Wrong thread.
I have an Ecobee for the living side of the house (not the sleeping side). I have not added any satellite sensors to it though. I have no idea if it's saving me any energy or not, but using the thermostat itself is certainly easy since it's a touchscreen digital interface.TXTransplant said:
Given the impending increase to my utility bill, anyone have a recommendation for a great smart thermostat that isn't crazy expensive?
I'm finally going to break down and get one, like it's 2010.
With any "smart" thermostat you're going to see 2 main improvements over a quality programmable unit...TXTransplant said:
Given the impending increase to my utility bill, anyone have a recommendation for a great smart thermostat that isn't crazy expensive?
I'm finally going to break down and get one, like it's 2010.
investing in NG anyone?12thAngryMan said:
Based on this chart and recent events that have REPs adjusting their assessment of price risk, I'm guessing all options will be significantly more expensive. Add it to the list of things that are eating away my budget...
Just confirmed it's 60 days. I decided to go lock in a plan now but the select-a-date calendars only went out 60 days. Sadly I'm still 2 weeks out from being in the 60 day window.Kenneth_2003 said:
Check... I think you can lock in 90 or so days out.
I locked in with my new provider almost 60 days before my current contract expires.
I'm in the market, too. We tried once before but we don't have the common wire or whatever it's called to keep it connected to the Internet. Anyone have any suggestions for a good thermostat that works without it?TXTransplant said:
Given the impending increase to my utility bill, anyone have a recommendation for a great smart thermostat that isn't crazy expensive?
I'm finally going to break down and get one, like it's 2010.
dang. I'm with them and they signed me up for a 18 cent plan 2 weeks ago. Thankfully it has a relatively low cancellation feeSouth Platte said:
Energy Ogre. Got me a year contract in the low 12's. It's the only way to go.
I got a 15c renewal offer from Reliant but went with EnergyOgre to negotiate on my behalf.Ag CPA said:
Some of these new plans being discussed sound crazy; I just renewed with Reliant and will jump from .10 to .14 in August on a one-year deal; thought I was getting screwed but guess not.
Kenneth_2003 said:
Below 1000kwh the TDU charges become a greater portion of the bill. The rates on things like power 2 choose average the other charges into the per kwh rate.
Yes, I saw an offer by Frontier that gives you a $100 credit if you go above 2,000. I would get that credit about 9 months out of the year.TXTransplant said:Kenneth_2003 said:
Below 1000kwh the TDU charges become a greater portion of the bill. The rates on things like power 2 choose average the other charges into the per kwh rate.
No, it's not just that. I'm well aware my fees are a larger percentage of my bill. But a lot of providers are offering rebates/bill credits to lower the rate if you use 1000-2000. But you don't get the rebate if you use more or less than that. And the rate without the credit is 20+ cents in many cases.
Interesting. I may call TXU tomorrow and ask about this. That would be my sweet spot as well.duck79 said:
I dropped EO today after I called TXU and found a plan that was on average 14.5. If I hit 2k then I pay 15c but 1200-2000 is 7c. Below 1200 is 14c which I'll never be. I'll hit 15c in the summer but that is still better than the 17.3 that EO found with Amigo.
YouBet said:Yes, I saw an offer by Frontier that gives you a $100 credit if you go above 2,000. I would get that credit about 9 months out of the year.TXTransplant said:Kenneth_2003 said:
Below 1000kwh the TDU charges become a greater portion of the bill. The rates on things like power 2 choose average the other charges into the per kwh rate.
No, it's not just that. I'm well aware my fees are a larger percentage of my bill. But a lot of providers are offering rebates/bill credits to lower the rate if you use 1000-2000. But you don't get the rebate if you use more or less than that. And the rate without the credit is 20+ cents in many cases.
Actually a lot of room to game these gimmick plans if you pay attention. I don't care enough to do it, but if you have one with the $100 credit at 2,000 kwh and you only wouldn't hit that 3-5 months you aren't using AC, just run every appliance in your house constantly (or make it extra cold and run your ac), run your pool pump longer or buy a crypto mining rig or something (would also generate heat). They count on people being lazy.YouBet said:Yes, I saw an offer by Frontier that gives you a $100 credit if you go above 2,000. I would get that credit about 9 months out of the year.TXTransplant said:Kenneth_2003 said:
Below 1000kwh the TDU charges become a greater portion of the bill. The rates on things like power 2 choose average the other charges into the per kwh rate.
No, it's not just that. I'm well aware my fees are a larger percentage of my bill. But a lot of providers are offering rebates/bill credits to lower the rate if you use 1000-2000. But you don't get the rebate if you use more or less than that. And the rate without the credit is 20+ cents in many cases.
How did you have a $.05 rate? That's almost what ONCOR's pass-through rate alone totals.YouBet said:I got a 15c renewal offer from Reliant but went with EnergyOgre to negotiate on my behalf.Ag CPA said:
Some of these new plans being discussed sound crazy; I just renewed with Reliant and will jump from .10 to .14 in August on a one-year deal; thought I was getting screwed but guess not.
However, my jump is from .046 to .15 so damn significant and our house is not super efficient. And that 15c was for 2,000 kwh. Every plan I looked at on PowertoChoose was 20c or more for =<1,000 kwh usage.
That was just my kwh rate. I think averaged all-in was 11c.Ag CPA said:How did you have a $.05 rate? That's almost what ONCOR's pass-through rate alone totals.YouBet said:I got a 15c renewal offer from Reliant but went with EnergyOgre to negotiate on my behalf.Ag CPA said:
Some of these new plans being discussed sound crazy; I just renewed with Reliant and will jump from .10 to .14 in August on a one-year deal; thought I was getting screwed but guess not.
However, my jump is from .046 to .15 so damn significant and our house is not super efficient. And that 15c was for 2,000 kwh. Every plan I looked at on PowertoChoose was 20c or more for =<1,000 kwh usage.
To Transplant's question, for starters I live in DFW where I think Reliant offers cheaper rates than down by Houston (inverse is probably true for TXU) and I have been with them since I lived in Houston 20+ years ago (pretty sure that does not matter as far as plans go). I'm on the Keep Your Cash Nights & Weekends Plan (get $.01 off during those times); I reelected the same plan for August but it is actually 18 months; my thinking is that the cancellation fee is only $200 if things change dramatically later in the year (which is doubtful). I think I secured it at the end of April.
I run the pool at night and push some other appliance use to that time so the savings can actually add up if you want to play the game.
Ag CPA said:
I'm looking at the all-in rate, including delivery charges.
For reference, the ONCOR delivery charge where I live in Southlake is around $.04, have no idea if that rate fluctuates around the state.