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Household Money Saving Tips - Printable Version +- 306oc - Peugeot 306 Owners Club & Forum (https://www.306oc.co.uk/forum) +-- Forum: General (https://www.306oc.co.uk/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +--- Forum: The Couch (https://www.306oc.co.uk/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=7) +--- Thread: Household Money Saving Tips (/showthread.php?tid=20095) |
RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Poodle - 04-01-2014 Wtaf, that's not what i quoted...?! That's quoted from JJ, post #40, no idea how that happened. ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - ally406 - 04-01-2014 (03-01-2014, 05:30 PM)Toms306 Wrote: I agree'd with most of your points (although you seem like a right tight a*se! Honestly mate, no problems here with damp or mould, I have asthma and that shit would not be on. If your condenser is causing condensation then there's something wrong with it, that's the whole point of the thing is that it doesn't output moisture ![]() ![]() Even if you had to buy new, I'm sure you could work out how long throwing away 3kw of power would start to cost you.....and before anyone says dry your clothes on a clothes horse, that is putting lots of moisture into the atmosphere ![]() ...and on washing machines, always a good idea to do a wash at its highest temperature with some washing machine cleaner occasionally. Take a look at the back of a drum out of an old washer, it looks like something from Aliens and you'd probably vomit. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Toms306 - 04-01-2014 Hmm, that's interesting, must be another variable I'm missing somewhere! ![]() Fair enough about the dryer, not sure if they all work the same but our dryer forced heat/air through the condenser plates (which should theoretically remove all moisture) and then blew that air straight out the front....well it couldn't condense quick enough so was basically blowing hot damp air out lol, despite filling the water bottle as well. So we had waste electricity on a dehumidifier as well, was a viscous circle lol. It's also not throwing away a solid 3kW, that's the idea of a thermostat lol, but it is obviously still a large cost - we do make sure appliances are A rated though, so it's not as bad as it could be I guess. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Dave - 04-01-2014 When I was a student I cooked a giant hotpot with everything in, and bagged it up into meals to freeze, never let anything go off. Google how to make your own favourite food, a pizza is surprisingly simple and cheap cheap to make. Most people over eat, so eat slower and you will eat less and your food will go further. Give up your gym and excersise at home. Swap that dog for a goldfish ![]() My 2p from when I was a student. I am really a dog lover. Blablacar is also an app to share lifts with people to split the bill. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Wor Jimmy - 06-01-2014 Sell your car.. Buy a moped. SORTED! (130mpg / £17 tax ![]() Hate Incoming ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - KevinTW - 12-01-2014 (03-01-2014, 04:46 PM)cully Wrote: Sack sky off TV is crap full stop I built a grey and rainwater water system and my water bill went from £80 a month to £20. I use a 1000 litre tank free from a local printer and a 12 volt on demand pump run by a battery. I charge it for 6 hours a day at 15 watts.THe whole system cost about £100.I have a wood burning stove which heats the lounge. All the wood comes from skips when I drive around for work. They are about 80% efficient compared to an open fire which is only about 20%. It cost £700 inc a flue liner and I fitted it myself.It has reduced my gas bill by 2/3. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - lolsteve - 13-01-2014 Dad bought an outside wood burning stove thing to dispose of some of the excess wood from his jobs, since filling skips with it was costing him money Been spending 6-7 hours a day in the university which I started off buying meal deals at £3 a day ($$$) popped to asda and for £5 I got 6 bags of crisps, enough sweetcorn and chicken sandwich filling for 4-5 days worth and a 1.5L bottle of coke which I just poured back into the spare 500ml bottle I had lying about to stop me drinking it all in one day. Also in regards to the grey water system, do you have any problems during the winter months when things get cold? Going to be writing up about eco housing soon and want to see if there's any drawbacks to the grey water systems RE: Household Money Saving Tips - THE_Liam - 13-01-2014 If you like your beer, have a search on here for the homebrew thread. 40 pints for £15 and it's good stuff if you get a good kit and you do it properly ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - cully - 13-01-2014 (13-01-2014, 11:26 AM)lolsteve Wrote: Also in regards to the grey water system, do you have any problems during the winter months when things get cold? Going to be writing up about eco housing soon and want to see if there's any drawbacks to the grey water systems when i say grey water, i mean rain water only not house waste water if you use house waste water you have to deal with pathogens in the water ![]() as my my main rain storage tank pump and filter is above ground, the only time i have problems is when it freezes, but i keep an eye on the weather and when the ground starts to freeze, i disconnect the pump and filter and remove it to indoors till the cold has passed, this only happens around 2-3 weeks in a year. while its disconnected my system runs on mains water as i have a bypass system too ![]() this could be got over if the storage tank and feed pipes were under ground but that is not an option here RE: Household Money Saving Tips - KevinTW - 13-01-2014 (13-01-2014, 11:26 AM)lolsteve Wrote: Dad bought an outside wood burning stove thing to dispose of some of the excess wood from his jobs, since filling skips with it was costing him moneyThe grey water from the shower goes into a 200 litre water butt in a shed by gravity. No freezing probs there. It feeds the basement toilet by gravity. The problem is crap getting in the ball valve. I run it through a mesh filter but it needs a clean once a month. The pumped rainwater tank feeds the washing machine and other higher toilets. The tank is right up against the house and is lagged , as is the outlet hose.It can freeze when very cold but the real trick is to keep out the light to stop algae etc. In summer we add a little bit of lidl bleach and that sorts out any probs. We pay almost £4 a cubic metre here in West Kent RE: Household Money Saving Tips - cully - 13-01-2014 the secret with the grey water is to get your water rates rebanded onto the lower price scale, I have done this with my system but i had to fight for it ![]() [attachment=12717] RE: Household Money Saving Tips - dwanepipe - 08-02-2014 Reading these tips and thinking me and the woman can do a lot of this . Thanks everyone RE: Household Money Saving Tips - lolsteve - 08-02-2014 ah didnt see your grey water replies, cheers for the info ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - THE_Liam - 08-02-2014 I've picked up a couple more. - Drink pints! I always do but my lass has always drunk vodka and coke, 3 an hour at £2.50 each. Got her on pints of cider, takes her 45 mins to drink 1 pint at £2.10 ![]() - Another tip to save money in the pub, don't play pool! Most places are a quid a game now and a game lasts what, 10 minutes if that? Alternatively, go play snooker, my snooker club is £5 for a years membership and charges £2.50 an hour to play pool or £3.50 an hour to play snooker. Plus, no annoying knobheads piling up a tenners worth of pound coins on the table and hogging it for hours! And it's £2 a pint in the club ![]() - When you buy a car part, consider how long you'll keep the car. Yes, Meyle HD wishbone bushes will last years but if a car will get sold in 6 months (as mine often do!) eBay shite will last that long. I probably wouldn't extend that to brakes though... - Used games. I got my Xbox 360 3 years after it came out, so I got a top-spec machine with all the reliability issues worked out for £120 rather than the £350 people queued to pay for them when they came out. Then, you can buy all the 3 year old games from Gamestation for like £3-£5 each with free delivery rather than paying £35 a game when they first come out. Don't forget games with gold either, just got Dead Island for nowt! - The gym. Now granted, anyone who's met me in recent years won't think I'll know anything about this, but I used to go regularly when I played rugby seriously before I destroyed my knee, I can only really do swimming now because of the damage to my knee, which I do for £1.50 at the council pool. It was like £60 a month to run on a treadmill (which you can do for nothing in the park) or lift weights (which you can do in your spare room with a £100 weights bench, even less off eBay), with the smell of sweat hanging in the air. The only upside was the hot women in lycra ![]() - I think the best saving, one we ALL make on here, is buying used cars. I paid £400 for my 306, and in over a year, besides tax, MOT, insurance, mods and wear and tear, it's cost me nothing and is still worth what I paid for it, if not more. A new Focus would be £12000, which including finance is more than £18000 over 5 years at the typical APR, yet buy the time that £18000 has been paid, it's worth what, £5000? That's £13000 in depreciation and interest, essentially nothing!!! And you still have to pay for fuel, insurance (usually), wear and tear and tax, fair enough your covered for major mechanical failure but if that happens to me even without breaking the car I can scrap it for £100 and only lose £300, sell my cyclones, Bosch pump, straight through exhaust and stereo and I'm even. Yet people I work with say stuff like "Well I'm glad I bought a new Focus, I only pay £60 a year for tax". Well done genius, that £825 you'll save over 5 years cancels out the £13000 in finance and depreciation... ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Toms306 - 08-02-2014 Don't go the pub at all, will save plenty of money then lol... Out of interest, as theres a few superscrimpers on here, how much do you roughly spend on bills/food etc over a month? I'm not talking about 'fun' if that's your thing (alcohol, clubbing etc) but just normal living costs? RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Uberderv - 08-02-2014 If your car runs on Veg it will run on WVO, massive savings straight away. I built a filter system for mine which paid for itself in the first batch. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - THE_Liam - 08-02-2014 (08-02-2014, 05:15 PM)Uberderv Wrote: If your car runs on Veg it will run on WVO, massive savings straight away. I built a filter system for mine which paid for itself in the first batch. I'd love to see some pics of that if you have any mate? RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Dum-Dum - 08-02-2014 (08-02-2014, 04:59 PM)Toms306 Wrote: Don't go the pub at all, will save plenty of money then lol... I probably spend £200-250 a month at the supermarket but that includes a few beers, cleaning stuff, occasional clothing DVDs etc. I dont really scrimp too much on that as I am happy spending money on it. Could probably spend half that if I tried. Electric is £50 a month on eco7, £16 a month on water (and I use about a third of what they consider economical for a single person), 20 odd quid home insurance, no gas, just shy of 90 council tax. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Uberderv - 08-02-2014 Still perfecting it but the basics are there, oil can either be poured in or sucked in, heated, filtered internally, settled, drained then filtered through the 2 10" to 5 micron when cooled. Eventually will be PLC controlled lol ![]() ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - THE_Liam - 08-02-2014 That's pretty bloody impressive! I was thinking of building a cold upflow setup, but apparently that's not that good... RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Uberderv - 08-02-2014 (08-02-2014, 06:16 PM)THE_Liam Wrote: That's pretty bloody impressive! I was thinking of building a cold upflow setup, but apparently that's not that good... Cheers, because I'm such a womble the only new part was the pump, filters and copper pipe. Upflow is OK if you have plenty of time, which I don't. ^^That system seems to be perfect for minimal spare time. Although I buy WVO which is already 1/2 decent quality its still only 55ppl. I could use it to make BIO but it just adds cost ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - THE_Liam - 08-02-2014 Thing is I can actually get more than I can use for free, my lasses stepdad is a school caretaker and they throw away 200 litres a month from the kitchens, no one collects it. Its just having the space. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Uberderv - 08-02-2014 (08-02-2014, 07:00 PM)THE_Liam Wrote: Thing is I can actually get more than I can use for free, my lasses stepdad is a school caretaker and they throw away 200 litres a month from the kitchens, no one collects it. Its just having the space. Gutted, I could easily mop up 200l a month. If you can store it then rough filter it you could make some good wonga. Shame your in Leeds I would take the lot every month ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - lolsteve - 08-02-2014 Mmm trying to convince ladysteve to get a dt when her mini sells RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Dum-Dum - 08-02-2014 Liam I'd be getting that and filtering it before selling it on on ebay or here. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - THE_Liam - 08-02-2014 As soon as I've got space I will be mate ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - RetroPug - 09-02-2014 Go to the supermarket late at night, buy the cheap food which is reduced to clear and freeze it all. Chicken breasts are what, like 3-4 quid for a couple? If you go late at night you can get several for 1-2 pounds, not to mention veg etc. which drops to pennies. If you do this you can eat well for little outlay. RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Sian - 11-02-2014 I wAs going through £7-8 a day on electric a day damn storage heaters so i Dont use them anymore and use plug in oil heaters and turn literally every plug off except the frodge freezer now using £15 a week! ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - Dave - 12-02-2014 Im living in Australia now, Brisbane city centre. I pay less than 85 quid (equivalent) a week, for all my bills, rent, and food. Im now living by this thread ![]() RE: Household Money Saving Tips - RetroPug - 12-02-2014 (12-02-2014, 01:47 AM)Dave Wrote: Im living in Australia now, Brisbane city centre. I pay less than 85 quid (equivalent) a week, for all my bills, rent, and food. Aren't living costs there typically higher as well? If so, you're doing well! |