home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.rural
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!mtu.edu!pecampbe
- From: pecampbe@mtu.edu (Paul Campbell)
- Subject: Re: concerns with well water and a septic tank
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.064739.7366@mtu.edu>
- Organization: Michigan Technological University
- References: <1992Dec30.213328.3073@siemens.com> <1992Dec31.080508.8720@mtu.edu> <1992Dec31.142839.4942@hubcap.clemson.edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 06:47:39 GMT
- Lines: 25
-
- In article <1992Dec31.142839.4942@hubcap.clemson.edu> hubcap@hubcap.clemson.edu (System Janitor) writes:
-
- >[I said]
- >>If you REALLY want to be economical about it, build yourself either your
- >>own wind mill or solar system, or both.
- >That sounds really economical to me. I live in a rural area. Here's a deal
- >for you. I'll run my house off wind mills and solar power, and keep paying
- >what I'm paying now. If there's a surplus, you get it. If I end up in
- >the hole, you pay. Deal?
-
- I have seen houses run this way in Colorado and Michigan. There are some
- problems; the initial setup cost is still pretty nasty. Some of the ways
- that it was set up failed for various reasons. If you are seriously
- considering it, go for it. Two of the neighbors use a passive solar water
- system that heats their houses in winter (one of them has an underground
- house so only a really tiny amount of heat is needed anyway). Both are
- quite satisfied. Wind power has the disadvantage that you need a bank
- of batteries around or possibly have the funny watt meters installed
- that go both directions (sell power to the local power company when you
- are generating a surplus; buy it when you are drawing some) and let the
- regular grid be your battery.
-
- No deal. It's not that I don't feel you are going to end up in the hole,
- but that this is an investment situation with risk involved, most of
- which I am not able to directly control.
-