Saturday, July 5, 2008

25 new messages in 6 topics - digest

misc.consumers.frugal-living
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living?hl=en

misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com

Today's topics:

* Electricity cost breakdown in average USA home - 8 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/21766bdce8117f83?hl=en
* Bush STILL Pushing Increasing U.S. Population - 3 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/abca4c0b7df632ec?hl=en
* McDonald's free wifi - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/f18d134b2385fd64?hl=en
* Surviving high heating oil prices - 10 messages, 8 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/a184bef53e828bc7?hl=en
* DTV Converter box major snafu in the US - 2 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/5479512ec399c625?hl=en
* Donating blood - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/51be6adc7412e820?hl=en

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Electricity cost breakdown in average USA home
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/21766bdce8117f83?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 2:30 pm
From: jeeppintom@webtv.net (Tommy)


I'll take that cheap coal power. Your power come from Harrisburg? I
snapped a pic of 3 mile Island flying out of there a few years ago.
Beautiful country between there, and Lancatser.

== 2 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 2:46 pm
From: clams_casino


Tommy wrote:

>With a June electric bill of a wopping $76.74 at 920 kwh in a all
>electric 1675 square foot air conditioned summertime home.
>
>

I'm envious. I just got my June bill - $78.54 for 512 KWh (15.3
cents/Kwh).

== 3 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 2:58 pm
From: jeeppintom@webtv.net (Tommy)


Dang you have done real well on your KWH's. Any details???

== 4 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:28 pm
From: "Rod Speed"


Tommy <jeeppintom@webtv.net> wrote

> You say I'm stupid, and silly.

You quite sure you aint one of those rocket scientist silly stupids ?

> That is you talking.

You quite sure you aint one of those rocket scientist silly stupids ?

> You absolutely dissected the crap out of Dons helpful post.

You quite sure you aint one of those rocket scientist silly stupids ?

> You must be a regular here,

You quite sure you aint one of those rocket scientist silly stupids ?

> theres one or ten in every group like you.

And plenty of fools like you, too.

> Tips, and positive remarks from people like Don has helped me out allot.

Your problem.

> With a June electric bill of a wopping $76.74 at 920 kwh in a
> all electric 1675 square foot air conditioned summertime home.

House, actually.

> That includes a environmental surcharge of $3.45 Next bill usage is around
> 650 KWH somewhere. NOT DONE YET with the electrical savings that is.

Irrelevant to the point I made that it makes no sense to be farting around
with trivial stuff that consumes very little power like cellphone chargers.

> Heck Rod let me ship you a dozen CFL's @ 13 watts each.

No thanks, I get free ones locally.

> They will be free to you, and be significantly cost effective.

Nope, because I spend bugger all on powering my lights.


== 5 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 4:08 pm
From: clams_casino


Tommy wrote:

>Dang you have done real well on your KWH's. Any details???
>
>
>
Air hasn't been a big factor..... yet (RI climate - was relatively cool
in June). Cut off date was 6/26.

We do tend to keep lighting under control & don't cook all that much
anymore. Most usage is probably the frig, washer / dryer and
computer. Gas hot water / No freezer / No kids (at home).

I installed a number of the low wattage bulbs last year, although I'm
not sure our usage has significantly dropped (not really showing up in
the monthly averages).

== 6 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 4:19 pm
From: clams_casino


clams_casino wrote:

> Tommy wrote:
>
>> Dang you have done real well on your KWH's. Any details???
>>
>>
>>
> Air hasn't been a big factor..... yet (RI climate - was relatively
> cool in June). Cut off date was 6/26.
>
> We do tend to keep lighting under control & don't cook all that
> much anymore. Most usage is probably the frig, washer / dryer and
> computer. Gas hot water / No freezer / No kids (at home).
>
> I installed a number of the low wattage bulbs last year, although
> I'm not sure our usage has significantly dropped (not really showing
> up in the monthly averages).


I should have added that we have 2x6 construction (extra insulation) and
the south side (back) is well shaded from noon on.

== 7 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 6:40 pm
From: clams_casino


clams_casino wrote:

> Tommy wrote:
>
>> With a June electric bill of a wopping $76.74 at 920 kwh in a all
>> electric 1675 square foot air conditioned summertime home.
>>
>>
>
> I'm envious. I just got my June bill - $78.54 for 512 KWh (15.3
> cents/Kwh).


and this power company is requesting a 21% rate hike.

== 8 of 8 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 8:59 pm
From: jeeppintom@webtv.net (Tommy)


Chatted with some people today that knows you. It was very easy to read
your book cover, and they filled in the pages.

How many groups do you screw up???


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Bush STILL Pushing Increasing U.S. Population
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/abca4c0b7df632ec?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 2:56 pm
From: OrangeSFO


Republicans...they want more babies...but they don't want anyone to
fuck.

== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:26 pm
From: "Clave"


"OrangeSFO" <intangible103@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:90472b84-f3a1-47b0-911d-b1f2fe121e2b@i76g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>
> Republicans...they want more babies...but they don't want anyone to
> fuck.

Nonsense. They just don't want women to enjoy it.

Jim

== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:05 pm
From: "Lord Gow333, Conservative Fullback!"

"Clave" <ClaviusNoSpamDammit@cablespeed.com> wrote in message
news:W6-dnTvT1pK7aPLVnZ2dnUVZ_r7inZ2d@cablespeedwa.com...
> "OrangeSFO" <intangible103@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> news:90472b84-f3a1-47b0-911d-b1f2fe121e2b@i76g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>>
>> Republicans...they want more babies...but they don't want anyone to
>> fuck.
>
> Nonsense. They just don't want women to enjoy it.

Completely wrong. They want all couples to be married before having sex,
thereby ensuring that the MAN won't enjoy it.

LG
--
Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently. - Henry Ford


==============================================================================
TOPIC: McDonald's free wifi
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/f18d134b2385fd64?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:37 pm
From: max


In article <20080705134204.ffb4ea97.noway@nohow.not>,
Dave <noway@nohow.not> wrote:

> If you are interested in free wifi, there are several chains that offer
> truly free wifi. Panera bread for example. But don't bother with
> McDonald's, it is not free.

I'd like to reiterate, in case anyone missed it: PANERA WIFI IS FREE!
No BS, works great.

<http://www.wififreespot.com/il.html> is a goo starting place. Not
wholly up-to-date (i.e. it doesn't list all the Panera locations), but
useful. Most public libraries have free wifi.

--
This signature can be appended to your outgoing mesages. Many people include in
their signatures contact information, and perhaps a joke or quotation.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Surviving high heating oil prices
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/a184bef53e828bc7?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:57 pm
From: BeaForoni


On Jul 4, 12:11 pm, "Rod Speed" <rod.speed....@gmail.com> AKA Sambo
spewed:

>
> Then he's a fool that doesnt have a clue.
>
More commie nonsense


> Thats just plain wrong.
>
Again you don't know what you are taking about.


>
> And that is just plain wrong too.
>
Nothing but a bare face lie


> Nope.
>
Yep


.
>
> Nope.

Yep
.
>
> Waste of time, he clearly doesnt have a clue.

You are a bald faced PIG liar.

Gowd, this is so much fun! And I even feel smarter. How about everyone
else; do I seem smart?


== 2 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 4:33 pm
From: krw


In article <MPG.22d91b5db066957a98b6f6@news.individual.net>,
the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm says...
> Fri, 04 Jul 2008 22:17:02 -0700 from Tim Smith <reply_in_group@mouse-
> potato.com>:
> > In article <MPG.22d7fc27b4a0188d98b6f2@news.individual.net>,
> > Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm> wrote:
> > > My understanding is that the furnace uses less fuel overall to keep
> > > the water in the heating pipes at a constant temperature than to let
> > > it cool down by 10 or 15 degrees in the day time (when I'm at work)
> > > and the night (when I'm in bed) and then reheat it.
> > >
> > > My understanding is that this is true for hot-water heat but not for
> > > forced-air, since it takes much less energy to heat air than water.
> >
> > In general, if you have something that you need to be above ambient
> > temperature at time 1 and at time 2, it takes more energy to keep it at
> > that temperature than it does to let it cool after time 1, and heat it
> > back to the desired temperature at time 2.
> [snip logical explanation]
>
> Yes, that makes perfect sense -- basic thermodynamics.
>
> The problem, and the difference between physics and engineering :-)
> is that no device is not 100% efficient. What I don't know is how
> that affects things.

"Efficency" of the mass doesn't matter. The heat used is
proportional to the difference in temperature between inside and
outside only. Any energy you put into latent heat will come back
later. Though as Stan points out that a longer running fire would
likely be more efficient.

> I also wonder about effects on the house structure of letting the
> indoor temperature fluctuate 10 or 15 degrees twice a day. And I
> wonder about mold too -- maybe I misremembered what my mold guy said
> and it's just that he said to keep the temp above 65 to prevent mold
> formation -- though presumably that's more of an issue in spring and
> fall since winter humidity is too low for mold.

As long as you don't get condensation mold shouldn't be an issue.
The issue here would be the minimum temperature not the difference.
However, there are things in the house that might not like the
constant temperature and humidity variation. IOW, there may be
other reasons to not go wild here.


> It's not a simple question. The answer could well turn out to be,
> "yes, setting back the temperature uses less energy, but it's worse
> because ..."

Ok, find the "..." and we'll listen. So far, the cost argument
isn't cutting it. ;-)

--
Keith

== 3 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:49 pm
From: hchickpea@hotmail.com


On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 22:42:48 -0400, "JonquilJan" <ward39@imcnet.net>
wrote:

>wondering about heating this next winter. right now, I have forced air with
>a propane furnace. Furnace new this past season. Very old house (pre 1850)
>which has been insulated as much as possible (vertical very thick plank
>walls - would have to build stud wall on the inside to put in more
>insulation )
>
>thinking of closing off more than I have already (2nd floor entirely closed
>off) and using heavy drapes/curtain/blankets to enclose the living room and
>adjacent bedroom - which would be the only rooms with open registers - other
>than the bathroom - and supplementing with a kerosene heater (which I have
>had for 25 years). But considering that the rooms would be closed/curtained
>off - with reduced air flow - thinking also one of the oil filled electric
>heater might be safer. If power goes (which it can) would open the curtains
>and use the kero heater. Last winter I had the thermostat at 64. I am
>disabled - 69 - and having increasing problems with mobility and keeping
>warm.
>
>Pay about $4000 a year for propane - heat and cooking only. Hot water
>heater is electric - new at the same time as the furnace - and has only
>raised my electric bill about $10 a month - so far. I expect propane will
>be much, much more costly this next heating season.
>
>Suggestions - ideas. I live in northern New York state.
>
>JonquilJan
>
>Learn something new every day
>As long as you are learning, you are living
>When you stop learning, you start dying
>

I hate to say it, but it might be time to consider a move to a house
that is more efficient. Sometimes there is only so much you can do.
If you have decreased mobility, can't deal with wood or coal, and have
essentially cordoned off the second floor, sounds like you might be a
prime candidate for such an extreme measure, and possibly even a move
south. I've been reading a bunch of stuff recently about solar
fluctuations, and I anticipate this winter to be *at least* as cold as
the last one.

In a Vermont forum, I mentioned early this year that there would be a
possibility of a lot of people trying to move south come November, due
to increased heating costs. I can vouch that north Alabama is a lot
warmer than northern New York state, has lower taxes, and has some
great people, like Gary.

Another option that you might consider if you are in a college area,
is to take on a boarder for the winter months, with the understanding
that they get the upstairs, and the rent is the cost of heating the
house.

If I was living back north, and had to stay in a house like that, and
had seriously limited resources, I would seriously consider building a
room within a room, where I would spend most of my time while at home.
A few rolls of insulation, some studs, some sheetrock and/or plastic,
and an electric heater and light and tv, comfy chair and bed. Let the
rest of the house drop into the 40s, scoot to the kitchen to cook, but
otherwise live in the heated small space. It would be cabin fever
time, but at least it would be survivable.

== 4 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 4:59 pm
From: Ron Peterson


On Jul 4, 9:42 pm, "JonquilJan" <war...@imcnet.net> wrote:

> Suggestions - ideas.  I live in northern New York state.

Convert to natural gas if you can.

Have you put in energy efficient windows?

--
Ron

== 5 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:32 pm
From: "h"

"Ron Peterson" <ron@shell.core.com> wrote in message
news:255f3a46-dfe1-4ec6-921a-5072b95031eb@r66g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
On Jul 4, 9:42 pm, "JonquilJan" <war...@imcnet.net> wrote:

> Suggestions - ideas. I live in northern New York state.

>Convert to natural gas if you can.

>Have you put in energy efficient windows?


I'm in upstate NY and natural gas is not an option (no gas lines here).
Propane would be the only alternative, and it's not that much less than oil,
especially once you factor in dumping a fairly new oil burning and
buying/installing the propane unit.

My house is slightly older than the OPs (about 1815), and we used about
$2,500 worth of oil last year for a 2000 sq ft house. Of course, I don't
heat much past 55F. We've insulated all we can and have brand new (2006)
sheathing, clapboards, windows, etc., and frankly, my very old house is much
better built and secure than any new econbox being built around here. Moving
to a "new" structure is not only not an option, it's not even smart. The OP
shouldn't even think about moving just yet.


== 6 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:18 pm
From: "JonquilJan"


Ron Peterson <ron@shell.core.com> wrote in message
news:255f3a46-dfe1-4ec6-921a-5072b95031eb@r66g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
On Jul 4, 9:42 pm, "JonquilJan" <war...@imcnet.net> wrote:

> >Suggestions - ideas. I live in northern New York state.

>Convert to natural gas if you can.

Not available.

>Have you put in energy efficient windows?

Don't have the funds for that. Use heavy drapes/blankets/old quilts.

JonquilJan

--
Ron

== 7 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:25 pm
From: "JonquilJan"


> If I was living back north, and had to stay in a house like that, and
> had seriously limited resources, I would seriously consider building a
> room within a room, where I would spend most of my time while at home.
> A few rolls of insulation, some studs, some sheetrock and/or plastic,
> and an electric heater and light and tv, comfy chair and bed. Let the
> rest of the house drop into the 40s, scoot to the kitchen to cook, but
> otherwise live in the heated small space. It would be cabin fever
> time, but at least it would be survivable.
>

Interesting point. I am considering something along that line with the
curtains and drapes. Big problem is heating the bathroom (and pipes) very
old house has weird setup. And not too thoughful additions (before my
purchase). As for cabin fever - been there - every winter when the weather
gets bad/icy and/or the car gets 'sick' and spends time at the mechanics (5
times last winter)

My snip took out mention of a college student/boarder. College is 15 miles
and is a local community college. Besides I have a lot of 'stuff' on the
second floor. Perhaps not important to others - but it's 'my' stuff.

JonquilJan a stubborn old lady.

Learn something new every day
As long as you are learning, you are living
When you stop learning, you start dying


== 8 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:05 pm
From: hchickpea@hotmail.com


On Sat, 5 Jul 2008 20:32:57 -0400, "h" <tmclone@searchmachine.com>
wrote:

>and frankly, my very old house is much
>better built and secure than any new econbox being built around here. Moving
>to a "new" structure is not only not an option, it's not even smart. The OP
>shouldn't even think about moving just yet.

I used to think that way. I also like DOS. Shit changes.

== 9 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 8:15 pm
From: gheston@hiwaay.net (Gary Heston)


In article <487012b8$0$21486$38cefb40@news.westelcom.com>,
JonquilJan <ward39@imcnet.net> wrote:

[room within a room]

>Interesting point. I am considering something along that line with the
>curtains and drapes. Big problem is heating the bathroom (and pipes) very
>old house has weird setup. And not too thoughful additions (before my
>purchase).

The plumbing can be helped with electric heat tapes (on the drains as well;
a ex-coworker had hers freeze in her apartment), and insulation where it's
possible.

> As for cabin fever - been there - every winter when the weather
>gets bad/icy and/or the car gets 'sick' and spends time at the mechanics (5
>times last winter)

Yes, the Internet isn't everything...

>My snip took out mention of a college student/boarder. College is 15 miles
>and is a local community college. Besides I have a lot of 'stuff' on the
>second floor. Perhaps not important to others - but it's 'my' stuff.

And you value your space. Reasonable.

>JonquilJan a stubborn old lady.

Which means you'll be around for quite a while longer. :-)


Gary

--
Gary Heston gheston@hiwaay.net

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/
"a member or members of Osama bin Ladens' Al Qaeda network, posing as
computer programmers, were able to gain employment at Microsoft..."
claim made by Mohammed Afroze Abdul Razzak to police in India, 12/01.

== 10 of 10 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 8:39 pm
From: WDS


On Jul 5, 7:49 pm, hchick...@hotmail.com wrote:
> In a Vermont forum, I mentioned early this year that there would be a
> possibility of a lot of people trying to move south come November, due
> to increased heating costs.  I can vouch that north Alabama is a lot
> warmer than northern New York state, has lower taxes, and has some
> great people, like Gary.

You can actually end up WORSE by doing that. A few years ago I worked
with some guys from southern California. They were complaining about
their heating bills and asked what mine (in Minnesota) was. When I
told them they didn't believe me because theirs were running 2x to 4x
mine. And that was in my old house which wasn't all that well
insulated. It had been a "cold" (for CA) winter and their houses
basically weren't insulated.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: DTV Converter box major snafu in the US
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/5479512ec399c625?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 6:14 pm
From: me@privacy.net (GordonD)


In article <7klv64pqgre916tloireq9nlj4b1l92lfr@4ax.com>, Dennis <dgw80@hotmail.com> wrote:
>On Sat, 5 Jul 2008 13:53:13 +0800, Dave <noway@nohow.not> wrote:
>
>>On Sat, 5 Jul 2008 05:31:40 -0700 (PDT)
>>James <j0069bond@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Do some boxes get better reception than others? I wonder if a more
>>> expensive box gets better results than the cheap one from Walmart.
>>
>>The short answer is NO.
>>
>>With digital, you either have picture or you don't. There's no
>>"better" reception. The processing of the video information is where
>>quality differences would lie. That is, one box might OUTPUT better
>>quality picture than another. BUT, these boxes are meant to be used on
>>older analog television sets. If there is a difference in video
>>quality from one DTV converter box to another, it will not be
>>noticeable when the monitor being used is analog. -Dave
>
>Gotta disagree here. There are differences between the performance of
>digital tuners built into different digital TVs and ATSC PC tuner
>cards. In some cases, different tuners running side-by-side from the
>same signal input can have significantly different performance. True,
>once locked on a signal the pictures are the same, but one may hold a
>given (marginal) station better, with fewer dropouts and glitches,
>than the other.
>
>I don't see why it would be any different with convertor boxes.
>
>
>Dennis (evil)

My personal experience also bears this out. I've tried Zenith, Magnavox and
Dish (DTVPal) boxes and both picture quality and number of stations recieved
varies significantly. The difference is noticeable even on a 20" Sony TV. The
Zenith picture quality and reception is far better than the other two, the
Dish has the poorest reception. Picture qulity between the Magnavox and Dish
is about equal.

GordonD

== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 8:18 pm
From: gheston@hiwaay.net (Gary Heston)


In article <48701715$0$10001$8ebe3a62@news.megabitz.net>,
GordonD <me@privacy.net> wrote:
[ ... ]
>My personal experience also bears this out. I've tried Zenith, Magnavox and
>Dish (DTVPal) boxes and both picture quality and number of stations recieved
>varies significantly. The difference is noticeable even on a 20" Sony TV. The
>Zenith picture quality and reception is far better than the other two, the
>Dish has the poorest reception. Picture qulity between the Magnavox and Dish
>is about equal.

What model Zenith converter box do you have?


Gary

--
Gary Heston gheston@hiwaay.net

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/
"a member or members of Osama bin Ladens' Al Qaeda network, posing as
computer programmers, were able to gain employment at Microsoft..."
claim made by Mohammed Afroze Abdul Razzak to police in India, 12/01.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Donating blood
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/51be6adc7412e820?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:27 pm
From: hchickpea@hotmail.com


On Wed, 2 Jul 2008 10:31:07 -0700 (PDT), val189
<gwehrenb@bellsouth.net> wrote:

> Ever thought about your psa score?
>
>Let me remind you of a friend who also boasted that he hadn't been to
>a doctor in 25 years - and died in bed one night - coronary - widow
>still angry that he might have prevented his untimely death.

Last time I checked, those weren't related...

People die. I once had the wife of a janitor accuse me of killing her
husband by asking him to do his job. He happened to die of a coronary
within a month of my supervising him.

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Google Groups: http://groups.google.com?hl=en

25 new messages in 9 topics - digest

misc.consumers.frugal-living
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living?hl=en

misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com

Today's topics:

* Surviving high heating oil prices - 13 messages, 10 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/a184bef53e828bc7?hl=en
* Electricity cost breakdown in average USA home - 3 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/21766bdce8117f83?hl=en
* 4th of July - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/fafc473fec279e21?hl=en
* returning electrical item to Argos - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/056c40394c1bbf63?hl=en
* DTV Converter box major snafu in the US - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/5479512ec399c625?hl=en
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http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/f18d134b2385fd64?hl=en
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http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/0e3aab1cbef19b22?hl=en
* Frugal place to get a 1996 Honda Civic repainted in SF Bay Area - 1 messages,
1 author
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* Bush STILL Pushing Increasing U.S. Population - 2 messages, 2 authors
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==============================================================================
TOPIC: Surviving high heating oil prices
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/a184bef53e828bc7?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 12:00 am
From: "Rod Speed"


Tim Smith <reply_in_group@mouse-potato.com> wrote:
> In article <MPG.22d7fc27b4a0188d98b6f2@news.individual.net>,
> Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm> wrote:
>> My understanding is that the furnace uses less fuel overall to keep
>> the water in the hating pipes at a constant temperature than to let
>> it cool down by 10 or 15 degrees in the day time (when I'm at work)
>> and the night (when I'm in bed) and then reheat it.
>>
>> My understanding is that this is true for hot-water heat but not for
>> forced-air, since it takes much less energy to heat air than water.
>
> In general, if you have something that you need to be above ambient
> temperature at time 1 and at time 2, it takes more energy to keep it
> at that temperature than it does to let it cool after time 1, and
> heat it back to the desired temperature at time 2.
>
> Here's how to see that. You need to know two facts of physics first.
>
> (1) Imagine the object surrounded by something that can measure the
> heat energy entering or exiting the object. You'll find that when
> heat energy leaves the object, the temperature goes down. When heat
> energy enters, the temperature goes up. You'll also find that there
> is a conservation law at work here. If the temperature is at a given
> temperature, and a given amount of heat energy leaves, then to get the
> object back to the original temperature, you have to put that amount
> of heat energy back.
>
> Basically, the temperature of the object is the integral of the heat
> flow over time.
>
> The important point here is that the temperature just depends on the
> net change in heat energy of the object.
>
> (2) The rate the object loses heat to its surroundings goes up as the
> temperature difference goes up. If the ambient temperature is, say,
> 50, and the object is 70, it will lose more heat energy per second
> than it would if the object temperature were 60.
>
> Putting these two together, let's do a thought experiment. We have
> two objects, both at, say, 70. The ambient temperature is 50.
>
> Object 1 we keep at a constant 70. Object 2 we allow to cool, until
> just before we need to use it again, and then we heat it back to 70.
>
> For object 1, it is at a constant 20 above ambient, so is losing heat
> at a constant rate. So, the total energy lost is the amount it loses
> per second at 70 times the number of seconds between time 1 and time
> 2. That's how much total energy our furnace has to put into the
> object to keep it at a constant 70 from time 1 to time 2.
>
> For object 2, it starts out at 20 above ambient, so in the first
> second it loses about as much energy as the first object. But we are
> letting it cool, so it gets colder. That slows the rate of heat loss
> slightly. In the second second, it loses slightly less energy than
> the first object. The advantage grows as time goes on. Finally,
> time 2 approaches, and we have to use the furnace to heat the object.
> The amount of heat we have to supply is exactly the amount it has
> lost since time 1, which is LESS than object 1 has lost.
>
> So, strictly from the viewpoint of energy required to have an object
> at, say, 70 at time 1 and at time 2, with an ambient temperature of
> 50, much less energy is required to let the object cool between time
> 1 and 2 and then heat it back to 70 at time 2, than just keeping it
> at a constant 70.

> However, it is possible that there could be other considerations in practice.

Yes, particularly with heat pump systems that are stupid enough
to turn on their aux electrical resistance heating when the outside
coils ice up when you try to pump too much heat when coming
back off the setback temp to the higher operating temp in the morning.

> If you had some kind of furnace that takes a while to reach full
> efficiency after startup, that could change things, depending on
> how much time is between time 1 and time 2.

There arent any where that makes as much difference
as the heat you saved with the setback temp.


== 2 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:36 am
From: Stan Brown


Sat, 5 Jul 2008 12:35:40 +1000 from Sambo <sambo@sambo.com>:
> This is from the stupid clown thats so stupid it cant even work out
> for itself that the industry wouldnt be flogging set back
> thermostats if they didnt work.

Right, because American business never sells us anything we don't
need.

--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA

http://OakRoadSystems.com
Shikata ga nai...

== 3 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:47 am
From: Stan Brown


Fri, 04 Jul 2008 22:17:02 -0700 from Tim Smith <reply_in_group@mouse-
potato.com>:
> In article <MPG.22d7fc27b4a0188d98b6f2@news.individual.net>,
> Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm> wrote:
> > My understanding is that the furnace uses less fuel overall to keep
> > the water in the heating pipes at a constant temperature than to let
> > it cool down by 10 or 15 degrees in the day time (when I'm at work)
> > and the night (when I'm in bed) and then reheat it.
> >
> > My understanding is that this is true for hot-water heat but not for
> > forced-air, since it takes much less energy to heat air than water.
>
> In general, if you have something that you need to be above ambient
> temperature at time 1 and at time 2, it takes more energy to keep it at
> that temperature than it does to let it cool after time 1, and heat it
> back to the desired temperature at time 2.
[snip logical explanation]

Yes, that makes perfect sense -- basic thermodynamics.

The problem, and the difference between physics and engineering :-)
is that no device is not 100% efficient. What I don't know is how
that affects things.

I also wonder about effects on the house structure of letting the
indoor temperature fluctuate 10 or 15 degrees twice a day. And I
wonder about mold too -- maybe I misremembered what my mold guy said
and it's just that he said to keep the temp above 65 to prevent mold
formation -- though presumably that's more of an issue in spring and
fall since winter humidity is too low for mold.

It's not a simple question. The answer could well turn out to be,
"yes, setting back the temperature uses less energy, but it's worse
because ..."

--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA

http://OakRoadSystems.com
Shikata ga nai...

== 4 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 3:53 am
From: "Sambo"


Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm> wrote:
> Sambo <sambo@sambo.com> wrote

>> This is from the stupid clown thats so stupid it cant even work out for itself
>> that the industry wouldnt be flogging set back thermostats if they didnt work.

> Right, because American business never sells us anything we don't need.

Presumably you actually are that stupid.


== 5 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 4:00 am
From: "Sambo"


Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm> wrote:
> Fri, 04 Jul 2008 22:17:02 -0700 from Tim Smith <reply_in_group@mouse-
> potato.com>:
>> In article <MPG.22d7fc27b4a0188d98b6f2@news.individual.net>,
>> Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm> wrote:
>>> My understanding is that the furnace uses less fuel overall to keep
>>> the water in the heating pipes at a constant temperature than to let
>>> it cool down by 10 or 15 degrees in the day time (when I'm at work)
>>> and the night (when I'm in bed) and then reheat it.
>>>
>>> My understanding is that this is true for hot-water heat but not for
>>> forced-air, since it takes much less energy to heat air than water.
>>
>> In general, if you have something that you need to be above ambient
>> temperature at time 1 and at time 2, it takes more energy to keep it
>> at that temperature than it does to let it cool after time 1, and
>> heat it back to the desired temperature at time 2.
> [snip logical explanation]
>
> Yes, that makes perfect sense -- basic thermodynamics.

> The problem, and the difference between physics and engineering :-)
> is that no device is not 100% efficient.

Doesnt need to be.

> What I don't know is how that affects things.

It should be obvious to anyone with a clue. The efficiency needs to be
worse by more than the setback saves to not be worth a setback, stupid.

> I also wonder about effects on the house structure of letting
> the indoor temperature fluctuate 10 or 15 degrees twice a day.

Its irrelevant to the reduced loss of heat with the lower setback temp.

> And I wonder about mold too -- maybe I misremembered what my mold guy said

That individual is completely irrelevant.

Even someone as stupid as you should be able to check the basics on mold and temperature using google.

> and it's just that he said to keep the temp above 65 to prevent mold formation

Mindlessly silly.

> -- though presumably that's more of an issue in spring
> and fall since winter humidity is too low for mold.

Gets sillier by the minute.

> It's not a simple question.

Yes it is and even someone as stupid as you should have noticed that the whole question
of setback has been discussed endlessly for more than a century or more now.

> The answer could well turn out to be, "yes, setting back the
> temperature uses less energy, but it's worse because ..."

Nope. If that was true, you wouldnt see so many authoritative
sources recommending the use of setback thermostats if you
care about the cost of running a heating system.


== 6 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 7:20 am
From: "Lou"

"JonquilJan" <ward39@imcnet.net> wrote in message
news:486ee098$0$75566$38cefb40@news.westelcom.com...
> wondering about heating this next winter. right now, I have forced air
> with
> a propane furnace. Furnace new this past season. Very old house (pre
> 1850)
> which has been insulated as much as possible (vertical very thick plank
> walls - would have to build stud wall on the inside to put in more
> insulation )
>
> thinking of closing off more than I have already (2nd floor entirely
> closed
> off) and using heavy drapes/curtain/blankets to enclose the living room
> and
> adjacent bedroom - which would be the only rooms with open registers -
> other
> than the bathroom - and supplementing with a kerosene heater (which I have
> had for 25 years). But considering that the rooms would be
> closed/curtained
> off - with reduced air flow - thinking also one of the oil filled electric
> heater might be safer. If power goes (which it can) would open the
> curtains
> and use the kero heater. Last winter I had the thermostat at 64. I am
> disabled - 69 - and having increasing problems with mobility and keeping
> warm.
>
> Pay about $4000 a year for propane - heat and cooking only. Hot water
> heater is electric - new at the same time as the furnace - and has only
> raised my electric bill about $10 a month - so far. I expect propane will
> be much, much more costly this next heating season.
>
> Suggestions - ideas. I live in northern New York state.

One of the things I find useful is an electric throw. This is essentially a
small electric blanket you put over your lap and down to the floor when
you're sitting down. They generally have three or four settings - off, low,
medium, and high. Using one, you can have the room quite cool and still be
comfortable, and they don't use much electricity.

These things were pretty popular a decade or two ago, though I haven't seen
one for sale for quite a while. On the other hand, I have mine and haven't
had to look. I suppose you could use a regular electric blanket the same
way.

Another item that was popular during the energy crisis days of the 70's was
a lightweight quilt with a few strategically placed buttons/snaps that
allowed you to wear it sort of like a serape with a hood. Didn't use any
electricity.

Basically, look for ways to warm you instead of the house.
>
> JonquilJan
>
> Learn something new every day
> As long as you are learning, you are living
> When you stop learning, you start dying
>
>


== 7 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 7:50 am
From: "Bill"


"JonquilJan" wrote in message
> wondering about heating this next winter. right now, I have forced air
> with
> a propane furnace. Furnace new this past season. Very old house (pre
> 1850)
> which has been insulated as much as possible (vertical very thick plank
> walls - would have to build stud wall on the inside to put in more
> insulation )
>
> thinking of closing off more than I have already (2nd floor entirely
> closed
> off)...
>

Insulate the 2nd level from the first level.

I did this by tearing out my 1st level ceiling and adding insulation, then
replacing the ceiling.

You can do this on the cheap by just laying insulation on the 2nd level
floor. Or cheaper would be to get many boxes filled with those packing
peanuts and placing them on the 2nd level floor.


== 8 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 7:55 am
From: Jeff


JonquilJan wrote:
> h <tmclone@searchmachine.com> wrote in message news:g4g11j$9ld$1@aioe.org...
>> "Dave" <noway@nohow.not> wrote in message
>> news:g4fvng$b8m$1@registered.motzarella.org...
>>> "Bill" <billnomailnospamx@yahoo.com> wrote in message
>>> news:6d1dc7FbbjqU1@mid.individual.net...
>>>> It seems heating oil prices for next winter are going through the roof!
>>>>
>>>> For those who can't pay, one way to survive this is to move two
> families
>>>> into one house. Then each pays half.
>>> How would that help? You'd still need the other house heated to at
> least
>>> 55F. So you might be saving about 20%, but what's the point?
>>>
>> Who heats their house to more than 55F-60F now?
>
> I do. Have the thermostat set at 64 - this past winter. With age (69) and
> disability/mobility problems increasing - just can't take the 58 I had it at
> a few years ago. I do layer clothing and frequently wear a knit hat. My
> very old home (pre 1850) has been insulated as much as possible - other than
> building a stud wall on the inside of the walls (vertical thick plank walls)
> can't do much more.

Is there any insulation in the walls? There's a variety of ways to do
this, the cheapest by far is blown in cellulose. I'm a huge fan of that
since I did my 1920 home.

Jeff

>
> JonquilJan
>
> Learn something new every day
> As long as you are learning, you are living
> When you stop learning, you start dying
>>
>
>

== 9 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:12 am
From: gheston@hiwaay.net (Gary Heston)


In article <486ee098$0$75566$38cefb40@news.westelcom.com>,
JonquilJan <ward39@imcnet.net> wrote:
>wondering about heating this next winter. right now, I have forced air with
>a propane furnace. Furnace new this past season. Very old house (pre 1850)
>which has been insulated as much as possible (vertical very thick plank
>walls - would have to build stud wall on the inside to put in more
>insulation )

>thinking of closing off more than I have already (2nd floor entirely closed
>off) and using heavy drapes/curtain/blankets to enclose the living room and
>adjacent bedroom

I suppose you could carpet the walls; a layer of Tyvek HomeWrap under it would
cut down on air infiltration and not cause moisture buildup.

> - which would be the only rooms with open registers - other
>than the bathroom - and supplementing with a kerosene heater (which I have
>had for 25 years). But considering that the rooms would be closed/curtained
>off - with reduced air flow - thinking also one of the oil filled electric
>heater might be safer. If power goes (which it can) would open the curtains
>and use the kero heater. Last winter I had the thermostat at 64. I am
>disabled - 69 - and having increasing problems with mobility and keeping
>warm.

Have you considered radiant floor heat, something like these:

http://www.suntouch.com/underfloor/

http://www.heatizon.com/products/radiant-floor-heating/retrofit

http://www.warmzone.com/retrofit-radiant-heat.asp

These are a few results from searching for "radiant floor heat retrofit
electric"; there are many more options.

Radiant floor heating keeps your feet warm, a major comfort factor in
cold weather.

>Pay about $4000 a year for propane - heat and cooking only. Hot water
>heater is electric - new at the same time as the furnace - and has only
>raised my electric bill about $10 a month - so far. I expect propane will
>be much, much more costly this next heating season.

>Suggestions - ideas. I live in northern New York state.

Cover your windows with clear shrink film; caulk around door and window
frames (if you're not already doing so).


Gary

--
Gary Heston gheston@hiwaay.net

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/
"a member or members of Osama bin Ladens' Al Qaeda network, posing as
computer programmers, were able to gain employment at Microsoft..."
claim made by Mohammed Afroze Abdul Razzak to police in India, 12/01.

== 10 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:22 am
From: gheston@hiwaay.net (Gary Heston)


In article <xNWdnUjHecDLFvLVnZ2dnUVZ_hudnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
Jeff <jeff@spam_me_not.com> wrote:
>JonquilJan wrote:
[ ... ]
>> I do. Have the thermostat set at 64 - this past winter. With age (69) and
>> disability/mobility problems increasing - just can't take the 58 I had it at
>> a few years ago. I do layer clothing and frequently wear a knit hat. My
>> very old home (pre 1850) has been insulated as much as possible - other than
>> building a stud wall on the inside of the walls (vertical thick plank walls)
>> can't do much more.

>Is there any insulation in the walls? There's a variety of ways to do
>this, the cheapest by far is blown in cellulose. I'm a huge fan of that
>since I did my 1920 home.

You can't put insulation into "thick plank walls", they're solid wood.

Now, if you want to go build the stud walls on the inside of the planks,
as Jan indicated would be necessary, then install insulation and drywall,
at your expense, I suspect Jan would be glad to hear from you.


Gary

--
Gary Heston gheston@hiwaay.net

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/
"a member or members of Osama bin Ladens' Al Qaeda network, posing as
computer programmers, were able to gain employment at Microsoft..."
claim made by Mohammed Afroze Abdul Razzak to police in India, 12/01.

== 11 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:26 am
From: WDS


On Jul 4, 9:42 pm, "JonquilJan" <war...@imcnet.net> wrote:
> Pay about $4000 a year for propane - heat and cooking only.  Hot water
> heater is electric - new at the same time as the furnace - and has only
> raised my electric bill about $10 a month - so far.  I expect propane will
> be much, much more costly this next heating season.

Wow. $4k is about 2.5 years of propane for my house. I guess the
double walls and special windows pay off!

Can you get one of those thermal cameras to see where heat is
escaping? Check on air infiltration, that's always a problem with
older houses.

== 12 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:34 am
From: George


Bill wrote:
> "JonquilJan" wrote in message
>> wondering about heating this next winter. right now, I have forced air
>> with
>> a propane furnace. Furnace new this past season. Very old house (pre
>> 1850)
>> which has been insulated as much as possible (vertical very thick plank
>> walls - would have to build stud wall on the inside to put in more
>> insulation )
>>
>> thinking of closing off more than I have already (2nd floor entirely
>> closed
>> off)...
>>
>
> Insulate the 2nd level from the first level.
>
> I did this by tearing out my 1st level ceiling and adding insulation, then
> replacing the ceiling.
>
> You can do this on the cheap by just laying insulation on the 2nd level
> floor. Or cheaper would be to get many boxes filled with those packing
> peanuts and placing them on the 2nd level floor.
>
>
That is bad advice to use flammable foam peanuts in that fashion.

== 13 of 13 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:46 am
From: clams_casino


George wrote:

> Bill wrote:
>
>> "JonquilJan" wrote in message
>>
>>> wondering about heating this next winter. right now, I have forced
>>> air with
>>> a propane furnace. Furnace new this past season. Very old house
>>> (pre 1850)
>>> which has been insulated as much as possible (vertical very thick plank
>>> walls - would have to build stud wall on the inside to put in more
>>> insulation )
>>>
>>> thinking of closing off more than I have already (2nd floor entirely
>>> closed
>>> off)...
>>>
>>
>> Insulate the 2nd level from the first level.
>>
>> I did this by tearing out my 1st level ceiling and adding insulation,
>> then replacing the ceiling.
>>
>> You can do this on the cheap by just laying insulation on the 2nd
>> level floor. Or cheaper would be to get many boxes filled with those
>> packing peanuts and placing them on the 2nd level floor.
>>
> That is bad advice to use flammable foam peanuts in that fashion.


Could be a source of heat, for a few hours.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Electricity cost breakdown in average USA home
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/21766bdce8117f83?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 4:31 am
From: jeeppintom@webtv.net (Tommy)


Why split hairs on this? Yea, every home has something in it a little or
lot different. Now with most belts being tightened, people are waking
up, and getting a good dose of reality.


So with that old incadescent bulb in the attic that is rarely used can
wait to be replaced when burns out. Or maybe----oh crap honey, I left
that 100 watt incadescent light on since sometime back in the spring.


Tommy


== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 8:18 am
From: don@manx.misty.com (Don Klipstein)


In article <15012-486F5B96-1047@storefull-3113.bay.webtv.net>, Tommy wrote:
>Why split hairs on this? Yea, every home has something in it a little or
>lot different. Now with most belts being tightened, people are waking
>up, and getting a good dose of reality.
>
>So with that old incadescent bulb in the attic that is rarely used can
>wait to be replaced when burns out. Or maybe----oh crap honey, I left
>that 100 watt incadescent light on since sometime back in the spring.

If you have any lights that are prone to being left on once a room is
unoccupied, and there is little hope of getting the offenders to change,
there are those windup light timers that some apartment building laundry
rooms have.
Back when suntanning lamps used to be more available, many of those also
had such timers. I would think that electrical supply shops of the kind
that contractors go to have them.

- Don Klipstein (don@misty.com)

== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:38 am
From: George


Don Klipstein wrote:
> In article <15012-486F5B96-1047@storefull-3113.bay.webtv.net>, Tommy wrote:
>> Why split hairs on this? Yea, every home has something in it a little or
>> lot different. Now with most belts being tightened, people are waking
>> up, and getting a good dose of reality.
>>
>> So with that old incadescent bulb in the attic that is rarely used can
>> wait to be replaced when burns out. Or maybe----oh crap honey, I left
>> that 100 watt incadescent light on since sometime back in the spring.
>
> If you have any lights that are prone to being left on once a room is
> unoccupied, and there is little hope of getting the offenders to change,
> there are those windup light timers that some apartment building laundry
> rooms have.


Or use occupancy sensor switches. No one has to fumble to find and
figure out how to operate a timer switch and it will keep the lights on
as long at it "sees" someone.


> Back when suntanning lamps used to be more available, many of those also
> had such timers. I would think that electrical supply shops of the kind
> that contractors go to have them.
>
> - Don Klipstein (don@misty.com)


==============================================================================
TOPIC: 4th of July
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/fafc473fec279e21?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:26 am
From: Shawn Hirn


In article <zJqdnY4mbcxFjPLVnZ2dnUVZ_umdnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
"Nicik Name" <orbits@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

> Dead here...............
> Almost zero cars on road.
> Last nite and AM....
> Northeast USA.......
> Any?

I live adjacent to a popular park that runs along a river. The area was
jammed with cars when I got home at 10:30pm after spending the day with
friends. There was a free concert and fireworks in my area, which I
missed because of other plans, but it was so crowded with traffic, I
couldn't even drive down two of the three access roads to my apartment.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: returning electrical item to Argos
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/056c40394c1bbf63?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:27 am
From: Shawn Hirn


In article <g4kqci$e2r$1@registered.motzarella.org>,
"john west" <bluestar@mail.invalid> wrote:

> Needing a small battery charger for torch (flashlight) batteries, two
> members of our family bought one at nearly the same time as each other.
>
> Although not used the charger bought from Argos was taken out of its sealed
> packaging. We wish to return one since we dont need two; and the one from
> Argos is by far the easiest to return in terms of making a journey, and
> would also qualify for their 14 day return scheme.
>
> I have heard Argos customer services desk tell customers that to return
> electrical items, they must be;
> unused and unopened. Although not used, since it's unopened it would not
> be possible to prove it's not been used.
>
> Have I understood this situation correctly? Thanks for any advice on
> returning this charger to Argos.

Call the store and ask.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: DTV Converter box major snafu in the US
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/5479512ec399c625?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:31 am
From: James


Do some boxes get better reception than others? I wonder if a more
expensive box gets better results than the cheap one from Walmart.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: McDonald's free wifi
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/f18d134b2385fd64?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:42 am
From: James


Recently McDonald's has been advertising on radio their free wifi.
Anyone tried it yet? It takes me about $1 worth of gas for a round
trip to the closest Mc so I haven't tried it yet.

Cosidering the transportation cost it would probably be better to get
your own access at home if you need it daily.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Frugal/safe summer vacation tips
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/0e3aab1cbef19b22?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 5:45 am
From: Shawn Hirn


In article <daEbk.17128$Ri.1010@flpi146.ffdc.sbc.com>,
William Souden <souden@nospam.com> wrote:

> If you are arriving in the evening and leaving the next morning a
> Motel 6 is great.
>
> Often suburban hotels are cheaper than their city counterparts. In NY
> for example stay in Jersey and take a bus or train each day into the city.
>
> If you reserve directly with a hotel get a rate quote and then ask
> what the corporate rate is.
>
> When you go out leave the "Do Not Disturb" sign on the door and leave
> the tv on . This will discourage a thief.
>
> Never use the mini-bar in the room. Local liquor stores and mini-marts
> are cheaper.
>
> Want to experience dining at a top notch hotel? Try breakfast,
> especially if they have a buffet,
>
> Want a great restaurant? Try lunch instead of dinner.
>
> On interstates when you pull off and see Denny's, a Denny's clone,
> fast food and mini-mart and a sign saying "(name of town_________3
> miles" drive the three miles for a restaurant.

Some of these tips are pretty good, but the idea of leaving the do not
disturb sign on the door when you're out isn't anything I would do. One
of the benefits I like from staying in a hotel is that someone cleans up
after me and makes my bed. To discourage theft, simply don't travel with
belongings that would cause you grief were they to be stolen. Obviously,
you need clothing, toiletries, and maybe a laptop, but no one is going
to risk their job to steel clothing and toiletries. Your laptop can be
locked up at most hotels. What I do with my laptop is lock it with a
latch I have or stow it in the in-room safe.

== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 7:32 am
From: William Souden


Shawn Hirn wrote:
> In article <daEbk.17128$Ri.1010@flpi146.ffdc.sbc.com>,
> William Souden <souden@nospam.com> wrote:
>
>> If you are arriving in the evening and leaving the next morning a
>> Motel 6 is great.
>>
>> Often suburban hotels are cheaper than their city counterparts. In NY
>> for example stay in Jersey and take a bus or train each day into the city.
>>
>> If you reserve directly with a hotel get a rate quote and then ask
>> what the corporate rate is.
>>
>> When you go out leave the "Do Not Disturb" sign on the door and leave
>> the tv on . This will discourage a thief.
>>
>> Never use the mini-bar in the room. Local liquor stores and mini-marts
>> are cheaper.
>>
>> Want to experience dining at a top notch hotel? Try breakfast,
>> especially if they have a buffet,
>>
>> Want a great restaurant? Try lunch instead of dinner.
>>
>> On interstates when you pull off and see Denny's, a Denny's clone,
>> fast food and mini-mart and a sign saying "(name of town_________3
>> miles" drive the three miles for a restaurant.
>
> Some of these tips are pretty good, but the idea of leaving the do not
> disturb sign on the door when you're out isn't anything I would do. One
> of the benefits I like from staying in a hotel is that someone cleans up
> after me and makes my bed. To discourage theft, simply don't travel with
> belongings that would cause you grief were they to be stolen. Obviously,
> you need clothing, toiletries, and maybe a laptop, but no one is going
> to risk their job to steel clothing and toiletries. Your laptop can be
> locked up at most hotels. What I do with my laptop is lock it with a
> latch I have or stow it in the in-room safe.

I was not clear. I put the "Do Not Disturb" sing on after the room has
been cleaned. If need be I ask the cleaning person to do my room before
I head out for the day and tip a few dollars.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Frugal place to get a 1996 Honda Civic repainted in SF Bay Area
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/82aee8ea9bb96483?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 7:32 am
From: Bhoot Nath


The paint on my 1996 Honda Civic has started to peel off, due to
weathering effects. For the first 8 years, when as a family we had
only 1 car, it was housed in garage during night, and in open air/sun
during the day. For the last 6 years, however, it has been exposed to
the mild California weather all the time.

It has 180K miles, but because I have been doing all regular
maintenance, without fail, it runs perfectly. Never has given any
trouble, and the emission level is less than 2% of the California
allowable limits, so SMOG certificate is not a problem at all. Body
does have a few dings, but I am not interested in fixing that.

The value of the car is probably around $3500, and for the last 4
years, it has been driven only about 4K miles per year. My work
commute is just 1.5 miles, so I use the car mostly for weekend /
evening drives (eating out, groceries, picking child from day care,
etc.)

I got estimates for repainting from Cavallino Auto Shop, a reputable
place in Palo Alto, but that estimate is $5,600 -- clearly, I don't
need this level fancy painting, attention to detail while repainting.
I also took it to Maaco, and their estimate is $600 and $800.

I am having trouble deciding if I should go with Maaco (only 1 to 2
years warranty, but hey, the car is already quite old), or just don't
paint it at all (how quickly would it rust, if not repainted?). I
would appreciate recommendations to any other places in the SF Bay
Area (Fremont, Hayward, Palo Alto, San Jose, Redwood City, and in
between).

Bhoot Nath


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Bush STILL Pushing Increasing U.S. Population
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.consumers.frugal-living/browse_thread/thread/abca4c0b7df632ec?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 8:18 am
From: wismel@yahoo.com


On Sat, 5 Jul 2008 08:02:56 -0400, "Population Explosion"
<flatbush@prodigy.net> wrote:

>More Americans losing jobs daily and we can't pay for gas for gas in our
>cars in order to sit in traffic on our traffic jammed highways; and Bush
>welcomes more immigrants into America. Never mind that we need more people
>here like we need more air, water and habitat destruction; President Moron
>gets a photo-op. I'm only sorry that more people in the audience didn't yell
>for his impeachment. 198 more days and (please Lord) we'll be rid of him. Of
>course, he'll be replaced with someone who will want to throw open America's
>doors to even more legal and illegal "immigrants."
>
>
>Bush Welcomes New American Citizens
>Antiwar Demonstrators Interrupt Annual Naturalization Ceremony at Monticello
>
>Washington Post Staff Writer
>
>Saturday, July 5, 2008; Page A02
>
>CHARLOTTESVILLE, July 4 -- President Bush kicked off the Fourth of July at
>the hilltop estate of one of the nation's Founding Fathers, where he
>welcomed dozens of new American citizens from 30 countries.
>Bush's address Friday at the annual Independence Day naturalization ceremony
>at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello was immediately interrupted by a handful of
>antiwar demonstrators, one of whom repeatedly shouted, "Impeach Bush!" Bush,
>apparently unfazed, offered a holiday-appropriate response.
>"To my fellow citizens-to-be, we believe in free speech in the United States
>of America," Bush said to hearty applause.
>Six protesters, including one in a cartoonish Uncle Sam hat, were
>"voluntarily escorted" away from the crowd of 3,000, and no arrests were
>made, said Lee Catlin, a spokeswoman for Albemarle County.
>The citizenship ceremony has been held annually since 1963 outside
>Jefferson's colonnaded plantation home in the verdant Piedmont hills. Bush,
>the fourth U.S. president to address the event, lauded the "guiding
>principles" Jefferson laid out in the Declaration of Independence, saying
>they had long inspired immigrants like those gathered before him.
>"They've made America a melting pot of cultures from all across the world.
>They've made diversity one of the great strengths of our democracy," he
>said. "And all of us here today are here to honor and pay tribute to that
>great notion of America."
>The 74 new citizens (72 adults and two children) filed one by one across a
>sun-drenched stage, and they shook hands with their new president. There was
>Ali Hussain Al Asady, an Iraqi man with a small U.S. flag sticking out of
>one buttonhole of his striped shirt. There was Sawsan Mohamed El Fatih
>Zeyada, a Sudanese woman wearing a vibrant floral head scarf. And there was
>Julia White Freeman, a petite girl born eight years ago in China, who got
>more than a handshake: Bush lifted her off the ground and propped her on his
>hip.
>Julia, donning a red-white-and-blue dress tailor-made for the occasion,
>smiled sheepishly.
>"I knew already I was an American, but it just made me feel very good and
>different," Julia said after the ceremony, as she soaked in the atmosphere
>with her parents, John Freeman and Jennifer White of Charlottesville, and
>her sister, Emily, who, like Julia, was adopted from China. "I feel that
>it's very exciting."
>The experience was heady for other new citizens, too, all Virginia residents
>who seemed to realize that they were taking the oath under special
>circumstances. Many naturalization ceremonies occur in places such as
>federal courtrooms.
>It was inspiring for Zeyada, 40, a native of Khartoum who is studying for a
>master's degree and hopes to become a psychologist. She, like many others in
>the group, said she was "proud to be an American." But she said that when
>she looked at the cast on the stage -- Bush, Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine
>(D) and a gaggle of federal judges in black robes -- she saw her American
>dream for her four children, ages 7 to 12, who watched from the crowd.
>"My kids have a big chance here," she said, referring to the United States.
>She pointed toward the stage. "Those men up there, maybe they can be one of
>them."
>
The President of the United States of America is worthless. Same for
McCain and Obama. America needs a total rebuild.

ted

http://www.wvwnews.net/

Western Voices World News

http://www.newnation.com/

New Nation News

== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Sat, Jul 5 2008 9:40 am
From: "David E. Powell"


On Jul 5, 11:18 am, wis...@yahoo.com wrote:
> On Sat, 5 Jul 2008 08:02:56 -0400, "Population Explosion"
>
>
>
>
>
> <flatb...@prodigy.net> wrote:
> >More Americans losing jobs daily and we can't pay for gas for gas in our
> >cars in order to sit in traffic on our traffic jammed highways; and Bush
> >welcomes more immigrants into America. Never mind that we need more people
> >here like we need more air, water and habitat destruction; President Moron
> >gets a photo-op. I'm only sorry that more people in the audience didn't yell
> >for his impeachment. 198 more days and (please Lord) we'll be rid of him. Of
> >course, he'll be replaced with someone who will want to throw open America's
> >doors to even more legal and illegal "immigrants."
>
> >Bush Welcomes New American Citizens
> >Antiwar Demonstrators Interrupt Annual Naturalization Ceremony at Monticello
>
> >Washington Post Staff Writer
>
> >Saturday, July 5, 2008; Page A02
>
> >CHARLOTTESVILLE, July 4 -- President Bush kicked off the Fourth of July at
> >the hilltop estate of one of the nation's Founding Fathers, where he
> >welcomed dozens of new American citizens from 30 countries.
> >Bush's address Friday at the annual Independence Day naturalization ceremony
> >at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello was immediately interrupted by a handful of
> >antiwar demonstrators, one of whom repeatedly shouted, "Impeach Bush!" Bush,
> >apparently unfazed, offered a holiday-appropriate response.
> >"To my fellow citizens-to-be, we believe in free speech in the United States
> >of America," Bush said to hearty applause.
> >Six protesters, including one in a cartoonish Uncle Sam hat, were
> >"voluntarily escorted" away from the crowd of 3,000, and no arrests were
> >made, said Lee Catlin, a spokeswoman for Albemarle County.
> >The citizenship ceremony has been held annually since 1963 outside
> >Jefferson's colonnaded plantation home in the verdant Piedmont hills. Bush,
> >the fourth U.S. president to address the event, lauded the "guiding
> >principles" Jefferson laid out in the Declaration of Independence, saying
> >they had long inspired immigrants like those gathered before him.
> >"They've made America a melting pot of cultures from all across the world.
> >They've made diversity one of the great strengths of our democracy," he
> >said. "And all of us here today are here to honor and pay tribute to that
> >great notion of America."
> >The 74 new citizens (72 adults and two children) filed one by one across a
> >sun-drenched stage, and they shook hands with their new president. There was
> >Ali Hussain Al Asady, an Iraqi man with a small U.S. flag sticking out of
> >one buttonhole of his striped shirt. There was Sawsan Mohamed El Fatih
> >Zeyada, a Sudanese woman wearing a vibrant floral head scarf. And there was
> >Julia White Freeman, a petite girl born eight years ago in China, who got
> >more than a handshake: Bush lifted her off the ground and propped her on his
> >hip.
> >Julia, donning a red-white-and-blue dress tailor-made for the occasion,
> >smiled sheepishly.
> >"I knew already I was an American, but it just made me feel very good and
> >different," Julia said after the ceremony, as she soaked in the atmosphere
> >with her parents, John Freeman and Jennifer White of Charlottesville, and
> >her sister, Emily, who, like Julia, was adopted from China. "I feel that
> >it's very exciting."
> >The experience was heady for other new citizens, too, all Virginia residents
> >who seemed to realize that they were taking the oath under special
> >circumstances. Many naturalization ceremonies occur in places such as
> >federal courtrooms.
> >It was inspiring for Zeyada, 40, a native of Khartoum who is studying for a
> >master's degree and hopes to become a psychologist. She, like many others in
> >the group, said she was "proud to be an American." But she said that when
> >she looked at the cast on the stage -- Bush, Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine
> >(D) and a gaggle of federal judges in black robes -- she saw her American
> >dream for her four children, ages 7 to 12, who watched from the crowd.
> >"My kids have a big chance here," she said, referring to the United States.
> >She pointed toward the stage. "Those men up there, maybe they can be one of
> >them."
>
> The President of the United States of America is worthless. Same for
> McCain and Obama. America needs a total rebuild.


And what the fuck do you want to do? Decrease the population? How,
smart ass? Hey here's an idea, if you don't like it and don't like
people are free to have kids here, move and get out.

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