lobadobadingdong
Lifer
- Aug 27, 2002
- 10,043
- 2
- 0
I live in a house built in 1900, (~1700 square feet w/12ft. ceilings) area rugs help immensly with cold floors (blankets spread around will do in a pinch) there is some plastic that can go over the glass of your windows that doesn't look as tacky as stapleing plastic over the whole window outside. Get a caulking gun and several tubes of clear silicon (the cheap stuff is fine) and use it anyplace visible that has drafts around the window frames (and the glass itself) in here garage/basement, there is some expanding foam called Great Stuff that works wonders in cracks, but it leaves a yellow foam behind that's not really pleasant to look at. get some foam tape to seal around the door jams, and if the door sweep is also letting in cold air she can use a towel to help block the wind from coming underneath the doors.
go to the kitchen and take out all the drawers and seal up those cracks with either Great Stuff (if there will be enough room for it to expand) or silicon.
check all the electrical plugs in the house, if you feel any breaze coming from them, take the cover off and use expanding foam (make sure it's the non-conductive kind) to fill in the box....be careful not to overfill the boxes!!!.
if she can afford it (doubt it after a 600 bill) get one of the $40 electronic thermistats and set it to automatically adjust the tempereature in her house (I saw a 15% drop in both my gas and electric bills using this thing) make sure her intake filters are clean (restrictive air flow will kill your furnace performance)
if she has no insulation, she should really thing about every pay check going to lowes/home depot and buying one roll at a time and slowly insulate the house. (don't put it on a credit card as that defeats the purpose)
I feel for you, but I've never had a gas bill over $300. currently after all the work to my house, it's around $200 durning the peak cold months.
go to the kitchen and take out all the drawers and seal up those cracks with either Great Stuff (if there will be enough room for it to expand) or silicon.
check all the electrical plugs in the house, if you feel any breaze coming from them, take the cover off and use expanding foam (make sure it's the non-conductive kind) to fill in the box....be careful not to overfill the boxes!!!.
if she can afford it (doubt it after a 600 bill) get one of the $40 electronic thermistats and set it to automatically adjust the tempereature in her house (I saw a 15% drop in both my gas and electric bills using this thing) make sure her intake filters are clean (restrictive air flow will kill your furnace performance)
if she has no insulation, she should really thing about every pay check going to lowes/home depot and buying one roll at a time and slowly insulate the house. (don't put it on a credit card as that defeats the purpose)
I feel for you, but I've never had a gas bill over $300. currently after all the work to my house, it's around $200 durning the peak cold months.