SavageHoutkop
Veteran
- Location
- South Manchester-ish
Mr SHK and I are finally in a position where we might be able to buy a house.
We've now lived in four different houses/flats.
As the selection of houses on offer is quite poor, we're likely to make some changes to whereever we buy. There are several things on the 'must have' list; one of which is a decent pressure shower. Our current rented property is single glazed, with an old boiler (c. 20 yrs, I believe) and the shower water pressure is poor (directly plumbed, not electric). I've also never yet met a good pressure electric shower.
The best house/flat, by far, in terms of insulation / heating / hot water / shower pressure was our fairly new build (c. 2003) flat - which had good insulation and no gas whatsoever. The running costs were also good. We only ever had one economy 7 storage heater on in the winter (with additional electric boost in the second bedroom, which we were using as a study, as the window frame there had left a good 2mm gap straight through to outdoors, and it was pointing in the wrong direction for any winter sunlight). The hot water was provided by an electric geyser (immersion heater? I'm not up to speed with the terminology) which was also economy 7 and had the option of an override for additional hot water. The tank was enough for us for showers + any dishwashing throughout the day. Occasionally we ran out (normally if we wanted a bath as well, and normally if the cold water tap was providing exceptionally cold water, in which case the override provided hot water fairly quickly)
I've heard it parroted frequently that gas is most 'efficient' in terms of heating and cooking. Cooking (on a hob) I might well agree, but for the others it seems to me what people mean is monetary efficiency - i.e. electricity expensive, gas cheap. Also, I think it's assumed that you'd want the whole house heated to (say) 22degrees; which is not what we do. We like to have the living room warm(ish); but other rooms not heated at all by default.
I'm not a fan of gas, it seems that it's very temperamental with high running costs; and of course it is also a fossil fuel and supplies depend on imports from possibly far off. Electricity, on the other hand, is possible to produce locally via PV / wind / whatever.
Any thoughts on whether or not to use a gas combi boiler; or to use an electric geyser? And whether or not one is actually more efficient? I've looked at the energysavingtrust but they seem to assume you already have, and will never change, from a gas boiler system.
I'm happy to have current running costs higher for electricity if it's simpler to run and breaks down less often! And of course there's the chance to have solar hot water heating and/or solar PV helping to power the electric appliances, whereas producing your own gas seems a bit harder (in the required quantities, anyway...)
We've now lived in four different houses/flats.
As the selection of houses on offer is quite poor, we're likely to make some changes to whereever we buy. There are several things on the 'must have' list; one of which is a decent pressure shower. Our current rented property is single glazed, with an old boiler (c. 20 yrs, I believe) and the shower water pressure is poor (directly plumbed, not electric). I've also never yet met a good pressure electric shower.
The best house/flat, by far, in terms of insulation / heating / hot water / shower pressure was our fairly new build (c. 2003) flat - which had good insulation and no gas whatsoever. The running costs were also good. We only ever had one economy 7 storage heater on in the winter (with additional electric boost in the second bedroom, which we were using as a study, as the window frame there had left a good 2mm gap straight through to outdoors, and it was pointing in the wrong direction for any winter sunlight). The hot water was provided by an electric geyser (immersion heater? I'm not up to speed with the terminology) which was also economy 7 and had the option of an override for additional hot water. The tank was enough for us for showers + any dishwashing throughout the day. Occasionally we ran out (normally if we wanted a bath as well, and normally if the cold water tap was providing exceptionally cold water, in which case the override provided hot water fairly quickly)
I've heard it parroted frequently that gas is most 'efficient' in terms of heating and cooking. Cooking (on a hob) I might well agree, but for the others it seems to me what people mean is monetary efficiency - i.e. electricity expensive, gas cheap. Also, I think it's assumed that you'd want the whole house heated to (say) 22degrees; which is not what we do. We like to have the living room warm(ish); but other rooms not heated at all by default.
I'm not a fan of gas, it seems that it's very temperamental with high running costs; and of course it is also a fossil fuel and supplies depend on imports from possibly far off. Electricity, on the other hand, is possible to produce locally via PV / wind / whatever.
Any thoughts on whether or not to use a gas combi boiler; or to use an electric geyser? And whether or not one is actually more efficient? I've looked at the energysavingtrust but they seem to assume you already have, and will never change, from a gas boiler system.
I'm happy to have current running costs higher for electricity if it's simpler to run and breaks down less often! And of course there's the chance to have solar hot water heating and/or solar PV helping to power the electric appliances, whereas producing your own gas seems a bit harder (in the required quantities, anyway...)