Posts Tagged Heating Cooling

How To Use Passive Space Heating

Posted by outside_voices on Tuesday, 12 January, 2010

Each time you switch on the heat or aircon in your house, you know how much you’re going to finish up paying for it. Particularly during those long cold winters and boiling hot summers, it appears like your energy bill is always sky high.

Learning about passive space heating will be one of the best things that you will ever do. If you use passive space heating to power your home you are not going to be the only one who is going to benefit. Not only are the people around you going to benefit as well, but so is the world that you live in.

Diy passive solar heating is something that everybody should find out more about, and here are some crucial bits of info to help get you moving.

How it Works

First and foremost you wish to know why passive space heating works and how. Passive solar heating or space cooling and heating truly represents a crucial methodology for displacing normal sources of energy in buildings, and even if you’ve ever just sat in a window on a winter day you have felt the consequences of passive solar heating.

You get heated by the sun that’s shining in on you, and the same kind of effect occurs when you use passive heating for your house.

Not only can you use passive space heating to heat your home but you can use it to cool it as well. Because solar power is always readily available, you can have heating and cooling unlimited throughout the year, no matter where you live.

If you are interested in using passive space heating to heat and cool your home, the first thing that you are going to want to do is find a skilled, knowledgeable professional who is going to be able to work with you and make sure that your home is ready for this sort of a system. This is imperative because after all if your home is set in a shady location, you are not going to be able to take full advantage of solar power.

This is typically fixable however in some cases the person may need to finish up moving if they need to be ready to take advantage here. You may quickly see all of the smashing benefits that are offered by solar power, and not merely will you’ll be able to save yourself cash but you’ll be doing good for the environment.

What you just learned about How To Build Solar Panel is just the beginning. To get the full story and all the details, check us out at Ways To Build Solar Panels.

Evans D. Smith

Living Grid Free, and Enjoying it

Posted by outside_voices on Monday, 26 October, 2009

Isn’t living off-the-grid every man’s dream? Rely on Yourself! Don’t pay for electricity anymore! Have power all the time, 24/7/365, no matter what is happening in the big wide world! It’s all so grandiose, and for most people, so completely out of reach.

But don’t get discourged; there are options available. Even someone in an apartment complex can do things that decrease their reliance on the grid. But first, let’s break the issue down into manageable pieces, with help from the experts at Evergreen Mountain Labs and http://www.EvergreenGasLabs.com, and look very briefly at each puzzle piece in turn.

There are basically five items to address in order to live completely grid free. You can explore as many of these ideas as you want to, but the secret is that you have to start somewhere.

  1. Cooking
  2. Heating, Cooling
  3. Electricity
  4. Food
  5. Water, Sewer, Laundry

1.     Cooking Needs. It all boils down, no pun intended, to how you use what energy you have. Find the cheapest way possible to cook your food. For some people, this means investing in a wood stove. For some people it means getting a little propane camp stove and then stocking up on propane. For some, assuming that you get lots of sun, it means getting a solar oven. And for everybody, it means consuming more dried goods and fresh fruits and vegetables, and cooking less often, or only cooking one pot of stew or something in the morning, and then serving from it all day. Electric stoves aren’t really even an option since they just plain use too much electricity.

2.      Space Heating/Cooling.For living space heating and cooling, you need two or three things. If you can track down a wood stove someplace, and enough firewood to keep it running, do so. If you can be happy with a swamp cooler instead of an energy guzzling air conditioner, do it. And thickly insulate everything, with as much insluation as you can snag. It takes less energy to keep well-insulated stuff either hot or cold, than uninsulated stuff.

3.      Electricity. You simply have to have electricity to survive in today’s world. So the thing that we have to do is to minimize our usage wherever and whenever possible (heating, cooling, cooking, entertainment, laundry, etc).  And the first thing to remember is this, CONSERVE electricity however possible with energy efficient everything (including lights). The second thing to keep in mind is to NEVER use electricity to warm or heat anything up; it’s too wasteful. Explore other ways to do it. As for generating your own electricity (including you city dwellers), get at least one 12volt, deep cycle battery, one solar panel you can place in a window to keep it charged (or one of the small, pollution free generators being developed by Evergreen Mountain Labs), and a 300Watt AC inverter to power your clocks, radios, computers, and etc. If an item uses more than 3 or 400 Watts, you could probably live without it – with the one possible exception of your washer. You can find a small 3. If you buy a diesel generator, you can even run it on biodiesel that you make yourself or likely get for free from restaurants nearby.

4.      Food is a bit of a trick sometimes, but even in an apartment building, there are still ways that you can raise enough food for yourself to survive on. Unless you like mouse, meat is pretty much not an option in a city dwelling, so focus on vegetable plants instead. You might consider starting with tomato plants, grown upside down, out thru holes in the bottom of hanging pots. They grow like crazy if everything is right, and will cover many of your daily vitamin needs. The idea here is to focus on plants that produce a fruit or vegetable on an ongoing basis, without needing lots of space to do it in.

5.     Drinking water and sewer disposal can also be an issue sometimes, but there’s still hope, even for someone living in an apartment complex. Rain, melted snow, and even brook or pond water can all be boiled or filtered for use. So start by getting a drinking water filter and replacement cartridges (since distillers take power). As for your sewer needs, consider getting an indoor, odor free composting toilet, and you suddenly have plant fertilizer as well. Laundry, since it uses so much water, can sometimes be an issue. The only thing I can offer there is learn to do it by hand if the need arises, because your washing machine simply takes too much power

 By addressing all five areas of grid dependence in our lives, and by learning to conserve, live simply, and find other options, anyone, including people in apartments, can learn to live off the grid and be energy independent and grid free.

 Some of the products mentioned in this article are, or soon will be, available at http://www.SurvivalOffTheGrid.com, along with more info, ebooks, and more.