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Saving Money – Saving Energy – These Two Tools Work Well Together

Sav e Energy and Money by Calking WindowsWe pay our hard earned money for the energy we use in our daily lives.  So by saving energy, we will save money.  We all know that buying and using energy efficient cars and appliances, walking whenever possible, and turning off lights and appliances when not in use will save energy and save us money.  Another way to save energy and money is not letting energy (money) escape into or out of your home after you have paid for it. One of the best ways to make sure you use energy in the best, and most energy/money saving possible way is to do an energy audit on your home.

I have often recommended The Professional Home Energy Audit Guide by David Anderson and The Home Weatherization Inspection Checklist by David Nelmes, for Do it Yourself energy saving audits.

What I just found, as I was running through my own audits (which I do on a regular basis), is that these two work quite well together, complementing each other to help you find the best path to saving energy, and saving money.  Simply, David Nelmes book helps you monitor where insulation will help you save energy and save money, and David Andersen’s book helps you find out how you, and your home, use energy – and then effective ways to cut back on energy use to save.

Both of these programs include information sheets that you fill out so you have a complete picture of energy use… and energy loss… in your home (this is important as you will save the most energy and money only when you base your energy saving plans on the realities of YOUR HOME and YOUR LIFE).

Nelmes fact sheets are printed ones that you can reproduce as needed.  Andersen’s are computer spreadsheet files.  What I have started doing is taking Andersen’s spreadsheet files and ADDING information from Nelmes’ sheets to form a totally complete picture, from the walls and windows in, of each room in the house.  From that, I can prioritize my energy and money saving “fixes” by which ones can save me the most money while costing the least.  For instance, I already have replaced about 80% of the bulbs in my house, inside and out, with energy saving CFL (compact fluorescent) bulbs.  I’ve been switching these over for years, so I can’t really point directly to savings on my electric bill – I can estimate, however, that I am saving about $50 US each year.  It didn’t cost me that much for all the CFL bulbs that I have bought, so I am way ahead on those.  Also, when we had to replace our 18 year old hot water heater, I already had an energy saving model in mind, so it was a quick choice – not too many cold showers.

The point of all that is that as I do my energy audits now, not only do I see places that I can make changes to save energy and money, but I also see where things I have been doing for quite a few years have been saving me energy and money all along.  Nice positive reinforcement for the actions I have taken in the past.

So if you are planning to do your own Home Energy Audits, by all means use both The Professional Home Energy Audit Guide by David Anderson and The Home Weatherization Inspection Checklist by David Nelmes.  You will be glad you did!

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Save Money and Cut Your Paper Use in Half … Do You Duplex?

Laser PrinterYou can save a lot of money — and paper — by using Duplex Printing or Duplexing — printing on both sides of the sheet. Since one-sided printing — simplex — only uses one side of the paper, you can see how you can quickly and easily save as much as 50% on paper costs.

In addition to saving many trees, you will be handling, moving, and storing only half as much paper. This will save file space, and will make it much easier should you ever have to move all those printed documents — and less expensive for documents you need to mail. Just … Duplex.

Many printers, especially the heavier duty units found in larger offices, have Duplex Printing capabilities built in. Simpler printers used in the home or in small offices may not have Duplex Printing directly available. It is easy, however, to print a multi-page document to both sides of the sheet. Different computers and different programs will have different ways to accomplish manual two-sided, Duplex Printing for printers without this feature — but even simple, inexpensive ink jet printers can do it.

At the heart of Duplex Printing with printers that do not have the function built in is to print the even numbered pages first, then flip the printed sheets over, reinsert them into the paper supply, and print the odd numbered pages. Caution here: you MUST print the even numbered pages first, and then the odd numbered pages or it doesn’t work. Experiment with a simple two-page document to get the hang of how to turn the paper, and once you have it down, you’ll start seeing the savings right away.

The Print Dialog screen is the place to set Duplex Printing. First, the printer dialog screen that comes from the Printer may have a Manual Duplex click box. You may have to click the Properties selection to access this dialog. If it does, select it and follow the instructions. If your printer driver does not have this feature, then look for a place to check Manual Duplex — then follow the instructions. Or there may be a box or drop down menu to select Print Even Pages and Print Odd Pages. To print the document two sided, select File>Print, then first select Print Even Pages and click Print. After the even pages have printed, flip the paper and place it back into the paper supply. File>Print again, but this time, select Print Odd Pages — and Print and you have a document correctly printed on both sides of the page — and you have cut your paper use in half.
The important thing is be your own “Energy and Resource Patrol” and always look for ways to save resources, energy, and money. It is good for the earth and good for your wallet.

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Time to Reprogram Your Thermostat?

Thermostat FLZ 541
Image via Wikipedia

Just turned on the heat for the winter – at least downstairs.  Haven’t turned it on upstairs yet.

With our oldest daughter now living away from home, and our youngest now in college, it changed the schedule of when we need heating, so I took the opportunity to reprogram the thermostat.  Because of the new schedule, I was able to cut out about 15 hours of heating, and I reduced some of the temperatures.  Save money – save energy … this is good.

Always look for opportunities to save energy and money as your life changes:

  • Doing less laundry? Always was full loads and do it less often rather than reducing the water level.  It’s more efficient that way.
  • When you cook, cook for leftovers so you use the stove less.  For instance, grill up extra pieces of chicken, then use the extras on salads later in the week.
  • Maybe you only need one car now, so consider getting rid of one – LOTS of savings there!
  • You probably don’t need to use as many lights as your children move out of the house – less lighting saves money and energy.
  • If you don’t watch several televisions every day, unplug the unused ones to save the “phantom power” drain.  You can plug them back in when needed.
  • Clock radio in your childs empty room?  Unplug it until they come home for vacations and holidays.
  • Possibly turn off the heat in your childs room, also until they come home for vacations and holidays.
  • Possibly you now use fewer dishes.  Use your dishwasher every other day rather than every day.  Always wash full loads.

The important thing is always think about energy use. You will save a great deal of energy, lower your utility bills, and reduce the resources needed to create that energy.  Even if you create electricity with your own wind and solar systems, if you use less doing day to day tasks, you will have more for other things.

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Save Energy and Money – Do Laundry in Cold Water

Laundry room
Image via Wikipedia

Don’t know how many of you use cold water for your laundry… but you should.  Most laundry detergents today work just fine in cold water, and you will save energy – therfore money – by not having to heat the water for your wash.  For a family, this can really add up – and not heating the laundry water can really reduce your energy bills.  By all means switch over.  We did so long ago (maybe 20+ years), and I couldn’t even begin to tell you how much money we are saving this way – but I know it helps!

As you combine these savings with compact fluorescent or L.E.D. bulbs  your energy savings – and the savings on your energy bills – will continue to grow.  (I have been changing over to CFL bulbs for years, and we now have more than 30 CFLs in our house.  I’ll continue to change them over until almost all of them are converted.  Because of the slow “coming up to full brilliance” of CFL bulbs, especially as they get older, you may find it desireable to leave a few bulbs as regular incandescent, but get as many over to CFL as you can.  You’ll save energy for the planet, and save on your utility bills.

And if you are thinkng about how to add solar and wind power to your home, here is a great book.  I especially like this one because Michael shows you great sources for solar panels, generators, batteries, etc. and many of them are at very low or even NO cost – cool!

In case you think I am a tree hugger who believes the hard core greenies who say New York will be under water shortly, I’m not.  I advocate the most efficient use of the world’s natural resources.  Consult the preamble to the U.S. constitution where is says, ” … for ourselves and our posterity,” (emphasis mine).  We owe it to our children and their children to leave the world, hopefully, better than we found it.  This means using the most efficient transportation that is practical, and using as little energy as possible.  If each of us does as much as possible, it all adds up.  Don’t let our governments regulate us to this – they’ll ruin it and our lives in the process – let’s do it ourselves!

For more energy saving tips – over 110 of them – take a look at Easy-Energy-Saving-Home.com.

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