Category Archives: energy savings

Low-Wattage Lifestyle; Giving Up Power

Battery Powered Refridge/Freeze

Here’s a simple truth about electrical power: If you don’t have it, you won’t use it. Most Americans never grapple with this. Queue up “Revolution” on the 60-inch plasma, punch the remote, and cheap, abundant power flows out of the wall.

If your home had almost a zero utility bill every month do you think there is value in that?  Contact the appraisers at http://www.scappraisals.com for your energy efficient values.

“A typical home draws about 30 kilowatt-hours a day,” Mr. Crea said, whereas a typical off-the-grid house may try to get by on 4 to 10 kilowatt-hours. Yet even for people devoted to sustainable living, he added, “the idea is always to find larger or greater amounts of power to sustain the kinds of living that people are accustomed to.”

For Friday at the energy fair, Mr. Crea said, “what I’ve done in my talk is to look at it from the other end”: how much power does a person need (that is, really need) to experience a good quality of life?

Mr. Crea’s four-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath home sits on 57 acres at the top of a hill. That’s a lot of house for a single guy. “I think it’s pretty,” he said. “Other people say it looks like the Bates Motel.”

Yet the house’s photovoltaic panel is just 2 by 3 feet: about a third the size of the front door. On a sunny day, it produces half a kilowatt-hour, enough to power a well pump, a TV, a microwave and the stereo.

Being a tinkerer, though, Mr. Crea decided to wire the tiny amp inside a set of computer speakers to drive his full-size hi-fi speakers. Now he plays music off four AA rechargeable batteries. (“Home Depot, off the shelf,” he said.)

It’s usually the refrigerator that really guzzles the juice: perhaps a kilowatt-hour a day, he said. But companies like Sun Frost and SunDanzer manufacture tiny, highly insulated boxes that run on perhaps a quarter or an eighth of the usual power.

“The majority of Americans would turn their heads when they see these things,” Mr. Crea said. Still, “you can put your beer and your lunch meat in there.”

Read More at: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/garden/solar-power-to-the-people.html?pagewanted=3&_r=0&ref=realestate

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Solar Energy for People Who Can’t Afford It

Make your own heating for your home

Make your own heating for your home

Jason Edens started experimenting with a solar-powered furnace because he didn’t have any money and he didn’t want to be cold. He is happy to explain how “solar thermal” technology works. It’s what he does as the founding director of the Rural Renewable Energy Alliance, which manufactures and installs solar energy systems across nine states.

First, here is what a solar-powered furnace isn’t: the familiar shiny photovoltaic panels that rest on the roof, generating electricity year-round. Instead, “essentially it is an aluminum-and-glass box,” said Mr. Edens, 41. Inside one of these solar thermal systems “is what I like to call a sun sponge or the absorber, the part that inverts the irradiance of the sun into useful heat.”

Will a solar powered furnace add value to your home in San Diego?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

Still can’t picture it? Try this: A solar-powered furnace is a slab of coated metal and a fan. The technology, which was patented way back in 1881, Mr. Edens said, operates when the sun shines.

But let’s get back to that cold winter a dozen years ago in Pine River, Minn. Mr. Edens, then a graduate student in environmental policy, was so poor that he ran out of propane to heat his 1,250-square-foot home.

read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/garden/solar-power-to-the-people.html?pagewanted=2&_r=0&ref=realestate

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Simple Ways to Cool Your Home and Save Big

attic fans, ceilings

attic fans, ceilings

One of the easiest ways to keep your cool in the summer is to use fans. In addition to moving air around, which makes us feel cooler, fans can, if properly located, purge heat from a house and draw in cool outside air. Moreover, fans use less energy than central air conditioners and evaporative coolers, and are less expensive to install. Fans can dramatically lower utility bills by reducing the need to use air conditioning.

Will fans add value to your home?  Contact the real estate appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

 

Follow these links for information on specific fan types:
Ceiling Fans: A Simple Cooling Method
Solar Attic Fans: Cool Your Attic and Your Home
Whole-house Fans: Easy, Low-cost Cooling

 

What Will You Save?

 

A regular attic fan uses electricity, but saves about 10 percent on air conditioning costs by keeping your attic (and, as a result, the living space below it) cooler. Solar-powered attic fans have a higher initial cost.

 

A ceiling or portable floor fan will cut your energy costs if you have central air conditioning — if you raise the thermostat setting. For every degree you turn it up, you will cut 7 to 10 percent from your cooling costs.

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/green-homes/home-cooling-fans.aspx?newsletter=1&utm_content=06.21.13+GEGH&utm_campaign=2013+GEGH&utm_source=iPost&utm_medium=email#ixzz2WrozOxga

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only