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How you heat your home?
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<blockquote data-quote="MO_cows" data-source="post: 726706" data-attributes="member: 9169"><p>We have a propane furnace. It's 3-4 years old and supposed to be highly efficient. I don't see any big savings over the 40-year-old model it replaced, but maybe that was just eaten up by the rise in the price of propane. </p><p></p><p>We heated with wood for one or two winters when I was between jobs and we had free oak wood to burn. (Heavy duty pallets) The woodstove was down in the basement. There are vents to downstairs from an old gravity furnace that used to be in the house so we opened them up and the heat came right up. It was very comfortable heat but we had an old hand me down woodstove that needed fed often or it went out, so once I was working again we had to give it up. Got tired of coming home to a cold house, building the fire again and by the time the house warmed up it was bedtime anyway.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MO_cows, post: 726706, member: 9169"] We have a propane furnace. It's 3-4 years old and supposed to be highly efficient. I don't see any big savings over the 40-year-old model it replaced, but maybe that was just eaten up by the rise in the price of propane. We heated with wood for one or two winters when I was between jobs and we had free oak wood to burn. (Heavy duty pallets) The woodstove was down in the basement. There are vents to downstairs from an old gravity furnace that used to be in the house so we opened them up and the heat came right up. It was very comfortable heat but we had an old hand me down woodstove that needed fed often or it went out, so once I was working again we had to give it up. Got tired of coming home to a cold house, building the fire again and by the time the house warmed up it was bedtime anyway. [/QUOTE]
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