Above: Home Energy Diet: How to Save Money by Making Your House Energy-Smart All books in the category Green DIY and Home Improvement by: Paul Scheckel Topics include: With rising energy costs, homeowners are beginning to examine the energy efficiency of their own homes, asking questions about where energy comes from and how much it costs, how to choose new appliances and what options exist for renewable energy.
Convert you home from a Hummer to a Prius: Paul Scheckel has come to guide us. His new book tells how houses work, where energy comes from, how heat moves, why certain appliances are best, and how to get the most bang for your energy buck. Scheckel provides the blueprint to convert your home from a Hummer to a hybrid Prius. Paul Scheckel is eminently qualified to give us this information. A self-admitted "energy geek," he is a Vermonter who lives in a solar-powered house in Calais and drives a car powered by vegetable oil. By profession an energy auditor, he has visited literally thousands of homes, assisting owners in cutting energy bills, increasing comfort, improving the air quality, and making the planet livable for the next generation. In The Home Energy Diet Scheckel takes us through the home from cellar to attic, giving us big and little picture perspectives on the actions to take to control our energy future. Each chapter has an "Awareness" section that gives the "why" of our energy situation. (It also has a lot of impressive statistics in case you would like to impress people at your next cocktail party. Suddenly, there's a cachet in being the local energy geek.) Other features are the "Math Box" that shows you how to quantify your activities, and a "Diet Box" that is a bulleted laundry list of the specific actions you can take to reduce your energy consumption. Get a yellow highlighting pen and prepare to save money. Reviews: It's Not About Shivering in the Dark! This book is a clearly written guide to saving money on energy around the home while simultaneously achieving greater comfort levels. As summed up in the introduction, Scheckel argues that following his "Triple A" approach to home energy usage will make you healthier, happier and wealthier. This approach involves: Awareness of the ways your home uses and loses energy, Assessment of your home's energy requirements, and Action taken to reduce energy consumption to a minimum. Scheckel, a career energy efficiency auditor, writes from experience. Over the years, he has visited thousands of homes and businesses and learned from observation and interviews how we use and waste our energy. In this book, he explains where energy comes from and how advanced technologies can help us use less of it while creating a more comfortable home environment. Cost Effective: Ways to change your habits of energy use while learning to quantify energy consumption and it's true cost. This book helps you make informed decisions in ways to make your home more cost-effective durning the cold winter months. I recommend this book to any house owner or for those looking to buy an older home. Read before you remodel or upgrade your home: This author goes into detailed explanations that are easy to understand. I learned MANY reasons why my 1950's brick house was still air leaky after replacing HVAC system, windows, exterior steel doors, roof and adding insulation-the "professional" installers (Temp-A-Tech, Window World, Lowes, roof installer, and the handyman)-simply I bought good products but they were improperly/inadequately installed. Needless to say after paying the rather pricey installation charges, I'm not too happy. I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone purchasing a home or having remodeling done. If I had only known about this book before I had the costly replacements done I would have a much better energy efficient home. Heat and What Can Be Done With It: I skimmed this book very rapidly so this is not a comprehensive review. I bought it looking for "how to" information on solar energy. I didn't find it, at least in an easy to assimilate and put to use form. What I did find was almost a dissertation about heat at the level of a physics class: what heat is, what its innate properties are, where it comes from, where it goes, etc. It actually is fascinating reading and probably makes an extremely good foundation for the most efficient use of all the forms of energy that we use in our daily rounds. But it wasn't what I needed, super-fast. I may contact the author from his blurb on the inside back cover of the book for help. Tremendously valuable: The Home Energy Diet should be required reading of every home owner in the United States. For a variety of reasons -- aging heating system, concern over potential fuel costs, and other reason's -- started looking into what I could be doing to improve my home's energy efficiency. I bumped into Home Energy Diet in the library ... and started to learn a lot and much of that learning has direct relevance to my own home. For example, Scheckel's material and explanations highlighted to me some serious problems in my attic insulation and ventilation that I simply was not aware of -- previously, I thought that it was reasonably well insulated. This drove me to a trip to the hardware store and an afternoon of work. With the first snow of the season, the 'roof' is proving that this work changed how my house is operating just how Scheckel's description said it would. |
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