Home Depot has
GE 30" 5.0 cu. ft. Free Standing Gas Range (Stainless Steel, JGBS66REKSS) on sale for
$528 (or
$581.98 w/ Installation).
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
DanMan5464 for posting this deal.
- Note: Installation includes $19.99 Install Fee + $33.99 Install Kit. Haul Away is also available for an additional fee.
Features:
- A large edge-to-edge cooktop cooking surface gives you extra room for pots and pans of all sizes and lets cookware move easily from burner to burner
- Extra-large integrated non-stick griddle cooks up to six grilled cheeses at once on the industry's largest integrated griddle
- 15,000 BTU power boil burner delivers high heat for fast boiling
- Center oval burner large oval fifth burner is ideal for griddle cooking
- Save time and effort by steam-cleaning the oven after cooking
- With the Precise Simmer burner, delicate foods don't burn with low, even heat
- Heavy duty, dishwasher safe grates easily and safely clean grates in the dishwasher
- 5.0 cu. ft. oven capacity cook more dishes at once
- Sealed cooktop burners contains spills and make cleaning quick and easy
- 2 oven racks can be figured in 6 positions to accommodate a variety of baking needs
- Limited 1-year warranty entire appliance
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Top Comments
Also, much like furnaces, gas stoves also vary in the efficiency that they burn the gas between models so it is difficult to actually give a x decimal number for efficiency for gas stoves in general.
In terms of energy-used to energy-wasted, gas stoves are actually pretty wasteful, because not all of the fuel is actually burned. Mid-range furnaces only burn and transfer about 80%+ of the heat that they generate. High efficiency furnaces can be up to 98%. I can't even guess what the actual percent of fuel burn efficiency for gas stoves might be, but it isn't going to be anywhere near 90% for the average stove.
But the thing is, even with the poor efficiency comparative to electric, even with recent rate hikes it's still cheaper to use gas.
The unvented and unburned fuel being released into the interior of your home as combustion components and byproducts is what a lot of groups are complaining about. If you get a gas oven already you really really do need to have a vent above the stove and also open the nearest window a small crack so that you get fresh oxygen into the kitchen and provide free air flow for the stove vent to function. If you can smell the gas stove burning smell from across the kitchen, or worse from another room, then you really don't have anywhere near adequate ventilation. Install / turn on your stove vent and open that window!
Gas stoves can provide instant, intense, sustained heat, and so get up the temperature and cook food much faster. Example, boiling a large pot of water for pasta. Even on a medium setting a gas stove will have tap water boiling in about a third of the time of an electric stove.
Electric stoves, in terms of energy efficiency, are about 98 to 99% efficient but take a significant amount of time to warm up, let alone actually transfer that heat to whatever you're cooking. In the boiling water scenario people with gas stoves will probably already be eating before the electric stove has even finished cooking the pasta.
Electric stoves are cheaper to buy but end up costing much more long term because they are expensive to run, they take longer to cook food, but on the plus side don't require anything more than a electrical hookup to operate. (Although having an range hood is still a really good idea to get out excess heat and moisture) Electric stoves have never killed anybody with carbon monoxide or asphyxiated them because it burnt all of the oxygen in a home without proper ventilation.
Gas stoves are more expensive to buy but the cost is offset over time because they are cheaper to use, cook significantly faster, are more versatile to use, are more reliable because they don't require electricity to run during blackouts, but need ventilation.
It comes down to what 'efficiency' means to you, saving yourself time or money in the short term. If you're only going to live in a place for 6 months and need a new stove, an electric stove is a great option (compared to just using a hot plate or toaster oven.)
If you're looking at the long-term, then a gas stove absolutely blows electric stoves out of the water in terms of both cost and functionality, but absolutely need to have proper ventilation imo.
🍳
Electricity grids are already overloaded and shutdown during major weather events for public safety (pg&e), so requiring more electric demand with applicances wont happen
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They all got over it.
Also, much like furnaces, gas stoves also vary in the efficiency that they burn the gas between models so it is difficult to actually give a x decimal number for efficiency for gas stoves in general.
In terms of energy-used to energy-wasted, gas stoves are actually pretty wasteful, because not all of the fuel is actually burned. Mid-range furnaces only burn about 80% of the fuel that they use, at high efficiency furnaces can burn up to 98%. I can't even guess what the actual percent of fuel burn for gas stoves might be, but it isn't going to be anywhere near 90% for the average stove.
But the thing is, even with the poor efficiency comparative to electric, even with recent rate hikes it's still cheaper to use gas.
The unvented and unburned fuel being released into the interior of your home as combustion components and byproducts is what a lot of groups are complaining about. If you get a gas oven already you really really do need to have a vent above the stove and also open the nearest window a small crack so that you get fresh oxygen into the kitchen and provide free air flow for the stove vent to function. If you can smell the gas stove burning smell from across the kitchen, or worse from another room, then you really don't have anywhere near adequate ventilation. Install / turn on your stove vent and open that window!
Gas stoves can provide instant, intense, sustained heat, and so get up the temperature and cook food much faster. Example, boiling a large pot of water for pasta. Even on a medium setting a gas stove will have tap water boiling in about a third of the time of an electric stove.
Electric stoves, in terms of energy efficiency, are about 98 to 99% efficient but take a significant amount of time to warm up, let alone actually transfer that heat to whatever you're cooking. In the boiling water scenario people with gas stoves will probably already be eating before the electric stove has even finished cooking the pasta.
Electric stoves are cheaper to buy but end up costing much more long term because they are expensive to run, they take longer to cook food, but on the plus side don't require anything more than a electrical hookup to operate. (Although having an range hood is still a really good idea to get out excess heat and moisture) Electric stoves have never killed anybody with carbon monoxide or asphyxiated them because it burnt all of the oxygen in a home without proper ventilation.
Gas stoves are more expensive to buy but the cost is offset over time because they are cheaper to use, cook significantly faster, are more versatile to use, are more reliable because they don't require electricity to run during blackouts, but need ventilation.
It comes down to what 'efficiency' means to you, saving yourself time or money in the short term. If you're only going to live in a place for 6 months and need a new stove, an electric stove is a great option (compared to just using a hot plate or toaster oven.)
If you're looking at the long-term, then a gas stove absolutely blows electric stoves out of the water in terms of both cost and functionality, but absolutely need to have proper ventilation imo.
🍳
80% efficient is not a mid range gas furnace. That is bottom end. For home heating most companies have 3 flavors - 80, 92, 96+ there abouts.
Electric is 99% efficient on an electric stand point yes, but as you pointed out there are other losses. I would have made the same disclosure about electricity that you made about gas "I can't even guess what the actual transfer losses for stoves might be, but it isn't going to be anywhere near 99% efficient for the average stove."
A lot of elect/heat is wasted in the transfer of heat on a glass top stove.
I hate the heat cycling of electric, but I will not have gas again. Pretty sure my next stove will be a drop in induction unit and elect wall oven. I moved to a new area and the monthly gas charges are ridiculous here. So much so that the cost to heat our current place is close to the same gas/elec. Solar panels, proper insulation (my walls are only r3-5) and heat pump or geo unit for heat.
They all got over it.
I couldn't imagine getting in a car without a seat belt on, or skiing without a helmet.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/GE-30-in-6-8-cu-ft-Double-Oven-Gas-Range-with-Steam-Cleaning-Convection-... [homedepot.com]
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Home Depot does NOT accept returns. You're stuck dealing with their drop shipping company. It's not like you can return it to their store for another model.
The shipper will allow you to look it over for visual damage before you sign off but who knows how it works when it's plugged in.
Price match to another store. Never HD never.
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