Did You Make the Right Decision?

 
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traderfjp
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Location: New York

Post by traderfjp » Sun. Apr. 08, 2012 9:42 am

NWBuilder wrote:This is my second year burning coal and my first year with a boiler. I would have spent $3600.00 on oil to keep my house at a booming 62* instead I spent $1600.00 oncoal to keep my home at 68* with water so hot you could make tea!!! Yea I'm lovin it! Boiler and install will be paid off in about 3 years, the rest is gravy. The fact that I am keeping my fellow Americans working is another wonderful aspect of coal heat. I tell everyone who will listen,so far one convert!
Did u have a stoker the first year? If so what was your coal costs that first year?


 
Tull
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Joined: Thu. Oct. 30, 2008 12:31 pm
Location: South Central PA
Stoker Coal Boiler: AHS-S130
Coal Size/Type: Pea/Anthracite
Other Heating: Oil for standby

Post by Tull » Mon. Apr. 09, 2012 12:30 pm

No regrets here. I save an average of $1500/yr compared to oil. In 2 more years my boiler/system will be completely paid off, and then it's money in the bank every year. Also, I like having the capability to run coal or oil, just in case.

 
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vermontday
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Location: Bennington, VT
Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520

Post by vermontday » Mon. Apr. 09, 2012 9:24 pm

Used to burn 2,200 gal of oil per year to uncomfortably heat our 4,200 sq ft house. We now do not burn a drop of oil all winter. We keep the house 72 F and are saving enough money to pay for our kids college money.

It is the second best decision we ever made (the first was adopting our 3 daughters, two blondes from Russia and a red head from Kazakhstan).

 
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DennisH
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Joined: Mon. Feb. 21, 2011 8:35 am
Location: Escanaba, MI
Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Yukon-Eagle Klondike IV
Other Heating: Propane

Post by DennisH » Thu. Apr. 12, 2012 9:10 pm

This was my first full heating season using coal and wood. I saved over $1500 this year over last year using propane exclusively. I have to do a minimum 500 gal buy of propane per yer to get a locked in price, but this winter we only used 250 gal of propane on those days where it was chilly in the morning, but too warm during the day to use coal or wood. So, this Homey is happy!! :D :D

 
hcarlow
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Location: Northern Maine (Houlton area)
Stoker Coal Boiler: Leisure Line WL 110

Post by hcarlow » Fri. May. 04, 2012 6:49 am

oliver power wrote:I'm very happy with the coal. Now that I have a coal fired boiler/central hot water heat, my house is the exact same temperature from one end, to the other. Thermostat set at 72 or 73 degrees. Tend it every 24 hours.
Thanks for the PM , how large of an area are you heating with your kaa2 ? I am going to look at a new ka6 today but really think it is to large for my home . I started out wanting just a hand fed stove then a stoker stove and now a boiler, way to many choices.The even heat with a boiler makes so much more sense seeing what ever I get will be in the basement and I already have central hot water heat, just a lot more expense going with the boiler option.

 
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Rob R.
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Location: Chazy, NY
Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520
Hand Fed Coal Stove: Chubby Jr

Post by Rob R. » Fri. May. 04, 2012 6:57 am

hcarlow, if you start a new thread and tell us more about your home I'm sure you will get a lot of advice. If you have hot water heat already, a boiler makes a lot of sense.

 
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steamup
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Joined: Fri. Oct. 03, 2008 12:13 pm
Location: Napoli, NY
Stoker Coal Boiler: Axeman-Anderson AA-130, Keystoker K-6
Hand Fed Coal Boiler: HS Tarm 502 Wood/Coal/Oil
Coal Size/Type: pea, buck, rice

Post by steamup » Fri. May. 04, 2012 8:19 am

This was my first year using 100% coal. Couldn't have gone better. Did a lot of research and searching before making the plunge. There are a lot more options and opinions than you think out there.


 
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vermontday
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Location: Bennington, VT
Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520

Post by vermontday » Sat. May. 05, 2012 7:44 am

I also did alot of research. I was considering wood, but I noticed how many were switching from wood to coal. You never read about anyone switching from coal to wood.

You add up coals advantages, safety, no smoking your neighbors out, how clean it is to use and the operating convenience, it can't be beat.

The final straw was reading about some poor guy that just spent $9K putting in a fancy wood boiler. It could not keep up with the house heat load even when he would get up in the middle of the night to feed it. He said his wife was not happy.

Coal easily does the job. There is a good reason everyone went to it before cheap oil.

 
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dh1200s
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Joined: Sat. Jul. 18, 2009 1:12 pm
Location: Honey Brook, Pa.
Stoker Coal Boiler: Leisure Line WL-110
Hand Fed Coal Boiler: HS-Tarm 202
Hand Fed Coal Stove: Harman TLC 2000

Post by dh1200s » Sat. May. 05, 2012 11:16 am

I did most of my research while standing in line in the 70's to gas up the vehicles. I built the house in 79 and installed my HS Tarm-202 in 82 when property cleared wood ran out for my cast iron wood burner.

How much have I $aved in heating cost over the years.....I haven't kept track but lot$.

I’m adding my third coal appliance a WL110K to reduce my coal appliance tending time a bit during the heating season.

Did I make the right decision? …………$till thinking that one over………. ;)

 
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Short Bus
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Joined: Sun. Jan. 10, 2010 12:22 am
Location: Cantwell Alaska
Stoker Coal Boiler: Kewanee boiler with Anchor stoker
Coal Size/Type: Chestnut / Sub-bituminous C
Other Heating: Propane wall furnace back up only

Post by Short Bus » Sat. May. 05, 2012 2:56 pm

Heated with coal cook stove first two winters here, should have found a coal heat stove, with propane wall furnace to protect the pipes.
Heated with coal boiler in garage last three years, including hot water, still have propane for vacations and such.
Still cool here, twenties at night, still heating, I'd be scared to find out how much oil would cost at about 5$ per gallon.
I don'd even own an oil burner,my neighbors that burn wood gathered it in the winter by snow mobile or delivered by log truck load, no thanks.
I still burn 150 gallons of propane, cook stove pilot lights and vacation heat.
Very glad I burn coal, considering spending some money on a different burner under my boiler, then I could find somone to tend the burner while on vacation, then just cooking propane :) .

 
TAMNOZ
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Location: Reading,Pa

Post by TAMNOZ » Thu. May. 10, 2012 9:35 am

This was my second full season with coal. I was heating a 2800 sq ft log home with a heat pump and paying as much $400 a month in electric,not to mention I went thru 4 heat pumps in 20 years. This past winter I used 4 ton at $165 per ton and my home is a true 72 degrees.I wish I knew 20 years ago what I know now,I'd probably be 20-30 grand ahead of the game.

 
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Rob R.
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Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520
Hand Fed Coal Stove: Chubby Jr

Post by Rob R. » Fri. Oct. 05, 2012 6:26 pm

Time to revive an old thread. Today I got a letter from my local fuel oil company, their "lock-in" price for this winter is $3.90 per gallon for No. 2 heating oil, $4.20 for Kerosene. With those prices, I am on track to save about $4000 this heating season. It only took 1.5 years for my EFM to pay for itself. Not only did I make the right decision by switching to coal, with the added costs of having a little boy running around we'd be pretty stretched trying to pay the fuel man. Having a warm & cozy house with unlimited hot water is a nice bonus.
Whiteash wrote:PLUS the one big thing is your keeping your money in the USA not to some sheik or prince who thinks I'm unclean. I buy my coal from Sherman Coal and they buy from independent miners and the money they make they buy Yengling Lager beer and I have a customer that works at the brewery who buys my maple syrup,hay and goat milk so you can say in comes in a complete circle. Buy Pa coal and drink Yungling beer. God Bless the USA.
Gary Owen :clap: :drunk: :dancing: :punk:
I really like that post.

 
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SMITTY
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Joined: Sun. Dec. 11, 2005 12:43 pm
Location: West-Central Mass
Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520 Highboy
Coal Size/Type: Rice / Blaschak anthracite
Other Heating: Oil fired Burnham boiler

Post by SMITTY » Fri. Oct. 05, 2012 10:04 pm

HEAR HEAR! 8-)

Yeah when we moved here in '03, it didn't take long to figure out we couldn't afford to stay warm in here burning oil. That first winter we went through 4 tanks of oil - about 900 gallons - to freeze at 58° during the day, and 56° at night and when we were at work. Oil was $1.90 a gallon then!! :shock:

So I saved my pennies and by fall of '05 I was able to buy a brand new Mark I. Made a HUGE difference in heating comfort & cost. We were warm, AND saving money. But after burning it for 3 years I realized this unit was far too small for the heat load this building was putting on it. So, during the summer of '08, just a mere months ahead of the big panic, I decided to upgrade. I chose the SF250, since it was the biggest, baddest hand fired in the Harman lineup. However by September, I called to ask of the status on when it would be arriving, my heart sank BIG TIME when they told me .... FEBRUARY! :fear: :eek2: So I told them in no uncertain terms that was not going to work for me - I had a seasons worth of coal, and no unit to burn it in, as I had just sold the Mark I for $100 less than I paid for it new! It was full panic mode in MA - people were lined up out into the parking lot to order stoves - wood, pellet, coal - didn't matter. People were freaking out at possible $5 gallon heating oil that winter. Even made front page news in our local paper!

Anyway, the dealer says ... well I've got a Mark III on the floor right now, brand new on the pallet still shrink-wrapped if you're interested ... before she could even finish I said I'LL TAKE IT!! And the rest is history.

We've been warmer than ever, but the coal consumption went up quite a bit over the Mark I. The more I thought about it, the more I realized I should've made a better decision and bought a stoker boiler to run the whole house.

So now thanks to a good friend & forum member, I now have that stoker boiler! :dancing: But, circumstances caught me off guard and I was unprepared. No money to switch from nut to rice, nor to buy plumbing supplies. Then add in a leaky barn roof and a car I had to overhaul to make a profit off of, and my time & money to do anything with the stoker was finished. Next year.

The saga continues ......

 
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2001Sierra
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Location: Wynantskill NY, 10 miles from Albany
Hot Air Coal Stoker Stove: Keystoker 90 Chimney vent
Coal Size/Type: Rice
Other Heating: Buderus Oil Boiler 3115-34

Post by 2001Sierra » Fri. Oct. 05, 2012 10:30 pm

But, circumstances caught me off guard and I was unprepared. No money to switch from nut to rice, nor to buy plumbing supplies. Then add in a leaky barn roof and a car I had to overhaul to make a profit off of, and my time & money to do anything with the stoker was finished. Next year.

Sleep at nite knowing you are half way there. :)

 
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Flyer5
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Location: Montrose PA
Stoker Coal Boiler: Leisure Line WL110
Hot Air Coal Stoker Stove: Leisure Line Pioneer
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Post by Flyer5 » Fri. Oct. 05, 2012 10:59 pm

I hear it all the time about people keeping there homes a cozy 50 degrees because of the costs of oil. Then I hear from them a month or two later about the house gets too warm when they first light the stove. The irony :D


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