Then maybe you should focus the heat where it's needed?My garage is the common entry point for the city water for my row of townhouses. There's 8 units worth of exposed water piping in there... So not heating it is definitely not an option!
Then maybe you should focus the heat where it's needed?My garage is the common entry point for the city water for my row of townhouses. There's 8 units worth of exposed water piping in there... So not heating it is definitely not an option!
Heh, well, no justice I guess. My pipes are in there too.
My garage is the common entry point for the city water for my row of townhouses. There's 8 units worth of exposed water piping in there... So not heating it is definitely not an option!
Smart meter, so every bill is actual.
It's funny you mention the block heater. We powered 2 block heaters like crazy last year since we had no garage, and this year I haven't plugged in once thanks to the garage.
I did not mean to have it set to 20 celsius when I bought the place--it was preset by the builder and in the chaos of a new place I never thought about it. It's set to 10 now and my bill is still astronomical.
My garage is the common entry point for the city water for my row of townhouses. There's 8 units worth of exposed water piping in there... So not heating it is definitely not an option!
All you need is some heat on the water pipe, not the whole garage. Why the hell is the watermain in the garage in the first place? The are supposed to be below freezing line, i.e. in your basement.
My garage is semi below grade--it's below grade on 2 sides and against the neighbour on one. So it's sort of a basement.
I am going to think about the pipe tracers you guys are mentioning. A $300 power bill isn't really viable for us.
Check for extension cords going to a neighbors or to a camper or to a homeless camp.
Could also look at putting some kind of heat strip along the pipe, then wrap with insulation. Include a small thermal sensor so that the heat strip only goes on if it reads less than 3 or so degrees. It's weird they would put pipes in the garage though. I don't even know if that's code.
OP, go to Princess Auto and buy their $13 clamp-on ammeter, take the cover off your panel, and check each wire where it comes out of the breaker. All it takes is an over-tightened clamp or otherwise failed insulation to have a constant drain.