Condensing Boilers - A More Efficient and Inexpensive Way to Heat Your Home
A condensing boiler is a home heating system that is designed to recoup energy that conventional furnaces and boilers lose. A condensing boiler can achieve up to 98% thermal energy efficiency and can save you up to 40% on your home heating bill.
A condensing boiler is a home heating system that is designed to recoup energy that conventional furnaces and boilers lose. Most houses have small pipes that discharge excess heat out through the roof - they often look like small chimneys. Condensing boilers capture this excess energy and put it to use. The reason for the name is that a condensing boiler literally condenses the water vapor produced by the consumption of gas or oil in the boiler condenses back into water. This condensation, in turn, allows the latent heat involved in the vaporization of the water to be used usefully in heating your home.
Affordable Holidays: How to do it Cheap on the Gold Coast
You are probably aware by now that things are going to be a little tighter in the coming years.
With record high oil prices, we are paying more and more for the petrol we need in our cars. With inflation on the rise, we spend more for the day to day necessities of life. And with both interest rates and rental prices increasing, no matter if you own or rent your home, you will be paying more for it this year, than you were last year. Something has to give.
Gas at Record Highs, How Can You Save Gas?
Gas prices have now hit record highs the price of gasoline in the U.S. is heading for $4 gallon while the U.K. are looking at £1.20 a litre
Gas prices have now hit record highs the price of gasoline in the U.S. is heading for $4 gallon while the U.K. are looking at £1.20 a litre
This has caused motorists to look for more and more ways to save gas and reduce their gas bills as much as they can.
The International Energy Agency energy forecast for 2008 has projected world oil demand would grow by 1.7 million barrels per day compared to 0.9 million barrels per day in 2007.