Building new home, electric down 800ft drive?
bwood74
13 years ago
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brickeyee
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agoRelated Discussions
New home design: build the woodshop or buy a prefab metal build
Comments (13)If you google "pole buildings" or "pole barns" and "stick built" garages/shops/buildings/etc., you'll find threads on other forums on this topic. We haven't built our shop yet, but I have researched it over the last couple years. For me, I found companies that specialize in this at our local home & garden expo, via word of mouth, on craigslist under services and on my county's permit web site. My county gives all the information on what permits were applied for and what company is doing the work; it basically gave me a list of who was building the shops locally and how much they are valued at.. I've done lots of driving around to look at the work done and see if it is what I'm after.... Since we plan on finishing our shop to match our house and insulating it, a pole building vs. stick-built building is around the same price. There is no point, for us, to pursue a pole building because of it. If you don't want to insulate and don't need to match finishes (on all sides,) a pole building will likely cost much less....See MoreTankless + 10 gal Electric H20 Heater per Fine Home Building
Comments (3)of course, if the 10g heater is not powered, then you will waste a lot of water. think about it, during cold winter nights/days it will cool off considerably, especially if you hav ebeen out of town a couple days. then you have to run 10gallons PLUS however much stands in the lines to get hot water. with a 2.5gpm shower head, that is a 4 minute wait for hot water!...See MoreNew home build gone bad, anyway to get deposit
Comments (68)Thanks everyone, we are very appreciative of what the builder did for us as this could have been a major disaster. We are currently looking for a new house and excited to see what we can find. We think the builder might of had other request for houses in the neighborhood and with the lots full couldn't sell them one. Maybe they knew they could sell the house with the demand. I will be happy for them if they do sell the house and happy for the family that gets it as long as it meets their needs, also happy that we didn't end up with it....See MoreElectrical and Gas questions for new home build
Comments (24)I was going to suggest going off grid electric, but given the power demands for the hobbies, that is a lot of panels. Still, I'd do the calculations. Is that a good wind area? If you can do it, you might flip David's suggestion of one utility around. Going back at least a decade, there are plenty of people out there that got disgusted with the cost of brining in electricity and went off grid instead. If you have nat gat, genset manufacturers have finally come around to making DC gensets for that application. (You really need a generator to equalize batteries by my understanding. That may well be, however, for flooded cell batteries only.) How come 3 ph is not a better way than single? You'd get 50% more power adding a third conductor of the same size. If you can get the POCO to give you 3 ph open delta, you can have 3 ph and 240V. That said,as Mike pointed out, with the cost of VFDs so low, what's the point? I was shocked when I looked at costs online a few months back. Note that you have to be careful about how the utility bills other than residential 124/240 too. The local utilities commission regulates that and some make sure that commercial and industrial users pay more by charging lots more/kWh for anything 3 phase. If you build efficiently, your costs other than the shop, hobby and domestic hot water can be be nil. Tankless and recirc seems like a weird match to me. You have a system that provides hot water on demand so you have no standby losses, then you connect it to a system with standby losses. Is the recirc going to be on a timer or controlled with occupancy sensors? If I have gas and need a new water heater, I'd buy a Westinghouse WGR060NG076 or larger tank and never look back. That goes especially with hard water unless you plan to install a water softener. Have you done the well research yet or maybe drilled already? I'd go with induction for your cooking hobs if you want easy clean-up. There is nothing easier. If you are not sure about it, buy a plug-in unit and see if you like it. You may save a lot of AC costs in addition to the straight savings at the cooktop. Ideally, I'd like one resistance hob for simmering. They suffer from the same drawbacks of the duty-cycle controlled power output as thermostatic resistance heating devices. I don't know if inverter powered induction is theoretically possible or practical as it is for microwave ovens, but it might work well if it is....See Morebus_driver
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agobrickeyee
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agoweedmeister
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agoyosemitebill
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agobrickeyee
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agosniffdog
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agoalan_s_thefirst
13 years agolast modified: 9 years ago
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