Results
O. K., how did all this work? This is entered as a journal,
newest entry first, because work is continuing.
August 11, 2009:
Here's the latest results, for the year ending with the June 2009
bill.
| Year ending |
Total therms |
Water heating |
Space heating |
| June 2005 |
656 |
135.33 |
520.67 |
| June 2006 |
620 |
135.33 |
484.67 |
| June 2007 |
666 |
121.33 |
544.67 |
| June 2008 |
396 |
116.67 |
279.33 |
| June 2009 |
275 |
48 |
227 |
It looks like our efficiency measures and sealing cracks is paying
off. As you can see, space heating (227 therms) was about 44% of
the average of the three "uninsulated" years ending June 2007
(516.67 therms). Woo hoo! Also, total therms of 275 was just
43% of the previous "uninsulated" average of 647.33.
It was probably a bit better than it should have been. Point
number one, we spent almost two months without hot water last summer
after our old water heater failed. Back-of-the-envelope, I figure
that in the normal scheme of things, we'd have 8 additional therms.
Point number two, this January was one of the mildest Januaries we've
seen in a long time -- average temp was 39 F instead of 28 F for last
year. We clocked 48 therms used, but it would have probably been
more like 54 therms (another back-of-the-envelope estimate) in a normal
January.
Feb. 2, 2009:
I had two further thoughts about ways to improve the insulation,
which I have now added to the "further work" section.
One is that the air exchanger may be oversized. The second is that
there may be thermal bridging, big-time, through the door steps, and the
front and back porches. There is nothing but concrete (with a very
low R-value) between the concrete block / brick thermal mass on the
inside and the outside air, where the back porch, front porch, and
doorsteps connect to the house. While the total area is small,
this may be significant because concrete conducts heat so
well.
Also, I have found some sources of information which may be
interesting:
The
Thousand Home Challenge (PDF)
This is coming soon to North America -- I think they will start the
challenge in the spring or summer of 2009
Passive
House Institute (USA)
This seems to be oriented towards new construction. They
offer a design package for $200. I'm not sure about whether
their consulting services are available in Colorado, though I doubt
it.
You can also download the RETScreen
Clean Energy Project Analysis Software for free from Natural
Resources Canada.
Oct. 27, 2008:
Here are the results during the from the first year's work (July 2007 -
June 2008). The insulation was not actually installed until about
October of 2007, but of course the insulation didn't matter for the
summer months.
| Year ending |
Total therms |
Water heating |
Space heating |
| June 2005 |
656 |
135.33 |
520.67 |
| June 2006 |
620 |
135.33 |
484.67 |
| June 2007 |
666 |
121.33 |
544.67 |
| June 2008 |
396 |
116.67 |
279.33 |
Bottom line, the therms required for space heating was about 54% of
the average space heating in the three previous years. Not bad,
although we were hoping to get an even lower percentage than that.
During this entire time, both before and after installing the
insulation, we kept our thermostat set at 68 degrees F. during the day,
and 62 degrees F. during the night.
In case you're wondering, I got the total therms from my utility
bill. I then calculated the water heating for the year based on
the average monthly therms during the summer months (June, July, August)
when there was no space heating requirement, and then multiplied this
monthly average by 14 (figuring that the water is colder in the winter
months and thus requires more heat). The space heating requirement
is the difference between these two figures.
Because we wanted to do better than 54%, I did an infrared test on
the house last March 2008 and found that, indeed, there were numerous
cold spots around the house, especially around the edges of the ceiling
of the house. The windows seemed to be pretty tight, though.
So we spent another $2000 and got all the various leaks plugged
up. We'll see how it goes this winter.
Woo-hoo! Our new
tankless hot water heater.
Also, this summer our water heater gave out and we've gotten a "tankless"
gas hot water heater, so we'll have to recalculate the portion of the
bill that goes for water heating, as we anticipate this portion of
our bill will be further reduced. The "tankless"
gas hot water heater has nothing to do with insulation, but it will
reduce our total natural gas requirements.
Also, speaking of the summer, you may be wondering how this
works in the summer. It did not seem to make that much difference
but did keep the house a bit cooler in the summer. We found that
on the very hottest days of summer, when the temperature outside got up
to over 100 degrees (as it did last summer on a few days), that the
temperature inside got up to 82 degrees. In the basement it never
got above 75 degrees or so the entire summer, so it was quite tolerable
in our 2/3 finished basement. One summer evening we had a meeting
at our house and met in the basement -- quite agreeable. We have
no swamp cooler, air conditioner, or whole-house fan or anything like
that. We cooled the house off during the evening by opening the
windows and turning on fans around the house.
Stay tuned for further results.