Pilot
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2004
- Messages
- 1,219
- Location
- Oregon
- Tractor
- JD 770, Yanmar 180D, JD 420 (not running), had a Kubota B6200
Shop around, shop around and shop some more. Ask lots of questions.
We bought our heat pump 1.5 yrs. ago. Planned to use our existing propane system for backup heat when the weather got cold. Talked to about 15 outfits. Bids ran from about $3,000 up to $12,000+. Some said we needed a new furnace, some said we didn't. Some wanted to gold plate the unit, some used powder coating.
We ended up with a contractor our builder recommended who bid $3,500 (I think--might have been $4,200) and who said we didn't need a new furnace. 2 weeks after he was done, he called and said he screwed up, that we did need a new furnace as the blower in ours was too small. "Uh oh", I thought. Then he said that since it was his mistake, he would give us a new furnace for free.
While he did the work, I asked how much a new furnace like that cost. He said there was a huge markup and that his cost was about $600 for a unit that lists for $1,800.
We bought our heat pump 1.5 yrs. ago. Planned to use our existing propane system for backup heat when the weather got cold. Talked to about 15 outfits. Bids ran from about $3,000 up to $12,000+. Some said we needed a new furnace, some said we didn't. Some wanted to gold plate the unit, some used powder coating.
We ended up with a contractor our builder recommended who bid $3,500 (I think--might have been $4,200) and who said we didn't need a new furnace. 2 weeks after he was done, he called and said he screwed up, that we did need a new furnace as the blower in ours was too small. "Uh oh", I thought. Then he said that since it was his mistake, he would give us a new furnace for free.
While he did the work, I asked how much a new furnace like that cost. He said there was a huge markup and that his cost was about $600 for a unit that lists for $1,800.