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Karen83
11-08-2008, 08:00 AM
We just recieved our first electric bill and I am shocked and think that it can't be right. The home we are renting is around 1800 square ft. and our bill was $188. Is this in line with any of your bills? I hate to see what it will be in the heat of the summer if this is correct. We don't keep it cold in here for sure!

Someone PLEASE tell me this has to be wrong!!

Karen

tucson
11-08-2008, 08:05 AM
Something must be wrong,I had a house a little smaller and my largest bill was 130.00 in the middle of the summer.I would get an energy audit from SECO.

schotzyb
11-08-2008, 09:56 AM
Something must be wrong,I had a house a little smaller and my largest bill was 130.00 in the middle of the summer.I would get an energy audit from SECO.

Excellent suggestion!! My bills were in the $200+ range during the summer months so we had Seco do an inspection and the tech found several leaks on the duct work. Only problem is it is cool enough now that we aren't using the air so we wll have to wait till next summer to see if the leaks were the cause of the high bills.

mac9
11-08-2008, 10:02 AM
Is your house all electric or do you get a gas bill too? I have a 2000 sq. ft. house with gas heat, cooking, hot water heater and dryer, and the highest summer bill that I have received is $165. My last bill was $89. Typical mid-winter bill is in the $50's. Gas bill is usually $25-$29. We keep the air conditioner set at 76 in the summer, and the heat at 72 when needed.

Karen83
11-08-2008, 03:48 PM
Thanks for the replies. I will call them first thing Monday morning.

Karen

dgammon6
11-08-2008, 09:31 PM
We have 2000 sq. feet and total electric. Summer months were just over $200. October bill was $104.

captain1202
11-10-2008, 02:42 AM
These items are also energy hogs:


Electric hot water set higher than necessary
Computer(s) left on all the time
Plasma & LCD TV's
Stereo's
A/C set lower than necessary (74deg s/b OK for most folks)
Leaks in ducts (as mentioned)
Not enough insulation


One thing not often thought of here are multi paned, low-e windows which will keep a LOT of heat out and cool air in.

Skip
11-11-2008, 01:07 PM
These items are also energy hogs:


Electric hot water set higher than necessary
Computer(s) left on all the time
Plasma & LCD TV's
Stereo's
A/C set lower than necessary (74deg s/b OK for most folks)
Leaks in ducts (as mentioned)
Not enough insulation


I beg to differ. A typical LCD TV uses about 175 watts, so does a Stereo and a computer on idle uses only 10 watts. The biggies are Electric Ovens, Frost Free Refrigerators, Dish Washers, Clothes Dryers, A/C units not properly maintained and any appliance that generates heat (toasters, electric fry pans, microwave ovens, etc.).

Skip

jflynn1
11-11-2008, 04:01 PM
That sounds about right,especially if the house is all electric. Florida is one of the
most expensive states for electricity. The cooperative that provides the villages electricity is still using Coal as their fuel source. They have filed for a 40% rate
increase because it costs more to transport the coal to the electrical plant.

jflynn1
11-11-2008, 04:03 PM
That sounds about right,especially if the house is all electric. Florida is one of the most expensive states for electricity. The cooperative that provides the villages electricity is still using Coal as their fuel source. They have filed for a 40% rate increase because it costs more to transport the coal to the electrical plant.

Russ_Boston
11-11-2008, 09:58 PM
Florida is almost exactly on the national average of $10.68 per KWH. That is almost half of my state and most of the northeast states where many of the TV residents came from.

http://www.neo.ne.gov/statshtml/115.htm

Russ_Boston
11-11-2008, 10:00 PM
Good point about LCD's Skip. On average they consume about 1/3 the amount as a same size plasma. But both types have come way down in usage over the past 2 years.

Shirleevee
11-11-2008, 11:38 PM
Florida is almost exactly on the national average of $10.68 per KWH. That is almost half of my state and most of the northeast states where many of the TV residents came from.

http://www.neo.ne.gov/statshtml/115.htm

Our home is TV is much larger than our home in NY. We pay more than double (based on 7 months usage), in NY.:sad:

gowens1
11-12-2008, 09:51 AM
Do you want to trade bills ? Our home in Deltona is 2000sq ft, built in 76, the electric bill for last month was $250. But I work at home, so the computers are on 24/7 and the pool pump is not the most effecent. Now that the Florida fall is here, I can dial back the pool pump, and leave the doors open during the day, and it should fall to the $150 range.
gary

Russ_Boston
11-12-2008, 10:30 AM
Do you want to trade bills ? gary

If you're offering it to me - Heck I'll trade! My LOWEST bill all year would be north of $200 (2500 sq. ft. house in MA). Summer is north of $400 with central AC set to 74.

I heat, cook, dryer and hot water with gas also.

captain1202
11-12-2008, 01:08 PM
175 watts here, 10 watts there, it all adds up! I've seen reports that all the "small stuff" including cel-phone chargers and other misc. "wall warts" can come to about $50/mo.

TomW
11-13-2008, 03:39 PM
That sounds about right,especially if the house is all electric. Florida is one of the most expensive states for electricity. The cooperative that provides the villages electricity is still using Coal as their fuel source. They have filed for a 40% rate increase because it costs more to transport the coal to the electrical plant.


40% rate increase! Wow!! Please keep the list posted on this piece of news.