by MarkJ » Wed 03 Sep 2008, 14:37:21
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lawnchair', 'R')ural users may stay on oil for a while (where midwestern rural is propane), but where gas is available, oil may be as rare as a coal chute in five years.
We still see a lot of oil customers in regions with natural gas. Sticker shock prevents many oil customers from installing more efficient oil fired equipment, more efficient gas fired equipment or switching to gas. In my region of the Northeast most of the installed base of heating equipment consists of hydronic heating systems which are very expensive to replace. Many homeowners already have a substantial investment in high efficiency oil fired equipment, plus they don't burn much fuel, so they're not likely to replace it until oil becomes incredibly expensive for a long period of time.
Some lower and middle income customers look at us like we're crazy when we quote a "Low-End/Low efficiency" boiler replacement job including oil tank removal, chimney liner, connecting to the gas mains, running gas line, multiple permits, inspections, boiler replacement, re-piping, valves, fittings, zoning, circulators, flo-checks, low water cutoff, PRV, backflow preventer, expansion tank, control strategies, extras etc. The more strict the codes, enforcement and licensing requirements in the region, the more a system costs.
Many people can't afford the costs of high end, high efficiency equipment and components alone, let alone afford the labor which is often extremely high. Of course the greatest weakness many homes have is the building envelope, but many people can't afford insulation, windows etc.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mudpuppy', 'W')as wondering what the peole who couldn`t afford the minimum amount required do? Interesting.
Besides buying kerosene or diesel at the pumps, many people that can't afford minimum deliveries also have kerosene or electric space heaters, wood stoves, or pellet stoves.
Since we often have electric outages during freezing weather due to ice, snow, fallen trees etc, it's a good idea to have supplemental back-up heat.
Many of our frozen/burst water/boiler piping and water damage emergency service calls we receive are due to electric outages or the use of supplemental heating systems. When people turn down thermostats and/or stop using their main heating systems, the pipes in the basements and walls of their poorly insulated homes often freeze, crack and burst. Much of the existing heating equipment can't keep up with the heat-loss of the poorly insulated homes during extended periods of single digit and sub-zero temperatures.