Reduce Your Heating Bills This Winter
Imagine leaving a window open all winter long
-- the heat loss, cold drafts and wasted energy! If
your home has a folding attic stair, fireplace or clothes
dryer, that may be just what is occurring in your home
every day.
These often overlooked sources
of heat loss and air leakage can cause heat to pour
out and the cold outside air to rush in -- costing you
higher heating bills.
Air leaks are the largest source
of heating and cooling loss in the home. Air leaks occur
through the small cracks around doors, windows, pipes,
etc. Most homeowners are well aware of the benefits
caulk and weatherstripping provide to minimize heat
loss and cold drafts.
But what can you do about the
three largest “holes” in your home -- the
folding attic stair, the fireplace and the clothes dryer?
Here are some tips and techniques that can easily, quickly
and inexpensively seal and insulate these holes.
Attic Stairs
When attic stairs are installed,
a large hole (approximately 10 square feet) is created
in your ceiling. The ceiling and insulation that were
there have to be removed, leaving only a thin, unsealed,
sheet of plywood.
Your attic space is ventilated
directly to the outdoors. In the winter, the attic space
can be very cold, and in the summer it can be very hot.
And what is separating your conditioned house from your
unconditioned attic? That thin sheet of plywood.
Often a gap can be observed around
the perimeter of the door. Try this yourself: at night,
turn on the attic light and shut the attic stairway
door -- do you see any light coming through? These are
gaps add up to a large opening where your heated/cooled
air leaks out 24 hours a day. This is like leaving a
window open all year round.
An easy, low-cost solution to
this problem is to add an attic stair cover. An attic
stair cover provides an air seal, reducing the air leaks.
Add the desired amount of insulation over the cover
to restore the insulation removed from the ceiling.
Fireplaces
Sixty-five percent, or approximately
100 million homes, in North America are constructed
with wood or gas burning fireplaces. Unfortunately there
are negative side effects that the fireplace brings
to a home especially during the winter home-heating
season. Fireplaces are energy losers.
Researchers have studied this
to determine the amount of heat loss through a fireplace,
and the results are amazing. One research study showed
that an open damper on an unused fireplace in a well-insulated
house can raise overall heating-energy consumption by
30 percent.
A recent study showed that for
many consumers, their heating bills may be more than
$500 higher per winter due to the air leakage and wasted
energy caused by fireplaces.
Why does a home with a fireplace
have higher heating bills? Hot air rises. Your heated
air leaks out any exit it can find, and when warm heated
air is drawn out of your home, cold outside air is drawn
in to make up for it. The fireplace is like a giant
straw sucking the heated air from your house.
An easy, low-cost solution to
this problem is to add a fireplace draftstopper. Available
from Battic Door, a company known for their energy conservation
products, a fireplace draftstopper is an inflatable
pillow that seals the damper, eliminating any air leaks.
The pillow is removed whenever the fireplace is used,
then reinserted after.
Clothes Dryer Exhaust Ducts
In many homes, the room with the
clothes dryer is the coldest room in the house. Your
clothes dryer is connected to an exhaust duct that is
open to the outdoors. In the winter, cold air leaks
in through the duct, through your dryer and into your
house.
Dryer vents use a sheet-metal
flapper to try to reduce this air leakage. This is very
primitive technology that does not provide a positive
seal to stop the air leakage. Compounding the problem
is that over time, lint clogs the flapper valve causing
it to stay open.
An easy, low-cost solution to
this problem is to add a dryer vent seal. This will
reduce unwanted air infiltration, and keep out pests,
bees and rodents as well. The vent will remain closed
unless the dryer is in use. When the dryer is in use,
a floating shuttle rises to allow warm air, lint and
moisture to escape.
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