by Tanada » Tue 28 Jan 2014, 09:56:39
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', 'T')he house is lathe board and plaster all through the interior with part of the basement being dirt floor and the remainder concrete. Having seen what frost does to lathe board and plaster walls my fear is if I shut the heat all the way off the damage to the walls will make the house unsaleble. It was built by my great grandfather in 1911 and electrified in the 1920's with knob and tube wiring, most of which has been upgraded over the years. Plumbing was not installed until the 1950's and draining that would be no problem, it is almost all galavanized pipe so disconnect from the pump tank and open the taps floor by floor and it will drain. The house is balloon frame construction so the humidity from the dirt floor third of the basement rises up the interior walls between the frame spaces full basement, two full floors and attic above. We used to play when I was a kid dropping stuff down between the uprights where there was a loose board from our playroom on the second floor straight down into the basement. It made rewiring a breeze when the upstairs was rewired, but it doesn't allow much moisture isolation.
Holy Toledo! Just opened up the heating bill for the old house, with the thermostat locked at 55 degrees F since I started working on it last fall between November 19, 2013 and January 13, 2014 the house consumed 265 gallons of Fuel oil #2 at $3.669/gal plus taxes, fees and delivery charges. Two months is setting me back near $1,000.00 plus the electricity to run the furnace. Looking at the statement I got from the supplier the same period in 2013 was 242 gallons, the weather was warmer but my occupants kept the house warmer as well.