>   Masters Oil is at $.95 but there is no upside
>   protection.  However, I don't think they went above
>   $1.05 last year.  

Joine ECAP -- the Energy Co-Op....
        http://www.theenergyco-op.com/


They negotiate an annual price with a (or several) vendors.
For the past several years it has been with Master.
The ECAP price for 2002 is $.91 -.98 per gallon.

The biggest problem I have had with Master is that I have been unable to
convince them to put me on scheduled delivery now for the past 4 years.
I have assumes that is simply because I do not have a maintenance contract
with them, but, in classic Catch-22 form, they don't do maintenance on the
burner system I have... although they claim that they do, but the won't
give me a contract on it... so I just watch the tank myself and call when
it gets to the 3/4 or 7/8 mark.

But, as the saying goes, you get what you pay for. 
Over the past ?Five? years now,I have not found source cheaper than the
ECAP price through Master. 

Note also: ECAP was founded for Fuel Oil buying, but today is also involved
in Electricity (aka deregulation). Including assorted green alternatives --
wind and Solar photovoltaics.

Membership is only $5.00 per year. Go sign up!

-- 
T.T.F.N.
William H. Magill                          Senior Systems Administrator
Information Services and Computing (ISC)   Networking & Telecommunications
University of Pennsylvania                 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.isc-net.upenn.edu/~magill/      [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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