Behemot wrote:It almost looks like there's either hot or cold down under
How's it with thermal insulation? I have only limited second-hand experience but from that it seems it's mildly better than in UK (where they also started doing something about those paper walls and single windows in the 90s), but often in poor condition (because everything is expensive, especially with that stupid system of reality servicing agencies which use useless but overpriced repairmain services to rip the landlord, which in turn rips the tennant, but because of huge lack of housing especially in some areas, ppl pretty much take everything there is).
As far as I know it's just ceiling insulation in my home, but since it's fairly small to begin with that's not a huge problem.
Albany
does get rather colder than most of the rest of Australia, to be fair.
Regarding gas heating, not sure what's all available in there but here you can choose from several types of stationary gas heaters, boilers etc., those usually ventilate the flue gasses outside (either through vent or chimney), often combined with hot-water boilers too (which are also available as small ones for individual flats) and there are also portables ones (usually for short-term use, especially industrial, construction etc. for heating and/or drying purposes) fed from small tanks (locally it's usually 2-10 kg propane-butane tanks called "bombs").
Than there is also large selection of solid-fuel burning heaters (coal/coke, wood, wooden pellets etc. or even poor quality grain) and a few liquid burning ones (light or heavy oil, some kinds of tar etc.). These together with gas heating are usually built as water-heating, using water as the medium for radiator heaters. Australia is known large producer of both coil and oil so you should definitelly be able to get those for reasonable price, even though the largest sources are on the west coast with most ppl on the east coast (but there is both water and railroad transportation).
Not sure how common it is, I have the feeling you ppl somehow prefer to only heat sepparate rooms and freeze in the rest. It may not be necessarry for too long during the year but definitelly in appartment buildings (10+ flats) I think that central heating is worth it as the costs are not so high when distributed amongst more tennants. Electricity only makes sense when using combined air-to-air heaters and air conditioners.
Electricity is good for direct heating of very small rooms or as a temporary solution, but other than that, it's the most expensive of all and I don't think this differs much throughout the planet. Only exception is accumulation heaters which usually get special tariff from electricity distributors with remote centralised control to only draw electricity in the times with lower draw from the net, when it is cheaper. As it usually switches the whole flat or house to such, you can use other devices like electric boilers or even washing-machines or dishwashers (pretty much everything with high but short enough power draw) in the low tariff and the total consumption for lower price usually is on par with other types of heating and water heating (and often easier to install and maintain).
I know basically all of this already (and even made
a thread to that effect); I didn't
want to get into reviewing heaters myself in the first place, but since no-one else did so properly that I saw,
it's come down to me to set a good example. (Since they're
way simpler than the likes of SMPS, it can't be
that hard to do properly
; just that the mainstream "reviewers" are
terminal sufferers of the Dunning—Kruger effect, so even very basic faults evade their notice.)
Since my mother is a well-paid accountant, electricity costs are no big deal for us;
time on the other hand is short even on better days, so for her it can be easily worth paying higher running cost for lower maintenance. (See also my note
here about reverse-cycle A/C; it's not quite the win-win many believe.)
Right now (around 3AM here) I have
this on full power (continuously since the thermostat is maxed out) in the main space of the house; inside temperature is around 18°C with the outdoors around 10°C (although I can't rule out that there may still be heat retained in the house bricks), for what that's worth. (I've used the A/C here before, but lately got a bit sick of the hot and cold spots.)
It also annoys me, the way fan heaters are effectively made into a scapegoat. (Probably why their gas counterparts aren't sold under the "fan heater" name
) It would be quite interesting to see fan-assisted heat exchangers for central heating (basically they'd resemble water-cooling rigs but bigger).
At least we're not like certain Americans who use basically an oversized
central fan heater (albeit under the name of "electric furnace"), of course missing the entire point of making heating central…