• @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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    201 year ago

    I’d rather go full electric and get rid of the gas infrastructure entirely tbh. Take that cost and put it towards local power generation+storage.

    Heat pumps most of the time and radiant electric heat for the few times the heat pump won’t quite cut it. Geothermal if that’s an option in your location.

    • debounced
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      31 year ago

      the upfront cost for something like geothermal is still outrageous, though. anecdotally, i bought my house with an older unit that ended up catastrophically failing after the reversing valve got stuck and destroyed the compressor. only 1 local shop in the area serviced the thing (same people who installed it when the house was built…) and the unit had long been discontinued since the company that made it (hydro delta) went bankrupt years ago. it was over $15k to put in a new updated unit… luckily my home owners insurance (with the help of a rider i added a year earlier that covered home systems) footed the bill, albeit after a long and arduous battle with the 3rd party shits that state farm outsourced it to. now this new system has a 10 year warranty on parts and labor, otherwise, i would have switched to gas in a heart beat. i can put in a new gas unit every year for 10 years at the same price… so while the geo’s monthly electric bill is nice, i wouldn’t dare install a new residential build with geo… plus add another easy $50k for the loop field if it’s a new install.

      i’m afraid what’s going to happen once then 10 years are up since that always seems to be about the time major home appliances fail… probably try to move by then so it isn’t my problem, lol.

    • @deFrisselle
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      11 year ago

      to me, Geothermal would be the way to go in the cold North Constant temp to draw heat from means the same efficiency all the time Then again I think Hybrid EVs are better for the same reason