Fireplace Plug in the Media
The Washington Post,
September 27, 2012
How to winterize your home and cut heating costs
The energy bill at John From Bristol’s Chevy Chase home fell by $722 over seven months after he installed a pair of $55 chimney pillows.
By Susan Straight
John Bristol’s 4,500-square-foot, four-level Colonial in Chevy Chase, Md., would have been pricey to heat even without air leaks but the two rooms with wood-burning fireplaces were always cold in winter. He said he believed it was caused by air passing through the chimney flues.
“There just seemed to be a lot of downdraft. Those two rooms were always cold,” he said.
After last winter’s heating bills,
Bristol had had enough. In early spring, he was ready to try to minimize air loss in the house. “I started searching around on the Internet and found chimney pillows,” he said. He purchased them for the two fireplaces and found that they were easy to install.
“I put the first pillow in the coldest basement family room that was drafty in February 2012, and the second pillow in the first-floor living room,” Bristol said.
The chimney pillow, also known as a fireplace plug or chimney balloon, is a large plastic bag that is inflated to block airflow through a chimney so that air neither escapes from nor enters the interior of the house. The plastic bag, which comes with an inflation tube, is usually installed by partially inflating the bag, placed inside the chimney, and then inflated to fit snugly.
Homeowners are advised to leave the inflation tube hanging down into the fireplace so that they remember to deflate the bag and remove the device from the chimney before lighting a fire.
For an investment of about $55 per pillow, Bristol said he has seen a noticeable improvement — his energy bill dropped by $722 over seven months, or $103 a month. By Bristol’s calculations, he saved 14 to 30 percent ($623) from February to April and as much as 9 percent ($99) May through August.
“The average over these seven months [since installation] was 13 percent less consumption” than the previous year, he said.
Sweater weather is upon us, with Washington-area temperatures this week plunging into the 40s and 50s, a reminder that winter lurks just around the corner.
Will your house be ready to weather the chill?Now is the time to begin assessing the investments you may need to make to ensure that you’ll be warm this winter and experience lower energy costs over time.
“The average US household will spend about $990 for winter heating costs this year,” said Allyson Schmutter, spokeswoman for the Alliance to Save Energy. “There’s an incentive to make changes that are easy and realistic,” she said. “There are many simple and energy-efficient fixes that help keep money in your pocketbook while keeping your house comfortable,” she added.
Sealing air leaks and improving insulation can save as much as 20 percent on heating bills, for example.
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