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Hi,
We’re seriously considering geothermal, and we’d love some
feedback on our particular situation and these potential contractors.
Our house is a 1941 brick cape cod with approximately 1400
finished square feet above. We have a basement, half finished, of about 850
square feet (so 425 finished). We’re currently using about 1200 gallons of
heating oil per year (about $4000 at today’s prices), plus about $440 in
electricity for our window units. We believe, based on these numbers, that the
house has basically no insulation. We have no ducts at this point.
We’re looking into the Keystone Help Whole House Geothermal
Loan program, which would require us to get a HERS energy audit and make other
envelope improving fixes like air sealing and insulation.
Here is what our potential geothermal contractors have
recommended:
1) Says
they do about 120 installations/ year.
a. Recommends
3 ton climatemaster Tranquility 2 stage system, with desuperheater and extra 52
gallon electric water heater, HONEYWELL FAN POWERED HUMIDIFIER
b. Cost
of 17308 PLUS drilling costs of approx 5850,
so a total of 23158.
2) Says
they do about 80 installations/ year
a. Recommends
2 ton Tranquility 27 2 stage system, 10 kw aux heat, Bradford White 50 Gallon
Electric Water Heater.
b. Proposal
is not specific about well depth etc
c. TOTAL
cost including drilling, 17880.
3) Says
they do about 75/ year
a. 25
years experience with geothermal
b. Recommends
2 ton WaterFurnace Envision series 2 speed, desuperheater with 50gallon
pre-heat tank, 8kw auxility heater
i.
2 ton loop, 300’ drilling with 600’ of 1.25” pipe in
the ground
c. Total
cost of $19741
4) Says
they do over 50/ year and have over 25/ yrs experience
a. Says
that a load calculation on the house revealed it needed a 6 ton unit, and he
didn’t recommend proceeding unless we get increased insulation. He dropped some
numbers that don’t make sense to me, but may to you: 24 degree balance point, 2nd
floor needs 12000 CFM.
5) Says
they do about 100/ year.
a. He
did geothermal for a friend of mine, and they are very happy with their system.
b. Presented
me with load calculation documents showing that I probably currently would need
a 5 ton unit. It shows a need of 72895 BTU heating and 41349 cooling, which
apparently corresponds well with what we’re currently spending.
c. He
recommended only doing geothermal if we can use the audit/ insulation to get
down to a 3 ton unit with more like 53806 BTU/heating and 26186/ cooling.
d. He
recommended a 3 ton Waterfurnace #NDV038, 2 stage, with desuperheater and 15kw
aux heat; Two 50 gallon water heaters, one as preheat buffer tank
e. Cost
of 20492 plus 3.4 ton of ground source heat exchanger (2- 260) using 1” high
density piping; he also provided me with a loop details report, though I’m not
sure which if any of those numbers might be useful to you guys
f.
Total cost of $27000
g. Recommends
zoning second floor because it will be tricky to get vents up there and will
probably not heat/ cool the same as the 1st floor (extra $1600)
Obviously there’s a great variance in recommendations and
costs here, from 17k for a 2 ton to 28k for a 3 ton. The last contractor gave
me the most information and generally impressed me with his knowledge and
expertise. If costs were equal, I’d certainly go with him. I’m inclined to
discount the 2 ton folks because, based on conversations with contractor 5, I
wonder if they really listened when I told them we were going through 1200
gallons of oil per year. Apparently, if our load really was 2 tons, we should
need a lot less than that.
Ideally, we’d get our energy audit and figure out what our
new load will be before deciding to do geothermal or not. Unfortunately, that’s
not the way this loan works; we need to decide and commit BEFORE the audit,
because we have to get a fancier (HERS) audit if we’re doing geothermal. We
plan to, at the very least, go ahead and get air sealing and insulation.
The reason I want to do this is that we’re spending
ridiculous money on oil, and we’re planning to stay in the house long term—probably
20+ years. At our current spending level, we’ll spend 44200 over 10 years. I
would rather invest that in geothermal and then pay substantially less in 10
years.
I am concerned, however, because if we go with the last
contractor and get our additional air sealing/insulation improvements, we may
be looking at $35k. At the loan rate of 3.875, this will cost us $350 per
month, or 4200/ year. Contractor 5 estimated our new energy costs at $1023/
year. He said this would be quite reliable since his numbers for our current
expenses were so dead on, and our friends who had them do their geothermal
system are spending about that per year. We could then deduct tax rebates (which I
calculate we’ll only be able to take 7500 of, since our tax liability isn’t
very substantial) and various energy rebates/ incentives to hopefully make the
cost comparable to what we’re spending now.
I’m mainly concerned because it looks like we can do this,
but the numbers need to be reliable. If
geothermal ends up costing us $2000/ year, so that we’re spending $6200/ year
for the loan and the energy costs, we’ll be in trouble. Our margin for error
here is small, so while I really want to get away from oil, I’m worried.
How likely do you think it is that oil prices will continue
to go up, at least pacing with inflation? That makes this a better investment.
How reliable are post- geothermal cost calculations if they
do a good load calc?
Should I discount the contractors who recommended 2 ton
units?
And any general recommendations you have.
In advance, thanks so much for your expertise.
Laura