OT BioDiesel
Guest
Posts: n/a
How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
"Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>
> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
> Northeast..."
>
> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
> --
> FRH
that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
"Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>
> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
> Northeast..."
>
> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
> --
> FRH
Guest
Posts: n/a
How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
"Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>
> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
> Northeast..."
>
> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
> --
> FRH
that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
"Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>
> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
> Northeast..."
>
> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
> --
> FRH
Guest
Posts: n/a
On Wed, 10 May 2006 17:01:41 -0600, "Earle Horton"
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> There is some confusion here. The modern oil furnaces have all sorts of
> safeguards, like thermally fused valves and photoelectric blowout detectors,
> that make them more or less safe. Add a smoke detector or two, and you
> should be able to sleep at night.
>
> I was talking about parlor stoves, home made devices to burn used motor oil,
> and antiques from another era. When one of those goes bad, you suffocate in
> your sleep or are blown off the face of the planet.
Design the system where the fuel tank and burner is outside in a
concrete building... Use the burner to heat up water and run the water
throughout the house... That way, if it does leak and catch fire, you
have the fire contained in a fireproof building...
Then again, I"m on the Texas Gulf Coast... Heating comes naturally
around here... I wouldn't be surprised if an electric radiant heater
would keep the whole house warm all winter... Hell, I'm more likely to
have the air-conditioner on in January than the heater...
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> There is some confusion here. The modern oil furnaces have all sorts of
> safeguards, like thermally fused valves and photoelectric blowout detectors,
> that make them more or less safe. Add a smoke detector or two, and you
> should be able to sleep at night.
>
> I was talking about parlor stoves, home made devices to burn used motor oil,
> and antiques from another era. When one of those goes bad, you suffocate in
> your sleep or are blown off the face of the planet.
Design the system where the fuel tank and burner is outside in a
concrete building... Use the burner to heat up water and run the water
throughout the house... That way, if it does leak and catch fire, you
have the fire contained in a fireproof building...
Then again, I"m on the Texas Gulf Coast... Heating comes naturally
around here... I wouldn't be surprised if an electric radiant heater
would keep the whole house warm all winter... Hell, I'm more likely to
have the air-conditioner on in January than the heater...
Guest
Posts: n/a
On Wed, 10 May 2006 17:01:41 -0600, "Earle Horton"
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> There is some confusion here. The modern oil furnaces have all sorts of
> safeguards, like thermally fused valves and photoelectric blowout detectors,
> that make them more or less safe. Add a smoke detector or two, and you
> should be able to sleep at night.
>
> I was talking about parlor stoves, home made devices to burn used motor oil,
> and antiques from another era. When one of those goes bad, you suffocate in
> your sleep or are blown off the face of the planet.
Design the system where the fuel tank and burner is outside in a
concrete building... Use the burner to heat up water and run the water
throughout the house... That way, if it does leak and catch fire, you
have the fire contained in a fireproof building...
Then again, I"m on the Texas Gulf Coast... Heating comes naturally
around here... I wouldn't be surprised if an electric radiant heater
would keep the whole house warm all winter... Hell, I'm more likely to
have the air-conditioner on in January than the heater...
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> There is some confusion here. The modern oil furnaces have all sorts of
> safeguards, like thermally fused valves and photoelectric blowout detectors,
> that make them more or less safe. Add a smoke detector or two, and you
> should be able to sleep at night.
>
> I was talking about parlor stoves, home made devices to burn used motor oil,
> and antiques from another era. When one of those goes bad, you suffocate in
> your sleep or are blown off the face of the planet.
Design the system where the fuel tank and burner is outside in a
concrete building... Use the burner to heat up water and run the water
throughout the house... That way, if it does leak and catch fire, you
have the fire contained in a fireproof building...
Then again, I"m on the Texas Gulf Coast... Heating comes naturally
around here... I wouldn't be surprised if an electric radiant heater
would keep the whole house warm all winter... Hell, I'm more likely to
have the air-conditioner on in January than the heater...
Guest
Posts: n/a
On Wed, 10 May 2006 17:01:41 -0600, "Earle Horton"
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> There is some confusion here. The modern oil furnaces have all sorts of
> safeguards, like thermally fused valves and photoelectric blowout detectors,
> that make them more or less safe. Add a smoke detector or two, and you
> should be able to sleep at night.
>
> I was talking about parlor stoves, home made devices to burn used motor oil,
> and antiques from another era. When one of those goes bad, you suffocate in
> your sleep or are blown off the face of the planet.
Design the system where the fuel tank and burner is outside in a
concrete building... Use the burner to heat up water and run the water
throughout the house... That way, if it does leak and catch fire, you
have the fire contained in a fireproof building...
Then again, I"m on the Texas Gulf Coast... Heating comes naturally
around here... I wouldn't be surprised if an electric radiant heater
would keep the whole house warm all winter... Hell, I'm more likely to
have the air-conditioner on in January than the heater...
<NurseBustersNoSpam@msn.com> wrote:
> There is some confusion here. The modern oil furnaces have all sorts of
> safeguards, like thermally fused valves and photoelectric blowout detectors,
> that make them more or less safe. Add a smoke detector or two, and you
> should be able to sleep at night.
>
> I was talking about parlor stoves, home made devices to burn used motor oil,
> and antiques from another era. When one of those goes bad, you suffocate in
> your sleep or are blown off the face of the planet.
Design the system where the fuel tank and burner is outside in a
concrete building... Use the burner to heat up water and run the water
throughout the house... That way, if it does leak and catch fire, you
have the fire contained in a fireproof building...
Then again, I"m on the Texas Gulf Coast... Heating comes naturally
around here... I wouldn't be surprised if an electric radiant heater
would keep the whole house warm all winter... Hell, I'm more likely to
have the air-conditioner on in January than the heater...
Guest
Posts: n/a
L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>> Northeast..."
>>
>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>> --
>> FRH
You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
(7000" above sea level).
--
FRH
> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>> Northeast..."
>>
>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>> --
>> FRH
You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
(7000" above sea level).
--
FRH
Guest
Posts: n/a
L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>> Northeast..."
>>
>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>> --
>> FRH
You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
(7000" above sea level).
--
FRH
> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>> Northeast..."
>>
>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>> --
>> FRH
You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
(7000" above sea level).
--
FRH
Guest
Posts: n/a
L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>> Northeast..."
>>
>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>> --
>> FRH
You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
(7000" above sea level).
--
FRH
> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-)
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>> Northeast..."
>>
>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>> --
>> FRH
You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
(7000" above sea level).
--
FRH
Guest
Posts: n/a
Frank_v7.0 wrote:
> L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
>> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
>> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-) God Bless America,
>> Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>>
>> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>>> Northeast..."
>>>
>>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>>> --
>>> FRH
>
> You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
> combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
> (7000" above sea level).
>
LOL! That's 7000' not 7000"!
--
FRH
> L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
>> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
>> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-) God Bless America,
>> Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>>
>> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>>> Northeast..."
>>>
>>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>>> --
>>> FRH
>
> You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
> combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
> (7000" above sea level).
>
LOL! That's 7000' not 7000"!
--
FRH
Guest
Posts: n/a
Frank_v7.0 wrote:
> L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
>> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
>> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-) God Bless America,
>> Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>>
>> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>>> Northeast..."
>>>
>>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>>> --
>>> FRH
>
> You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
> combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
> (7000" above sea level).
>
LOL! That's 7000' not 7000"!
--
FRH
> L.W.(Bill) ------ III wrote:
>> How many gallon of water in your exchanger, if you use that type,
>> that doesn't keep you cool, nor warm. ;-) God Bless America,
>> Bill O|||||||O
>> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>>
>> "Frank_v7.0" wrote:
>>> "Of the 107 million households in the United States, approximately 8.1
>>> million use heating oil as their main heating fuel. Residential space
>>> heating is the primary use for heating oil, making the demand highly
>>> seasonal. Most of the heating oil use occurs during October through
>>> March. The area of the country most reliant on heating oil is the
>>> Northeast..."
>>>
>>> Heated with oil in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Used kerosene in
>>> Vermont. In Arizona I have a heat pump :-)
>>> --
>>> FRH
>
> You're thinking of a "swamp cooler". ecch! I've got a Trane SEER 13
> combo A/C and "real" heat pump. Works great up here in the mountains
> (7000" above sea level).
>
LOL! That's 7000' not 7000"!
--
FRH


