The mere mention of the word smart meter, has me rolling around laughing! Billions have been wasted on these devices & still 2 million of them remain inoperative. My father changed to a cheaper tariff with a new supplier & the smart meter would no longer work. Suppliers think I'm going to pay to power the thing on & allow it to use my Wi-Fi signal so that they can save millions & pay directors millions in interest free loans & bonuses!
@@nigelsmith6413 we are still using the same amount of power with or without it,it's just going to tell you in £'s how much BUT is that like now with a non smart but digital one ????
When prices first went through the roof, I did an experiment so that I didn't have to worry about being able to afford the bill. I have a 1 bedroom bungalow.... I put the central heating on 19 for 2 hours in the morning and 6 hours over the course of the day (wasn't warm, just took the chill off) and using the smart meters, I could see that the total amount spent for that day (inc Electric) was £13 something, for 1 DAY.... So I went out that day and bought a Zanussi Oil Filled Rad, I turned the central heating off and just used the Rad in the 1 room I was in (bedroom). I left it on for 24 hours (got too hot at about 24 degs) and the total cost for gas and electric for that day was £7 something, so since then, I just use the oil rad, no Gas (apart from hot water and cooking). I look forward to a day where I can go back to putting the Central heating on without having to worry, but I don't think that day will ever come, shareholders need their payouts right ???
NOT TRUE.....my bedroom is 20 square metres and as I said before, it heats it up to around 23 to 24 degs now. You just have to get the right rad I guess. @@bikusmoto59
Thought I'd answered this at the time of posting, but it didn't go through by the looks of things....That isn't true, my room that I use it in is 4m by 4.2m, so I'd say medium size and the temp when using the oil heater is usually between 20 and 24degrees in the entire room, not just my legs ! @@bikusmoto59
We have a wall mounted a/c unit that works in reverse so it heats instead of cools when running steady uses 400 watts but gives out plenty of heat, it’s only compressing a gas and letting it expand again not heating an electric element so is cheaper to run. It gives out the equivalent of 3 1/2 times its consumption it is also thermostatically controlled so cuts in and out, I’ve got it set on 23 degrees this time of year and over a year using a/c when needed and heating in the winter (I turned it on in October and won’t turn it off until at least March) it has cost cost an average of £1 per day that includes the days when it is not used, I’m happy with that.
I have central heating but it is now to expensive to have on all winter like I used to. House temp was down to 7 c at the coldest point of last winter and not much above 10/12c during day. I just wrap up in loads of clothes during the day. Of a night to stop condensation building up on my bedroom walls I have a thermostatically controlled oil heater which I have on medium during the night. Although my bed has two duvet's and two fleece throws on it as well, I also have a small electric blanket. Coronary heart disease medication thins my blood and makes me quite cold otherwise. Ah getting old is such fun in this country. I wonder what temp Richie Sunack's indoor heated pool is at the moment!
It's also the fault of all the people who rushed to buy the British Gas 'Ask Sid' shares in the late 80s. That was the start of privatisation of our utilities, and now we are all paying the price. Sunak is just the current cheerleader for it.
Good on you Bill, don't forget the good old fashioned hot water bottle ! cheap and very effective. I recommend a dehumidifier in the winter months , even if it's just run for a couple of hours a day helps with condensation.
Guys just put your heating on for about an hour before bed and maybe 30 minutes in the morning, all other times use an electric over blanket, very cheap to run - I use the blanket straight on top of me and add a throw over it, gets lovely and toasty and only needs to be on a low to medium setting. We have a wood burning stove but even that proves costly to run all the time. Also about 3 loose layers of clothing help - so long sleeved cotton t shirt or vest (thermal ones are best) then a jumper then a gilet or a fleece top, make the last layer the loosest one x
Another thing that must be factored in is the cost of maintaining a gas-fired central heating system. I've lived in my present house for 23 years and in that time I've had the boiler replaced 3 times, a couple of 3-way valves failed, a couple of room thermostats, and the 3-way valve failed (again) a couple of months ago, so now I use the electric immersion heater for hot water. If you add up the cost of all these replacements, plus the cost of the annual boiler services, the resulting sum of money would have bought me a huge amount of electricity. ATM i have the CH set at 18*C with a 2 kW oil-filled radiator in my living room, which keeps it at a comfortable 21 - 22*C. The intangibles are that the gas CH is noisy in operation (particularly the pump) and the potential for leaks (dirty, smelly water). My boiler is up in the loft, at one point one of the other failed boilers sprang a leak, which saturated the plaster on the walls of the stairwell necessitating an expensive replastering job.
Interesting topic, I've only depended on oil filled electric rads when I lived in a bungalow with only an oil boiler. At worst in winter it was £300 in oil a month, the electric rads in that case where definitely cheaper. It was an really old oil boiler though, engineer said was 40% efficient. These days I rely on the gas central heating in a terrace house, there's a difference being end of terrace though with a gable exposed to the wind and cold. A good friends heating central heating system failed about a year ago, I lent him 2 of my old oil filled rads and he's happily using them to heat the house. Because of the high temp he maintains, I doubt very much that it's cheaper, but he's loathed to pay £1000 to get the central heating system repaired.
I swapped my 3kw. Oil. Filled radiator with three towel rails with 750w total electric heating elements and the difference is incredible. it's the new "ceramic disc "heating elements. Great topic very little facts around
We have the central heating on all the time set at 19c as Mum feels the cold (95 yrs old) We used to have a radiator in the big room but over the years it became cooler and cooler (despite balancing and a complete system flush when we had a new boiler five years ago. I've now removed that radiator and replaced it with a similar sized electric ceramic radiator set to 20c (found them on Ideal World TV channel). It bumps the smart meter up into the orange when it switches on but its only drawing power for about twenty minutes and then it shuts off but continues getting hotter for about forty minutes until the cycle starts again. Overall its very economical to run compared to the oil filled ones. We actually have a second one still in its box - tomorrow we are having our solar panels installed - with 4.4kw of free power, No.2 can come 'online' as well!
Utter rubbish, the oil ones aren't cheap, I've got only electric in my property, predominantly storage heaters, old ones too! Used them one winter cost a fortune so never used again, bought a few oil filled electric and they were more expensive! So installed a woodburner! Electricity prices are disgusting, an efficient gas central heating system is cheaper to leave on constantly than stop start! Unfortunately no mainline gas here so.....🤷🏻♂️👍
@@andyjohnston4394 At which point in my comment did I say the oil filled radiators were cheap to run? I said we have a CERAMIC radiator which runs far cheaper than the oil ones!
An interesting comparison. I have gas central heating, but, now with the price rises, I only put it on for an hour in the morning and an hour in the evening. I use a 3 bar halogen electric heater in my sitting room, which quickly heats up the room and doesn't cost much to run. I bought a sheep's wool duvet which is lovely and warm and no need for an electric blanket, and I avoid condensation by keeping the bedroom window open a bit all the time. It's criminal that we have to make these choices though. It should be a human right to be able to stay comfortably warm for free or at a low cost.
@@dereton33 I doubt that you can go gas free to avoid the standing charge ? my understanding is that If you are connected to gas mains you have to pay standing charges even if you don't have any gas appliances? please correct me if I'm wrong, I have 1 gas fire, and manage all the electric heating/water on wifi systems. I have a portable oil electric heater which I sometimes use as a booster if needed when the temp really drops for a sustained period of time, and I agree it pumps out heat very quickly, and i think that is its advantage, it gets a cold room comfortable in a short space of time.
I'm using Dimplex oil free electric rads here. Looks the same but no oil. I brought a new Delonghi oil rad a few years back and it leaked oil all over the carpet after being on for a few hours new out the box. So no more oil rads in carpeted areas now anyway. Just got an older smaller Dimplex oil job in the kitchen that does the job. Key is to insulate and stop drafts to minimise heat loss. A well maintained gas central heating system is cheaper to run if you want a warm house over all. Or a heat pump conversion that been properly designed for the building & installed. £7500 grant helps with that one at the moment.
Quite a few variables on this one, possibly too many to give a definitive answer that will suit everyone. My tuppence-worth would be to experiment to find what suits your own individual circumstances.
An interesting one, I live in very rural Germany. we have 2 1500 litre tanks for heating oil (basically red diesel) we fill up maybe once every 2.5 to 3 years. currently it costs around 100 euros per 100 litres. The house is around 120 years old with big thick (1 metre plus) walls, we have 9 radiators in the house and winter temps are always 0 or below for the winter months. There has been a push to move to natural gas but our boiler is quite new so we can keep it, plus we get the bonus of still seeing a chimney sweep once a year. I would imagine this is still cheaper to run than most UK heating bills?
Those little oil radiators are great little things and do chuck out some heat. We've used one a few times and found them surprisingly good. I have no idea how cost effective they are though. The one thing that does worry me with them is how hot they get and I don't feel safe for my dog being too near them. I would be worried about them with little children too.
I use my oil filled radiators religiously & I have placed a fire guard in front of mine so the dogs & kids don’t get too close even though the kids know to stay away it’s better being safe 😊
If not too cold. Central heating on for 1 hr. I use a hot water bottle and a blanket. I'm out at work during day. If i need it on I'll keep heating on , but normally I'm fine.
Ive found that both are good. But if your boiler is efficient i use that in the morning and gone back to a old school calour gas fire for night times. With teenagers and kids they seem to want to come sit in the livingroom more and have family time. 1 bar is more than enough and will last me a month.
Hi Al, thank you for the information you gave me about a Drayton Activator 3way diverter , I changed the head as you instructed and all is well . I’m now going to have a go at moving and replacing 3 rads on the ground floor of my 3 bed semi , all pipe work to the rads drops from the ceiling joists and all three rads have a drain off although very antiquated, I have a Worcester Bosch Greenstar boiler in the loft which I believe to be called a condensing boiler as a plastic pipe runs to the outside down pipe . There is no small header tank anymore just a large cold water tank that services the cylinder and WC and cold water taps in the bathroom. To drain down the system do I just turn the boiler of and open the drain of valves as your drain down video explains ? . Is this a sealed heating system I have ? Regards, Dermot Kelly .
Hi.Off topic.. But I sent you a message in your video about the Magniclean.. Do you think it matters if it is installed downstairs beside the boiler or upstairs beside the hot water tank. Thanks
I think the idea is that having it right beside the boiler it protects the boiler from the muck in the pipes and extends its working life. Five years ago we had a new Vaillant gas boiler, it came with a 3 year guarantee but because we also had a Magnaclean installed at the same time, Vaillant automatically increases the guarantee period to 10 years.
1 kwh costs about 24p per hour. When their at operating temperature. They use about 860 w. About 20p per hour. I use one for about 5 hour in the evenings. Costs about £1 to £1.20 per day.
I live in a 1970's 2 bed bungalow. I have storage heaters. There is no gas in my village. My electricity bill last winter was £140 per week. I tried an electric oil filled rad in the lounge, regardless of cost, it was about as useful as a chocolate fire guard. I am currently installing an oil fire wet system.
@@dereton33 yes exactly. My dad works from home a lot days. So we keep the house at 18-19. And then just in his office is the small electric heater. It's warm in no time.
You only have to look at the cost per kwh for gas & electricity & gas wins every time. Fit TRV's on every radiator except the room you spend most time in & have the thermostat in that room. What I really want is a heating control which can be programmed to head individual rooms as required (why heat the bedroom between 08:00 & 23:00?). Yeah, I know you can get battery powered TRV's where the time can be set but people say the batteries last no time - why not a mains powered distribution manifold?
What about 1 bag of coal next to your tv .. then during the adverts and if you're felling cold just pick it up over your shoulder and walk back and fourth then you'll be sweating 😅😅😅
I don't have central heating in my one bed flat ...i have that warm air heating but i found that expensive plus it was making me ill....so i've got an oil filled heater in the front room and the bedroom....i don't have a smart meter ...i refuse to have one ...i have a key meter (it was here when i moved in over 12 years ago) and i can see exactly what i'm using by checking that lol...i've had the oil filled heaters a long time....they have lasted well, heats up the room nice and are definitely cheap to run...even in these times of cost of living crisis of electric companies overcharging us with their ridiculous price hikes!! Always good to see you Al x hope you both been keeping well...and warm!! x
I have a small oil heater for my extension (Garage size room) It was so cold the rads wouldn't get hot enough, so bought an oil heater, left it running over night and by morning it was about 20 degrees perfect temp, but suddenly started leaking Small drops randomly, so am wondering if there is anything better and cheaper to run?
Those oil heaters are great as a back up, but mine is has two settings of 1.5 kWh or 3 kwh per hour. Now that's going to be expensive at 84 pence an hour on hottest. Either way there will be a big fat turkey on the Christmas table for the energy supplier.
Old gas central heating boilers were about 60-70% efficient but modern condensing central heating boilers are about 92% efficient depending on your boiler - you will have some energy losses distributing the gas (low viscocity so not a lot). Electric heating you have losses at the generator, losses in transmission (you need to raise the voltage for transmission, pylons loose energy, then you need to reduce the voltage for consumption plus some losses from sub-station to your house) and potentially some EM losses at your electric radiator. The cost of gas is significantly cheaper per kW when compared with electricity. It would be interesting to sit down and work out what those losses are (possibly Google). I would expect gas to be more efficient because it is a primary energy source as opposed to electricity which is a secondary source). That’s my view as a Physicist.
We have experimented with running one electric heater in the room we are in vs running the whole central heating system. We find with current prices one room with electric is 60p an hour whereas to run the gas central heating is 80p an hour. Not a good deal to only heat one room in my opinion.
How many rooms do you have in total? I guess it isn't a good deal even if the answer is two rooms, but if you're talking 2 or 3 bedrooms, plus living room, kitchen, bathroom, maybe hallway or something like this, then it becomes a huge difference.
Even with a heat pump which produces 4kw heat from 1kw of electricity, gas is *still* cheaper. Even of you assume your boiler is loosing 15% of the heat throught the exhaust.... its still cheaper.
Electric only makes sense for a super insulated small proprety. It is lower installation cost and practically zero maintenance cost. However, if people are looking for the wrost of all worlds there are electric heat pumps.
during the cold times, i've been trying to keep my radiator on for only an hour or at least till it feels warm enough to turn it off. recent gas cost £192 :( i'm wondering if oil radiator could be a cheaper options. maybe someone can share their monthly rates comparison? either that or doing natural body heat by doing push ups and squads! :D
I find my oil filled radiator warms up the room lot faster vs the central gas heating. the oil radiator gets the temp to 22 deg in half hour vs gas heater which takes hours and never even reaches 22. Most it gets to is 18. I have bad insulation which is problematic. The oil radiator does the job given the conditions
I don’t like those oil filled radiators, they take a long time to heat a room. I had a few and got rid of them. All electric space heaters cost the same to run, because they are all almost 100% efficient (almost all electricity used goes into heat, less fan and electronics which is minimal). The best space heater for me is one that warms the room quickly. A far cheaper to use solution is to keep the house cooler and use an electric blanket for watching tv or any stationary activity. Same with sleeping, far cheaper to lower the thermostats and use electric blankets than keep a house warmer. Also, a $5 tube of calk can save hundreds $$$ in heating costs!
All electric heaters are 100pc efficient because all of the energy is converted to heat so it makes no difference which type it is. The only exception is a heat pump where its more than 100% efficient, and that's because its not creating heat its moving it. Typically they are between 3.5 and 4.5x more efficient than an electric heater. But.... gas is still cheaper even after all that.
The mere mention of the word smart meter, has me rolling around laughing! Billions have been wasted on these devices & still 2 million of them remain inoperative. My father changed to a cheaper tariff with a new supplier & the smart meter would no longer work. Suppliers think I'm going to pay to power the thing on & allow it to use my Wi-Fi signal so that they can save millions & pay directors millions in interest free loans & bonuses!
You really don’t understand how they will benefit the production of power.
@@nigelsmith6413 we are still using the same amount of power with or without it,it's just going to tell you in £'s how much BUT is that like now with a non smart but digital one ????
It’s more the data it provides to the grid.
A nice strong view point
Thanks everyone ☺️
When prices first went through the roof, I did an experiment so that I didn't have to worry about being able to afford the bill. I have a 1 bedroom bungalow....
I put the central heating on 19 for 2 hours in the morning and 6 hours over the course of the day (wasn't warm, just took the chill off) and using the smart meters, I could see that the total amount spent for that day (inc Electric) was £13 something, for 1 DAY....
So I went out that day and bought a Zanussi Oil Filled Rad, I turned the central heating off and just used the Rad in the 1 room I was in (bedroom). I left it on for 24 hours (got too hot at about 24 degs) and the total cost for gas and electric for that day was £7 something, so since then, I just use the oil rad, no Gas (apart from hot water and cooking).
I look forward to a day where I can go back to putting the Central heating on without having to worry, but I don't think that day will ever come, shareholders need their payouts right ???
Thanks for your comments 🙂
But an oil filled radiator only warms a very small area like your legs!
NOT TRUE.....my bedroom is 20 square metres and as I said before, it heats it up to around 23 to 24 degs now. You just have to get the right rad I guess. @@bikusmoto59
When I look at my annual gas and electricity consumption I can see 1kW of electricity is 3.5 times more expensive than 1kW of gas. Gas is far cheaper!
Thought I'd answered this at the time of posting, but it didn't go through by the looks of things....That isn't true, my room that I use it in is 4m by 4.2m, so I'd say medium size and the temp when using the oil heater is usually between 20 and 24degrees in the entire room, not just my legs ! @@bikusmoto59
This is not the future we dreamed of in the 1960s, that people in the U.K. in 2024 would be crippled by energy bills.
No but we sure got it. Successive governments have let us down all the way.
We have a wall mounted a/c unit that works in reverse so it heats instead of cools when running steady uses 400 watts but gives out plenty of heat, it’s only compressing a gas and letting it expand again not heating an electric element so is cheaper to run. It gives out the equivalent of 3 1/2 times its consumption it is also thermostatically controlled so cuts in and out, I’ve got it set on 23 degrees this time of year and over a year using a/c when needed and heating in the winter (I turned it on in October and won’t turn it off until at least March) it has cost cost an average of £1 per day that includes the days when it is not used, I’m happy with that.
Thanks for your informative comments.
I have central heating but it is now to expensive to have on all winter like I used to. House temp was down to 7 c at the coldest point of last winter and not much above 10/12c during day. I just wrap up in loads of clothes during the day. Of a night to stop condensation building up on my bedroom walls I have a thermostatically controlled oil heater which I have on medium during the night.
Although my bed has two duvet's and two fleece throws on it as well, I also have a small electric blanket. Coronary heart disease medication thins my blood and makes me quite cold otherwise. Ah getting old is such fun in this country.
I wonder what temp Richie Sunack's indoor heated pool is at the moment!
Great all round comment Bill!
Some great stuff there. Love it.
It's also the fault of all the people who rushed to buy the British Gas 'Ask Sid' shares in the late 80s. That was the start of privatisation of our utilities, and now we are all paying the price. Sunak is just the current cheerleader for it.
His swimming pool will be about 30 degrees, like bath water...don't want him to get into a cold pool now...
Good on you Bill, don't forget the good old fashioned hot water bottle ! cheap and very effective. I recommend a dehumidifier in the winter months , even if it's just run for a couple of hours a day helps with condensation.
Guys just put your heating on for about an hour before bed and maybe 30 minutes in the morning, all other times use an electric over blanket, very cheap to run - I use the blanket straight on top of me and add a throw over it, gets lovely and toasty and only needs to be on a low to medium setting. We have a wood burning stove but even that proves costly to run all the time. Also about 3 loose layers of clothing help - so long sleeved cotton t shirt or vest (thermal ones are best) then a jumper then a gilet or a fleece top, make the last layer the loosest one x
Some great tips thanks.
@@dereton33maybe you could review some electric blankets, not seen anyone do that on here yet….doesn’t mean no one has though 😊
Another thing that must be factored in is the cost of maintaining a gas-fired central heating system. I've lived in my present house for 23 years and in that time I've had the boiler replaced 3 times, a couple of 3-way valves failed, a couple of room thermostats, and the 3-way valve failed (again) a couple of months ago, so now I use the electric immersion heater for hot water. If you add up the cost of all these replacements, plus the cost of the annual boiler services, the resulting sum of money would have bought me a huge amount of electricity. ATM i have the CH set at 18*C with a 2 kW oil-filled radiator in my living room, which keeps it at a comfortable 21 - 22*C.
The intangibles are that the gas CH is noisy in operation (particularly the pump) and the potential for leaks (dirty, smelly water). My boiler is up in the loft, at one point one of the other failed boilers sprang a leak, which saturated the plaster on the walls of the stairwell necessitating an expensive replastering job.
Thanks for your story. It will help others.
Interesting topic, I've only depended on oil filled electric rads when I lived in a bungalow with only an oil boiler. At worst in winter it was £300 in oil a month, the electric rads in that case where definitely cheaper. It was an really old oil boiler though, engineer said was 40% efficient.
These days I rely on the gas central heating in a terrace house, there's a difference being end of terrace though with a gable exposed to the wind and cold.
A good friends heating central heating system failed about a year ago, I lent him 2 of my old oil filled rads and he's happily using them to heat the house. Because of the high temp he maintains, I doubt very much that it's cheaper, but he's loathed to pay £1000 to get the central heating system repaired.
Thanks everyone for your great stories 😀
I swapped my 3kw. Oil. Filled radiator with three towel rails with 750w total electric heating elements and the difference is incredible. it's the new "ceramic disc "heating elements. Great topic very little facts around
Thanks for sharing
Exactly what I do in my hobby room oil heater sits between my legs (hobby room is an insulated section of the garage) works a treat.
They sure do have there uses.
I tend to use central heating in the evening but use blow heaters to warm individual room(s).
Thanks.
We have the central heating on all the time set at 19c as Mum feels the cold (95 yrs old) We used to have a radiator in the big room but over the years it became cooler and cooler (despite balancing and a complete system flush when we had a new boiler five years ago. I've now removed that radiator and replaced it with a similar sized electric ceramic radiator set to 20c (found them on Ideal World TV channel). It bumps the smart meter up into the orange when it switches on but its only drawing power for about twenty minutes and then it shuts off but continues getting hotter for about forty minutes until the cycle starts again. Overall its very economical to run compared to the oil filled ones. We actually have a second one still in its box - tomorrow we are having our solar panels installed - with 4.4kw of free power, No.2 can come 'online' as well!
Utter rubbish, the oil ones aren't cheap, I've got only electric in my property, predominantly storage heaters, old ones too! Used them one winter cost a fortune so never used again, bought a few oil filled electric and they were more expensive! So installed a woodburner! Electricity prices are disgusting, an efficient gas central heating system is cheaper to leave on constantly than stop start! Unfortunately no mainline gas here so.....🤷🏻♂️👍
One thing's for sure; it's not getting hotter unless it's using electricity.
Oh & don't expect 4.4kw at this time of year - more like 1kw.
@@andyjohnston4394 At which point in my comment did I say the oil filled radiators were cheap to run? I said we have a CERAMIC radiator which runs far cheaper than the oil ones!
Thanks 😀
Thanks for your comments
Get yourself some Longjohns and stay comfortable even at 17c indoors. :)
Thanks 😀
An interesting comparison. I have gas central heating, but, now with the price rises, I only put it on for an hour in the morning and an hour in the evening. I use a 3 bar halogen electric heater in my sitting room, which quickly heats up the room and doesn't cost much to run. I bought a sheep's wool duvet which is lovely and warm and no need for an electric blanket, and I avoid condensation by keeping the bedroom window open a bit all the time. It's criminal that we have to make these choices though. It should be a human right to be able to stay comfortably warm for free or at a low cost.
It's the way life today
Do you have any problems with burst pipes?
An added consideration is to do the sums and possibly go gas free and save on the daily Standing Charge.
Yes a good point.
@@dereton33 I doubt that you can go gas free to avoid the standing charge ? my understanding is that If you are connected to gas mains you have to pay standing charges even if you don't have any gas appliances? please correct me if I'm wrong, I have 1 gas fire, and manage all the electric heating/water on wifi systems. I have a portable oil electric heater which I sometimes use as a booster if needed when the temp really drops for a sustained period of time, and I agree it pumps out heat very quickly, and i think that is its advantage, it gets a cold room comfortable in a short space of time.
@@briandavis8120 Yeah, need to be disconnected from the gas main to avoid the standing charge.
Or fit solar panels & a power pack & ditch the electric...
@@briandavis8120 Tell them to terminate supply on a certain date. After that, they have no legal means to charge for a gas supply.
We have two of these oil radiators, and when i looked at the meter it was whizzing around like a helicopter roter. Frightened me to death.
They do fly.
I'm using Dimplex oil free electric rads here. Looks the same but no oil. I brought a new Delonghi oil rad a few years back and it leaked oil all over the carpet after being on for a few hours new out the box.
So no more oil rads in carpeted areas now anyway. Just got an older smaller Dimplex oil job in the kitchen that does the job.
Key is to insulate and stop drafts to minimise heat loss.
A well maintained gas central heating system is cheaper to run if you want a warm house over all.
Or a heat pump conversion that been properly designed for the building & installed. £7500 grant helps with that one at the moment.
Thanks for the info 👍
its hard to heat the house in this weather and im on the south coast of ireland hopefull we get some mild weather
Hopefully it will warm back up soon.
Stay in bed😁
Quite a few variables on this one, possibly too many to give a definitive answer that will suit everyone. My tuppence-worth would be to experiment to find what suits your own individual circumstances.
Spot on - seems people are all too quick to state "facts" without any tangible maths behind it 🤦♂
Great answers 👏
An interesting one, I live in very rural Germany. we have 2 1500 litre tanks for heating oil (basically red diesel) we fill up maybe once every 2.5 to 3 years. currently it costs around 100 euros per 100 litres. The house is around 120 years old with big thick (1 metre plus) walls, we have 9 radiators in the house and winter temps are always 0 or below for the winter months.
There has been a push to move to natural gas but our boiler is quite new so we can keep it, plus we get the bonus of still seeing a chimney sweep once a year. I would imagine this is still cheaper to run than most UK heating bills?
😊
18deg is more than adequate for evening temperature.....put a bloody jumper on if its not
Hot stuff ha ha.
Those little oil radiators are great little things and do chuck out some heat. We've used one a few times and found them surprisingly good. I have no idea how cost effective they are though. The one thing that does worry me with them is how hot they get and I don't feel safe for my dog being too near them. I would be worried about them with little children too.
Thanks for the tip! All the best Sugarpuff.
I use my oil filled radiators religiously & I have placed a fire guard in front of mine so the dogs & kids don’t get too close even though the kids know to stay away it’s better being safe 😊
If not too cold. Central heating on for 1 hr. I use a hot water bottle and a blanket. I'm out at work during day. If i need it on I'll keep heating on , but normally I'm fine.
Thanks 😀
Ive found that both are good. But if your boiler is efficient i use that in the morning and gone back to a old school calour gas fire for night times. With teenagers and kids they seem to want to come sit in the livingroom more and have family time. 1 bar is more than enough and will last me a month.
Hi Al, thank you for the information you gave me about a Drayton Activator 3way diverter , I changed the head as you instructed and all is well . I’m now going to have a go at moving and replacing 3 rads on the ground floor of my 3 bed semi , all pipe work to the rads drops from the ceiling joists and all three rads have a drain off although very antiquated, I have a Worcester Bosch Greenstar boiler in the loft which I believe to be called a condensing boiler as a plastic pipe runs to the outside down pipe . There is no small header tank anymore just a large cold water tank that services the cylinder and WC and cold water taps in the bathroom. To drain down the system do I just turn the boiler of and open the drain of valves as your drain down video explains ? . Is this a sealed heating system I have ?
Regards,
Dermot Kelly .
It is a sealed heating system. So nothing to turn off.
Drain away
Hi Al , thank you for coming back , between Christmas and new year is when it is going to happen 🥺 “ He who dares wins “
Kind regards,
Dermot Kelly .
Hi.Off topic.. But I sent you a message in your video about the Magniclean.. Do you think it matters if it is installed downstairs beside the boiler or upstairs beside the hot water tank.
Thanks
Best by the boiler downstairs.
I think the idea is that having it right beside the boiler it protects the boiler from the muck in the pipes and extends its working life. Five years ago we had a new Vaillant gas boiler, it came with a 3 year guarantee but because we also had a Magnaclean installed at the same time, Vaillant automatically increases the guarantee period to 10 years.
1 kwh costs about 24p per hour. When their at operating temperature. They use about 860 w. About 20p per hour. I use one for about 5 hour in the evenings. Costs about £1 to £1.20 per day.
Thanks for the info 👍
800 watt oil radiator you have.
@@eddierae8945 it's 2kw. Heating up. An runs at around 860w .
I live in a 1970's 2 bed bungalow. I have storage heaters. There is no gas in my village. My electricity bill last winter was £140 per week. I tried an electric oil filled rad in the lounge, regardless of cost, it was about as useful as a chocolate fire guard. I am currently installing an oil fire wet system.
Thanks for sharing
Surely a heat pump makes sense?
A 2kw electric heater is nice to for a small space so u can keep your boiler off.
One of the best uses for them
@@dereton33 yes exactly. My dad works from home a lot days. So we keep the house at 18-19. And then just in his office is the small electric heater. It's warm in no time.
You only have to look at the cost per kwh for gas & electricity & gas wins every time.
Fit TRV's on every radiator except the room you spend most time in & have the thermostat in that room.
What I really want is a heating control which can be programmed to head individual rooms as required (why heat the bedroom between 08:00 & 23:00?).
Yeah, I know you can get battery powered TRV's where the time can be set but people say the batteries last no time - why not a mains powered distribution manifold?
😊 thanks for your comments 🙂
What do you think about the Fischer electric heaters?
They do seem good but have yet to try one.
Yup, i'm 51 years old, i remember ice being on the inside of my bedroom window in the late 70s.It was normal back then....@@eddierae8945
What about 1 bag of coal next to your tv .. then during the adverts and if you're felling cold just pick it up over your shoulder and walk back and fourth then you'll be sweating 😅😅😅
Ha ha nice one.
I don't have central heating in my one bed flat ...i have that warm air heating but i found that expensive plus it was making me ill....so i've got an oil filled heater in the front room and the bedroom....i don't have a smart meter ...i refuse to have one ...i have a key meter (it was here when i moved in over 12 years ago) and i can see exactly what i'm using by checking that lol...i've had the oil filled heaters a long time....they have lasted well, heats up the room nice and are definitely cheap to run...even in these times of cost of living crisis of electric companies overcharging us with their ridiculous price hikes!! Always good to see you Al x hope you both been keeping well...and warm!! x
Good to hear from you Hazel. Keep warm and have a happy Christmas. Al and Jan. x
I run one in my home office in order to not heat the whole house during the day. Brilliant in my opinion.
Thanks 😀
I have a small oil heater for my extension (Garage size room) It was so cold the rads wouldn't get hot enough, so bought an oil heater, left it running over night and by morning it was about 20 degrees perfect temp, but suddenly started leaking Small drops randomly, so am wondering if there is anything better and cheaper to run?
Infrared heaters are cheaper.
we in the 50/60s believed politicions!!!!!!! OH DEAR WE R PAYING NOW support REFORM at every op. only way i can c going forward 😀😀😀😀
Me too George.
Those oil heaters are great as a back up, but mine is has two settings of 1.5 kWh or 3 kwh per hour. Now that's going to be expensive at 84 pence an hour on hottest. Either way there will be a big fat turkey on the Christmas table for the energy supplier.
Ha ha thanks 😊
Old gas central heating boilers were about 60-70% efficient but modern condensing central heating boilers are about 92% efficient depending on your boiler - you will have some energy losses distributing the gas (low viscocity so not a lot). Electric heating you have losses at the generator, losses in transmission (you need to raise the voltage for transmission, pylons loose energy, then you need to reduce the voltage for consumption plus some losses from sub-station to your house) and potentially some EM losses at your electric radiator.
The cost of gas is significantly cheaper per kW when compared with electricity.
It would be interesting to sit down and work out what those losses are (possibly Google). I would expect gas to be more efficient because it is a primary energy source as opposed to electricity which is a secondary source).
That’s my view as a Physicist.
Thanks a lot
Gas is definitely cheaper, i have a pay as you go electric meter, to run an oil filled heater over night cos me about£ 10 per night.
Ok thanks.
where do you live? how much do you pay per kwh?
We have experimented with running one electric heater in the room we are in vs running the whole central heating system. We find with current prices one room with electric is 60p an hour whereas to run the gas central heating is 80p an hour. Not a good deal to only heat one room in my opinion.
How many rooms do you have in total? I guess it isn't a good deal even if the answer is two rooms, but if you're talking 2 or 3 bedrooms, plus living room, kitchen, bathroom, maybe hallway or something like this, then it becomes a huge difference.
Thanks for your comments 🙂
Can you do a video on how to bend copper pipe I.e pass over etc…
I have done one already check my channel
I got small plug heater cost me 15pounz and cost less to run
Thanks for the info mate.
Gas is still waaaaay cheaper, despite today's insane prices.
Even with a heat pump which produces 4kw heat from 1kw of electricity, gas is *still* cheaper. Even of you assume your boiler is loosing 15% of the heat throught the exhaust.... its still cheaper.
Thanks Bertie.
Electric only makes sense for a super insulated small proprety. It is lower installation cost and practically zero maintenance cost. However, if people are looking for the wrost of all worlds there are electric heat pumps.
@@dr_jaymzshould we generate electricity from our gas boilers ourselves?
@@dr_jaymzmost boilers I do maintenance on still have 90-108% efficiency. So I would change that to 10% worst case so just use gas ahahha
Gas central heating is cheaper 7 rads lovely and warm 😊
Thanks 😀
Seems a lot of your viewers have failed their maths when it comes to the thermodynamics of their own houses 😂
There are not many with a degree in thermo what dynamics. Ha ha.
Used one for years and defo cheaper
Cheers
I thought you were going to give us an answer to the question! I'm no clearer on it...
The answer is the way in which the oil radiators are used.
Good "simple" question. Shame no answers. Martin Lewis MSE app good source for this type of question... Eg hear the person not the room.
Thanks 😀
Use a hot water bottle on your belly. Works for a few hours.
Very true. A cold re-awaking though ha ha.
during the cold times, i've been trying to keep my radiator on for only an hour or at least till it feels warm enough to turn it off. recent gas cost £192 :(
i'm wondering if oil radiator could be a cheaper options. maybe someone can share their monthly rates comparison?
either that or doing natural body heat by doing push ups and squads! :D
Thanks for sharing
I find my oil filled radiator warms up the room lot faster vs the central gas heating. the oil radiator gets the temp to 22 deg in half hour vs gas heater which takes hours and never even reaches 22. Most it gets to is 18. I have bad insulation which is problematic. The oil radiator does the job given the conditions
Thanks 😀
Gas heating. NEXT!!!
Not always.
I don’t like those oil filled radiators, they take a long time to heat a room. I had a few and got rid of them. All electric space heaters cost the same to run, because they are all almost 100% efficient (almost all electricity used goes into heat, less fan and electronics which is minimal). The best space heater for me is one that warms the room quickly. A far cheaper to use solution is to keep the house cooler and use an electric blanket for watching tv or any stationary activity. Same with sleeping, far cheaper to lower the thermostats and use electric blankets than keep a house warmer. Also, a $5 tube of calk can save hundreds $$$ in heating costs!
All electric heaters are 100pc efficient because all of the energy is converted to heat so it makes no difference which type it is. The only exception is a heat pump where its more than 100% efficient, and that's because its not creating heat its moving it. Typically they are between 3.5 and 4.5x more efficient than an electric heater. But.... gas is still cheaper even after all that.
Thanks for the tips.
Good luck if you can get a woman to live with 17c😊
Just tell her she needs the money saved for a new dress 👗 😏
If you turn off the gas and use an electric heater your pipes can freeze
No.
@@dereton33 Yes