Stan
Well-known member
I interpret that to mean that you consumed more therms per heating degree day the second year. If you installed the insulation and windows between the first and second heating season, they don't appear to be paying for themselves on the surface.If I divide therms consumed (I'm using gallons of oil) by the total HDD's for a heating season I get a number like .1765 for one season and .2000 for a second season. What does that mean ? That I consumed 13.3% more oil adjusted for the temperature in the second season or that I consumed 11.75% less oil adjusted for the temperature in the second season, or something else entirely ?
Averages can be very misleading however and there could be a number of explanations for this unrelated to your improvements. First, the period of time examined should be the same in each year. Heating systems generally operate at a higher efficiency during peak season than the shoulder seasons.
Second, the oil in the tank should be the same at the beginning of each period and the same at the end of each period. Otherwise, you are counting fuel for the wrong time period.
Third, other factors could impact your results ... was the oil burner tuned up one season and not tuned up the other season? if your hot water is fueled by oil, was there a change in hot water consumption? etc.
Sometimes the best result of an analysis like this is not just in the obvious calculation but in examining the explanation behind it.