by vision-master » Thu 01 May 2008, 10:10:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MarkJ', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'I') just don't understand how working class people can afford it. Or I guess they can't afford it. That's the problem.

Some don't understand how working class people can afford homes, multiple vehicles, boats, snowmobiles, waverunners, quads, digital cable, high speed internet, big screen televisions, beer, liquor, cigarettes, lottery tickets, junk-food, pizzas and spend their paychecks at the horse track.... Depends on the cost of living in and pay scale of jobs the in the area. Plus it helps when they pay lower income taxes, lower property taxes and receive tax refunds, credits, rebates and benefits from social programs.
A family of 5 making $50,000 per year can qualify for the Home Energy Assistance Program HEAP. Many of the lower income households also waste incredible amounts of fuel since they rent older apartments, they own older homes or mobile homes and many don't insulate, weatherize, replace windows, replace heating systems or maintain their systems.
From my experience in the building and heating industry, people will choose kitchen remodels, bath remodels, tile, hardwood, stainless appliances, decks, new vehicles, boats, snowmobiles and big screen televisions over insulation & heating system upgrades.
Many of the older homes in the Northeast built in the 1800s and early 1900s are totally uninsulated and still running antique boilers, or coal conversion gravity furnaces retrofitted with oil burners or gas burners back in the 50s and 60s. Just worked on a 1930s big water content gravity boiler in 3,000 plus sq/ft colonial with no insulation in the walls, 10 foot ceilings, tall drafty single pane windows and 3 open fireplaces. They just bought the home and were using so much fuel they thought their 1,000 gallon underground tank was leaking. The previous owners always burned well over 2,000 gallons per year even using their fireplaces and propane fired gas stoves occasionally for supplemental heat. Net efficiency is probably less than 30%.
When you work on the roofs of some homes you can feel the heat just pouring out the chimneys when the system is off due to standby loss, chimney loss etc.
People used to stuff newspapers between the studs for insulation.