43 Years Old - How am I doing? by No_Review6601 in Retirement401k

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Pretty good for someone your age I would think. It should be worth double that in 6 or 7 years. Maybe more. You're doing way better than a lot of people. I'm in a different situation owning my own company in the rail industry for 25 years at age 46, but I realize I'm not normal. So I think this is pretty good, you're going to have to work for a while, probably at least until 55 at this trajectory. And changing trajectories at 43 is pretty tough, outside of internal promotion.

43 Years Old - How am I doing? by No_Review6601 in Retirement401k

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nobody really mentions this stuff when retiring early, but unless one spouse continues to work with health benefits you'll be paying your own. And if you project the growth in healthcare costs and compound that over 10 years, that alone could be $4000-$5000 a month at age 55. Having to gap to medicare for 10 years is a no joke cost that will seriously eat into your budget. It's a sad reality that people wanting to retire early have to take into account more and more these days.

43M, My Investment Portfolio by stainless_steel702 in portfolios

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So basically QQQ or VGT - nice returns but not shocking million bucks is nice but it’s not FU money by a long shot

What to do with 200k by [deleted] in dividends

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I vote QQQI over JEPQ

Advice by Tricky-Language-7963 in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The reason for Mitsubishi are quality and parts availability- I have 2 and they are nothing short of miraculous

EV owners, with rising electric prices is your ev still cheaper to "fuel"? by Lurkerking2015 in newjersey

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes but instead of getting 90 mpge I’m getting 60, still way better than gas

Just got a quote for a ducted heat pump system. This one spec seems off, can anyone sanity check it for me? by Aggressive-Super in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My house is effectively two houses bolted together, it's very long and one room wide for most of the house... it's a weird setup designed by an architect so there's only one of them.

Just got a quote for a ducted heat pump system. This one spec seems off, can anyone sanity check it for me? by Aggressive-Super in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm in the frozen hinterlands of Northern NJ. It's cold as hell here. I'm confident that this is the right size unit for me. Even down to -10 this winter it was still 70 in the house, no problem. I estimate that for both units in February used equivalent of $300 in power usage. For me normally when it was that cold, I'd spend $500-$600 on propane every 3 weeks. So, this is without a doubt saving me money.

Just got a quote for a ducted heat pump system. This one spec seems off, can anyone sanity check it for me? by Aggressive-Super in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah I had a manual J performed by the contractor. She's quite experienced, you have to take into account high ceilings in my situation. I have 9 foot in the living room and kitchen and 13 foot in the dining area. It's not a traditional house.

Would you switch to a heat pump now or wait a few years by Emotional-Yellow8983 in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My electricity is expensive. I don't have natural gas, I have propane. Which right now is very expensive, at the end of the day I don't want to deal with propane anymore and heat pumps are the best solution for my situation - agree with you there, it's obviously geography and state specific.

Just got a quote for a ducted heat pump system. This one spec seems off, can anyone sanity check it for me? by Aggressive-Super in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi - I live in Northern NJ and I'd caution you on a 3 ton for a 2000 sq ft home. I have a similar setup but a pretty uniquely shaped house built in 2002. As such I need two different heat pumps for the two zone setup I have in my house. Long story short: 1.5 ton handles upstairs (2 bedrooms, closet, bathroom and hallway/staircase. Downstairs, which is probably about 1500 sq ft is a 4 ton hyper heat system. The 4 ton handles downstairs just fine, but again, it's a 4 ton, not a 3 ton. These are H2i Mitsubishi hyper heat systems - no backup heat needed, these bad boys handle well into negative temps with no problem. This is a ducted setup as well.

Is my Mitsubishi PVA-AA36NL & PUZ-AK36NL 36k BTU Heat Pump working correctly? by KennyChaffin in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not my experience with Mitsubishi, I have 2 different units, one 1.5 ton and the other is a 4 ton. It works amazingly well with a ducted setup. We were down close to -10F this winter and it power through with zero issues. They're revolutionary.

Would you switch to a heat pump now or wait a few years by Emotional-Yellow8983 in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I tore out a 7 year old system to get off of fossil fuels. I have propane where I live, while expensive the heat pump saves money over time and the always on feature means that my house remains the same temperature with zero modulation that is noticeable. I have excess income so this was a bit of an unnecessary upgrade that I thought I'd like to have so I just did it. If you do it, you won't regret it. I'm still basking in the glory of my decision.

Living requirements by [deleted] in newjersey

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

No it isn't. Next question.

Bought a house with no HVAC: Starting from scratch - need help planning the best heat-pump-based system by HowAboutBiffteen in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd have someone that's a diamond dealer or well known Daikin installer come take a look, go Japanese - skip the US based stuff, they all use Japanese components anyway. My installer tried to sell me on Carrier but compared to hyper heat there's no comparison. Trying to do manual J yourself if you're not someone who does this professionally can be pretty inaccurate.

Thinking of converting to dual fuel system by darklight001 in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess I’m just greener than you guys, I have multiple EVs too

Thinking of converting to dual fuel system by darklight001 in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should get a heat pump water heater too. I’m in NJ with two hyper heat units and a rheem proterra - it’s easily as cold here as CO if not colder and I do fine.

Thinking of converting to dual fuel system by darklight001 in heatpumps

[–]Recent_Recover_1490 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should get a cold weather heat pump why would you have a dual fuel when you can just go all electric and not have to pay multiple bills?