Raspy
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,636
- Location
- Smith Valley, Nevada
- Tractor
- NH TC29DA, F250 Tremor, Jeep Rubicon
We purchased 32 acres 2 years ago & would *like* to start building. While I'm still figuring out the house logistics (could that be another thread?) as to whether or not to build with SIPs or another method, I've run into an issue with getting electricity to the house. Our utility company in NY is National Grid and they've tentatively given me a $25k number for running electrical from the road, 1300 feet to where we'll put the house. They won't give me a FIRM number until I have some sort of structure built on the property (which seems kinda ***-backwards to me).
With Federal, State & Local rebates I was wondering about going off grid completely with a battery system. My initial findings was that the batteries weren't even lasting 10 years, which made the setup very cost-prohibitive if I had to replace the batteries every 7 years or so. The Tesla Power Wall came out & they guarantee nothing more than 8% loss at 10 years, which would *seem* to me to mean that it should last longer.
Our current temporary house is 120 years old and we use 13,000 kwh per year or 1083 kwh per month. But that's on an OLD home with very little insulation, etc. We're hoping to build with SIPs or closed cell spray foam at the very least, so figuring that along with LED lights energy efficient appliances, a propane stove and dryer, it should all add up to considerably less usage. I'm also looking at hydronic radiant floor heating. Cooling is my biggest concern, though in CNY, we're talking all of 3-4 months and it's not run constantly.
Thoughts, issues, concerns? Anyone already doing this or looking into this?
Here's our land in case anyone is curious...the black outline is ours. I don't have a current areal picture of the driveway we put in last year, sorry!
View attachment 436789
Seems like you should get yourself a good tractor and backhoe and dig the ditch yourself, put the conduit and pull boxes in to their specs and just have them pull the wire. I did this on my house, but it was only 220' from the pole. You'll save enough to pay for the tractor. I also bought an off-road forklift for the project and it too has paid for itself over and over. Then it will move on to another project somewhere, but my tractor stays!
By all means add hydronic radiant in your slab!!! But drive it with thermal solar. Very low cost of operation, also does domestic hot water and there is no heating system more comfortable. Last winter we used three 70 watt circulators, running during the day, to heat our 2,800 sq ft house through the winter. No energy source other than solar. But I also have a wood stove in case we want an evening fire or to take the chill off a surprise cool morning. Now, in the spring, summer and fall months, we have 650 gallons of domestic hot water on tap for occasional bathroom floor heat and unlimited showers. I can't imagine a cheaper or more comfortable heating system! Then, if you need to, you could add a simple air conditioning system that is entirely separate from your heating system. I added a simple duct system and wired the house for air conditioning, but I doubt I'll ever install it.
My priorities in the house design included a steel frame, but most of the structure is 2/6 and 2/8 walls with blown in insulation and blown in attic insulation. Not the absolute lowest heat loss, but totally practical and a structure that is incredibly strong.
I don't like propane, so I only put it in for cooking with the rangetop. I installed a cast iron boiler that runs on oil for backup if needed. Then I modified it to be more efficient than originally designed. We also have an electric water heater that remains permanently switched off unless the solar is shut down for more than about three days or in the event of severe winter conditions for an extended period. In the end, the cost of heating is insignificant
Be sure to include practicality in your design considerations. For instance, you might sacrifice a bit of theoretical R value for much simpler construction or lower cost or stronger structure. R value is only one of many considerations