Reduce Your Heating Bills
Imagine leaving a window open all winter long – the
heat loss, cold drafts, and wasted energy! Well if your home has
a folding attic stair, a fireplace, and/or a clothes dryer, that
may be just what is occurring in your home!
These often overlooked sources of heat loss and air leakage can
cause your heat pour out and the cold outside air pour in –
costing you higher heating bills, causing cold drafts, and
wasting energy.
Air leaks are the largest source of heating and cooling loss in
the home. Air leaks occur through the small cracks around doors,
windows, pipes, etc. We apply caulk and weatherstripping to
these areas to minimize heat loss and cold drafts.
But what can you do about the three largest “holes” in your home
– the folding attic stair, the fireplace, and the clothes dryer?
Here are some tips and techniques that can easily, quickly and
inexpensively seal and insulate these holes.
Attic Stairs:
Do you have a folding attic stairway in your house? When attic
stairs are installed, a large hole (approximately 10 square
feet!) is created in your ceiling. The ceiling and insulation
that were there have to be removed. And what is installed to
cover this opening? A thin, unsealed, un-insulated sheet of
plywood!
Did you know that your attic space is ventilated directly to the
outdoors? In the winter, the attic space can be very cold, and
in the summer it can be very hot. And what is separating your
conditioned house from your unconditioned attic? That thin sheet
of plywood!
Often a gap can be observed around the perimeter of the door.
Try this yourself: at night when it is dark, turn on the attic
light and shut the attic stairway door - do you see any light
coming through? These are gaps - which add up to a large opening
where your heated/cooled air leaks out 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week, 52 weeks a year! This is like leaving a window open all
year round!
An easy, low-cost solution to this problem is to add an attic
stair cover. An attic stair cover provides an air seal, reducing
the air leaks. Add the desired amount of insulation over the
cover to restore the insulation removed from the ceiling.
Fireplaces:
Approximately 100 million homes in North America are constructed
with wood or gas burning fireplaces. Unfortunately there are
negative side effects that the fireplace brings to a home
especially during the winter home-heating season. Fireplaces are
energy losers!
Researchers have studied this to determine the amount of heat
loss through a fireplace, and the results are amazing! One
remarkable research study showed that an open damper on an
unused fireplace in a well-insulated house can raise overall
heating energy consumption by 30%!
A recent study showed that for many consumers, their heating
bills may be more than $500 higher per winter just due to the
air leakage and wasted energy caused by fireplaces!
Why Does a Home With a Fireplace Have Higher Heating Bills? Hot
air rises! Your heated air leaks out any exit it can find, and
when your warm heated air is drawn out of your home, cold
outside air is drawn in to make up for it. The fireplace is like
a giant straw - sucking the heated air from your house. This is
like leaving a window open all year round!
An easy, low-cost solution to this problem is to add a fireplace
draftstopper. A fireplace draftstopper is an inflatable pillow
that seals the damper, eliminating any air leaks. The pillow
removed whenever the fireplace is used, then reinserted after.
Clothes Dryer Exhaust Ducts:
Have you ever noticed that the room containing your clothes
dryer is the coldest room in your house? Ever wonder why? Your
clothes dryer is connected to an exhaust duct that is open to
the outdoors. In the winter, cold air leaks in through the duct,
through your dryer and into your house, while your heated air
just pours right out!
Dryer vents use a sheet metal flapper to try to reduce this air
leakage. This is very primitive technology that does not provide
a positive seal to stop the air leakage. Compounding the problem
is that over time, lint clogs the flapper valve causing it to
stay open. This is like leaving a window open all year round!
An easy, low-cost solution to this problem is to add a dryer
vent seal! A dryer vent seal will reduce unwanted air
infiltration, and keep out pests, bees and rodents as well. The
vent will remain closed unless the dryer is in use. When the
dryer is in use, a floating shuttle rises to allow warm air,
lint, and moisture to escape.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mark_Tyrol
If you are looking for a Cortland County
Heating
Contractor,
please call us today at 607-844-8787 or
complete our online request form.
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