6BangBronk
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2005
- Location
- Durham
As for propane, again, boy do I know about them too. 
9 times out of 10 the unit you have was installed by the owner that got it at a deal from someone they know and not professionally set up. And 95% of heatpacks are set up for natural gas. Simply open the door to the unit where the nozzles are. If you don't see definite markings from a professional stating clearly "set up for propane" or either a baggie laying in the bottom with an extra set of nozzles, it is most likely set up for natural gas and is shooting 3 times as much propane as needed. It's exactly like a carburetor. Sure it will run, but horrible. And wear and tear is greater. But the nozzle kit comes with a pressure spring and a set of nozzles and cost around $60 from a dealer. I did mine last year and my bill went down to a third of what it was. Of course you have to set the pressure so you need a hvac person or the gages with know-how.
It pays to have an educated hvac dude in the family like I do.
My bill is around $100/month in the winter now with propane to heat 1,000 sf with a 2 1/2 ton unit. Propane is cheaper than electricity. Don't be a dumb ass and just run what you got like 95% of what others do^^^^^^ before swapping to electricity.
Check it out and try it first. I love mine and would never go to electricity.
Make sure the regulator is sized and the unit is sized. If too small of either or too large of either then you are wasting propane. Your underground propane is best situation if the regulator is sized for the distance correctly. It's cheaper to buy in bulk like that but you have to be on a contract with a distributor. so it can get pricy when fill-up time comes.
I use 100 pound cylinders that are transportable and I can drive 2 miles to fill mine up. Heatpacks have an emergency backup that allows them to operate if the power goes out. So if I'm caught in a storm, I have it covered better than anybody heating with electricity.
Wood makes a hell of a mess and you can't buy my time at such a cheap rate to cut wood like that. Unless you have someone just dropping wood off to you or like to spend weekends on end cutting wood and emptying ashes every day and you don't have a nagging wife having to dust every week, it's not for you.
I'm different than most. But I'm the type to dig in to see if something is feasible before bailing ship. It's just me and I feel my experience and knowledge gained has saved me a lot of money. The operating cost of a pump for a well is like $5/month. The operating cost of the fan of a gas pack is about the same. My water is free all I want. And propane is the future and most likely to have a lower cost for MANY years to come due to the supply. Electrical companies are charging more and more and the fees and taxes is well over half the bill. Electricity is only going to go up, never down. It's illegal to sell solar energy in NC (blame backwards over governship for that) so that only goes as far as you use it and the equipment is still good but solar equipment technology is getting outdated on a daily basis.

9 times out of 10 the unit you have was installed by the owner that got it at a deal from someone they know and not professionally set up. And 95% of heatpacks are set up for natural gas. Simply open the door to the unit where the nozzles are. If you don't see definite markings from a professional stating clearly "set up for propane" or either a baggie laying in the bottom with an extra set of nozzles, it is most likely set up for natural gas and is shooting 3 times as much propane as needed. It's exactly like a carburetor. Sure it will run, but horrible. And wear and tear is greater. But the nozzle kit comes with a pressure spring and a set of nozzles and cost around $60 from a dealer. I did mine last year and my bill went down to a third of what it was. Of course you have to set the pressure so you need a hvac person or the gages with know-how.
It pays to have an educated hvac dude in the family like I do.
My bill is around $100/month in the winter now with propane to heat 1,000 sf with a 2 1/2 ton unit. Propane is cheaper than electricity. Don't be a dumb ass and just run what you got like 95% of what others do^^^^^^ before swapping to electricity.

Check it out and try it first. I love mine and would never go to electricity.
Make sure the regulator is sized and the unit is sized. If too small of either or too large of either then you are wasting propane. Your underground propane is best situation if the regulator is sized for the distance correctly. It's cheaper to buy in bulk like that but you have to be on a contract with a distributor. so it can get pricy when fill-up time comes.
I use 100 pound cylinders that are transportable and I can drive 2 miles to fill mine up. Heatpacks have an emergency backup that allows them to operate if the power goes out. So if I'm caught in a storm, I have it covered better than anybody heating with electricity.
Wood makes a hell of a mess and you can't buy my time at such a cheap rate to cut wood like that. Unless you have someone just dropping wood off to you or like to spend weekends on end cutting wood and emptying ashes every day and you don't have a nagging wife having to dust every week, it's not for you.
I'm different than most. But I'm the type to dig in to see if something is feasible before bailing ship. It's just me and I feel my experience and knowledge gained has saved me a lot of money. The operating cost of a pump for a well is like $5/month. The operating cost of the fan of a gas pack is about the same. My water is free all I want. And propane is the future and most likely to have a lower cost for MANY years to come due to the supply. Electrical companies are charging more and more and the fees and taxes is well over half the bill. Electricity is only going to go up, never down. It's illegal to sell solar energy in NC (blame backwards over governship for that) so that only goes as far as you use it and the equipment is still good but solar equipment technology is getting outdated on a daily basis.
Last edited:
