GlenEllynite

| J R Plumbing Heating Air Conditioning
804 Highview Ave Glen Ellyn, IL 60137-5532 (630) 545-2619 |
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GlenEllynite

| Nice job, Clam, steal my rec and pass it off as your own?
Anyway, Mama, I had a similar problem a few years ago (yes, my HVAC is old) with the blower. In my case the blower shaft had busted (or something like that, I can't really remember). Anyway, I was able to repair it myself with parts from Grainger (www.grainger.com). It's not all that difficult.
But if electricity frightens you, I can give the contractor Clam mentioned a thumbs up for the A/C unit they just put in. |
| | | Posts: 1957 | Location: Posh YMCA District | Registered: June 04, 2003 |
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GlenEllynite

| Here's a search for furnace blowers at Grainger. Link I guess I should add that of course, I don't know that your blower is shot, it could be a relay or a number of other things. So ignore my comment about doing it yourself. Get a tech out to diagnose the problem first. Then, even if you're not doing the work yourself, you can find out what the parts would cost you. |
| | | Posts: 1957 | Location: Posh YMCA District | Registered: June 04, 2003 |
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GlenEllynite

| Everyone loves Frank. His brother? Not so much. |
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GlenEllynite

| Thanks everyone. Looks like it is the blower motor. $600 to fix or $2500/$4,150 for a new furnace. Since the furnace is original to the house (1956), I think we'll soon be the proud owners of a new furnace.
Now I'm weighing a regular furnace with the high efficiency (and eligible for tax credit) version. Decisions, Decisions . . . |
| | | Posts: 697 | Location: Glen Ellyn, IL | Registered: February 26, 2007 |
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GlenEllynite

| Just look at the payback on the higher efficiency versions (95%+)...they typically take 15+ years to payback your energy savings....that is why I went for a 80% efficiency model...only takes a couple years to start paying back....
It's the spending, Stupid! |
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GlenEllynite

| 15 years? I had no idea. I was thinking I would recoup the net difference somewhere around year three or four.
I was looking at it like this - $2,500 for the 80% efficiency. $4,150 for the 95%+ efficiency.
The tax credit is 30% of the cost, which is $1,245. That means the net difference between the two furnaces is really $405 - as long as I write a check for the furnace and don't finance it, of course.
I figured at .15 per dollar of heat, the break even point would be right around $2,700 in heating costs. So my guess was that I would make up the $405 in around 3-4 years.
Hmmm. . . I need to do more thinking. Maybe there's a calculator online somewhere that will help me, after all I'm a lawyer, not a mathematician. |
| | | Posts: 697 | Location: Glen Ellyn, IL | Registered: February 26, 2007 |
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