn't double usage over base load appliances like a refrigerator, air conditioner, furnace, etc. |
01-11-12, 04:17 PM | #84 |
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I have an 18 month old and a 3.5 year old. for the last month I'm averaging 29.8 kwh/day. I'm averaging 31.85 kwh/day for the last year. THis is an all electric house with 4 people (2 kids) in it. I do supplement with wood however. The house never drops below 18C 64.4 F which is what the thermostat stays pretty much permanently set at.
I haven't worked out my driving energy usage yet however |
04-08-14, 12:28 PM | #85 |
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An update for me.
Hot water is electric. Dryer is gas. No EVs. My kitchen has in floor electric heating, I very rarely use it. I do not have A/C, just ceiling fans and I use box fans at night to vent the house. Average monthly usage is 360 kWh over the past 5 years. Winter is more since the furnace takes up more power. Summer usage is around 200 kWh/month. Yearly electric usage is 4,200 kWh over the past 5 years.
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05-14-14, 11:47 AM | #86 |
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50% drop in electric and natural gas in 5 years
updated usage with solar panels, attic insulation to R52, replaced instant gas water heater with instant electric. For the year 2013 1,476 CDD, Total KW used 3,085 or 8.45 per day. Solar panels provide 155% of requirements. Electric bill for the year was $82.33
Natural Gas 231 therms for 4,405 HDD. Gas bill for the year was 484.00 Last edited by Gerhardt; 05-14-14 at 11:52 AM.. |
05-14-14, 12:28 PM | #87 | |
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Quote:
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05-15-14, 09:31 AM | #88 |
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A family of 4 comprised of 2 boyz, aged 7 and 4.
Typical electricity consumption is (at this time of the year) around 13kW per day. It can peak to 23kW during winter time due to supplementary oil heater use (x2), etc. Our cooking is electric, dryer is electric, etc. only radiant hydronic heating is natural gas and ditto with hot water (separate billing). Q. |
05-17-14, 02:20 PM | #89 |
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How many peopel live in the houses and how many sqft? These are HUGE factors
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05-17-14, 02:51 PM | #90 |
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Mine is a 2,000sqft, 2 storey bldg, comply to our local 2001 building code RE: energy efficiency.
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