You sure moved quick with your decision.
Good luck, and keep us posted!
Glad i did too seeing the price jump back up to $1899.
I watched my oil tank drop from full to 3/4 in 2 months just for hot water! I just had to try something other then oil.
You sure moved quick with your decision.
Good luck, and keep us posted!
@cableman, did you go for a condensate pump too...running where?
Mine is in my attached garage, and the condensate is gravity drained to a sump pit.
So far hot water is very even and much better then that tankless coil.
It seems to kick on once a day at night after kids showers, they must turn hot all the way up being further from the shower head!
It stays on for quite some time, 4 or more hours im not sure cause im sleeping by then.
Basement drops 2* from 70 to 68 but feels much colder, being summer its not a problem, but not sure how that will work in winter with basement temps prolly 10*-20* less.
Hopfully boiler helps out a little then.
I amp clamped each hot lead at roughly 1.8amps per side, hopefully my 80-100 dollar montly electric bill doesnt go up too much!
Anyone hook the wifi up?
That's pretty good, and almost worth dealing with the slow recovery time and lower water temperature. I'm burning a gallon a day, keeping my water hot with oil, although I do have the luxury of almost instant recovery (we never run out of hot water) and much hotter hot water.1.8 amps, over 4 hours, is about 1.7kwh.
Don't know what you pay for electricity - but if it's say $0.20/kwh, that's 34 cents a day. $10/month.
So far hot water is very even and much better then that tankless coil.
It seems to kick on once a day at night after kids showers, they must turn hot all the way up being further from the shower head!
It stays on for quite some time, 4 or more hours im not sure cause im sleeping by then.
Basement drops 2* from 70 to 68 but feels much colder, being summer its not a problem, but not sure how that will work in winter with basement temps prolly 10*-20* less.
Hopfully boiler helps out a little then.
Heres my newest pseg bill, i dont know what im beong charged here!
When it kicked on early today it was only short lived maybe 2hrs not like the evenings ive experienced.
View attachment 181906
Looks like you get a discount on the first 300 kWh, which is 9 (energy) + 6 (delivery) = 15 cents/kWh. After that they bump you up and extra cent and half to 16.5 for the remainder.
And then they add fixed costs and percentages like sales tax.
Your whole bill divided by your usage works out to 20.6 cents/kWh, your marginal rate is likely a bit lower.
Thats high right? Lol
Thats high right? Lol
That's pretty good, and almost worth dealing with the slow recovery time and lower water temperature. I'm burning a gallon a day, keeping my water hot with oil, although I do have the luxury of almost instant recovery (we never run out of hot water) and much hotter hot water.
I agree, the Geospring would save on energy costs, but you're forgetting some other big numbers:The savings over oil is huge. Lets just say $2 gallon heating oil. You use a gallon a day is so about $60 a month or $720 a year. I am sure some use more than a gallon a day so the figure could probably be doubled. I know oil is cheap now but heating oil was almost $4 a gallon 3 years ago. Even with $2 a gallon oil the geospring blows away oil in energy cost. I had natural gas at my old place and it was $15 a month just to be connected. The geospring is cheaper than the monthly fee just to be hooked up to gas.
I will use your 1 gallon a day oil usage as an example. I think most would use more than a gallon of heating oil a day though.
Geospring $10 a month or $120 a year.
Heating oil at @ $2 a gallon is $60 a month or $720 a year.
Using that example the geospring more than paid for itself in the first year and your saving $600 a year after that. If oil goes up the savings is even bigger. If oils goes to $3 a gallon oil your saving $960 a year.
I agree, the Geospring would save on energy costs, but you're forgetting some other big numbers:
1. My basement is a heated, finished space. If I'm pulling heat out of the basement via the GeoSpring, I must make that up via my oil-fired boiler, and my heating costs will rise. I'm not sure how much this would close that gap on energy savings.
2. These Geosprings seem to eat parts at a rate maybe 100x higher than my oil-fired system. Even under warranty, the frustration and down-time is worth $. Out of warranty, it's real money. A typical oil-fired system can last 50 years, and it's unlikely I'll ever have to replace any parts on the system the previous owners of my house installed, short of maybe a circulator pump motor every 20 years.
The costs over the 20 - 30 years I may live in this house aren't clear, especially if I go thru a new HPWH every 10th year, and need repair them in-between.

The savings over oil is huge. Lets just say $2 gallon heating oil. You use a gallon a day is so about $60 a month or $720 a year. I am sure some use more than a gallon a day so the figure could probably be doubled. I know oil is cheap now but heating oil was almost $4 a gallon 3 years ago. Even with $2 a gallon oil the geospring blows away oil in energy cost. I had natural gas at my old place and it was $15 a month just to be connected. The geospring is cheaper than the monthly fee just to be hooked up to gas.
I will use your 1 gallon a day oil usage as an example. I think most would use more than a gallon of heating oil a day though.
Geospring $10 a month or $120 a year.
Heating oil at @ $2 a gallon is $60 a month or $720 a year.
Using that example the geospring more than paid for itself in the first year and your saving $600 a year after that. If oil goes up the savings is even bigger. If oils goes to $3 a gallon oil your saving $960 a year.
I agree, the Geospring would save on energy costs, but you're forgetting some other big numbers:
1. My basement is a heated, finished space. If I'm pulling heat out of the basement via the GeoSpring, I must make that up via my oil-fired boiler, and my heating costs will rise. I'm not sure how much this would close that gap on energy savings.
2. These Geosprings seem to eat parts at a rate maybe 100x higher than my oil-fired system. Even under warranty, the frustration and down-time is worth $. Out of warranty, it's real money. A typical oil-fired system can last 50 years, and it's unlikely I'll ever have to replace any parts on the system the previous owners of my house installed, short of maybe a circulator pump motor every 20 years.
The costs over the 20 - 30 years I may live in this house aren't clear, especially if I go thru a new HPWH every 10th year, and need repair them in-between.
![[Hearth.com] My Geospring [Hearth.com] My Geospring](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/181/181954-09b6a946af4421c277f9a769dcdfa14d.jpg?hash=XBSaA2R9vP)
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