this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2026
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Fuck fossil fuels.

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[โ€“] vandsjov@feddit.dk 2 points 8 hours ago (2 children)

We have just converted from a gas furnace to a heat pump. It took a day. Connected to the existing heating system (water radiators and under floor) and hot water pipes. I know you wanted an ethanol solution, however, the electricity route combined with solar cells (like we have) makes it cheap to run.

[โ€“] ApocolypticGopher@infosec.pub 1 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

Currently on an oil system that uses baseboard radiators throughout the house. Didn't realize a heat pump could potentially tie into the same system but am going to look into it now. Anything to watch out for in your experience?

[โ€“] JoeBigelow@lemmy.ca 1 points 6 hours ago

It's cool that you had liquid based heating a heat pump could tie into, but most of new England is heated by forced hot air systems that don't tie in the same way. Most heat pump installs around here, and there are a lot, are mostly for cooling and supplemental heating. Having to install an interior unit usually winds them up near the ceiling so the more expensive cooling can fall and cool more efficiently, at the decrease of heating efficiency because it rises. Also, until pretty recently a heat pump was basically no good below zero ยฐf, lots of people still have those units and still need heat in the winter. I resolutely think B20 (20% biodiesel mix) is a great solution for current heating prices, and think a state sponsored program to install the necessary upgrades to burn B50 and get production up to scale would be a really good investment. Big changes are great if you can afford them, but those aren't the folks I'm talking about. I'm talking about folks using HEAP benefits, people who scrounge up the $450 for a 100 gallon minimum delivery and keep a couple jugs of off-road diesel on hand in case the tank runs dry on a cold day. People that know how to bleed and reignite their furnace without calling the guy, because they've had to do it 5 times a winter because keeping oil in the tank means not eating and the stove burns propane, which is already paid for and makes heat too.

Sorry, I've had some pretty fucking desperate Maine winters in my years up here.