- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Question for the ot a/c man regarding house temperature
Posted on 5/23/19 at 10:33 pm to Steadyhands
Posted on 5/23/19 at 10:33 pm to Steadyhands
quote:
never cold never hot cooling ability of a geothermal unit.
Don't know specifics. Just remember that it lived up to the cost savings, but the house always seemed too hot in the summer and too cold in the winter.
This post was edited on 5/23/19 at 10:36 pm
Posted on 5/23/19 at 10:56 pm to TheAstroTiger
Speaking of AC, I now have a thermostat that I can control via phone app. Can turn it down before I start home so that it’s already cooler when I get home.
Posted on 5/23/19 at 11:11 pm to fightin tigers
quote:It's not a myth, it's just that there are a lot of factors that determine how much it will save, if any at all.
I think the bumping the AC up to save money is a myth. Something about cooling down thermal mass.
Obviously if OP went out of town for a week and had it on 80 the whole time, he would save some money. Is he saving anything doing that daily? I don't know, doesn't sound like it if it takes over 2 hours to get down to 70. Maybe his house is poorly insulated, or maybe his unit is undersized (TWSS), or both.
Posted on 5/23/19 at 11:16 pm to TheAstroTiger
Buy a dehumidifier. It helps your body operate more efficiently with humidity in the 50% range. You feel comfortable at 3 or 4 degrees higher than you normally do. Also it makes the AC work less because the cooling energy goes to cooling air and not condensing so much water.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 6:14 am to MEANGREEN65
quote:
I just installed a variable speed compressor at my house and it can choke down to running as little as 5% and up to 100%. As long as it doesn’t shot completely off, I was told it was as efficient as possible
I guess with a system like this there is a unit that can actually speed up and slow down.
I hate it when people think that when your turn down the thermostat that they expect colder even air to magically come out a system that was designed to work at one speed.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 6:27 am to fightin tigers
quote:
Just saying it is a shitty system. Very economical though.
Why is it a shitty system? The home we bought has one. It’s cheap to run and has performed great. Thermostat is never above 73.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 6:49 am to Eli Goldfinger
quote:
Just leave it at 73 or 74.
You’ll get used to it in a week or 2.
I leave mine at 78.
It is comfortable, and my power bill isn't bad.
This post was edited on 5/24/19 at 6:50 am
Posted on 5/24/19 at 6:53 am to TheAstroTiger
quote:
What puts more stress on an ac unit:
Running doesn't stress the AC unit. Starting and stopping is what stresses the unit.
Nothing wrong with what you are doing.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 6:59 am to Steadyhands
quote:
geothermal through the ground or my pond on 2-3 perfectly zoned units.
once you get a price for that I bet you'll reconsider. An extra 10k goes a long way in paying for electricity. Also, if building a new home, build it to be efficient and conditioning will almost be a non-issue.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:07 am to TheAstroTiger
It could be that your unit needs more refrigerant. Get that added to it and see if it cools down faster then.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:17 am to Steadyhands
ive always slept at 72 but thinking of dropping it down to 70. curious how much more $$ per month eeach degree would be?
its a two story house and this is the upstairs unit.
Would it be like $100+ more per month or $20?
its a two story house and this is the upstairs unit.
Would it be like $100+ more per month or $20?
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:18 am to MEANGREEN65
quote:
That voltage is super high, but it doesn’t take much to keep it running.
quote:
Voltage is super high
quote:
voltage
This post was edited on 5/24/19 at 7:19 am
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:22 am to Bullfrog
quote:
I bump it up to 80° for the day. But it only takes an hour or so for the temp to get down to 70°-72°.
What, you live in a 72 qt Igloo.....?
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:29 am to Chuker
quote:
once you get a price for that I bet you'll reconsider. An extra 10k goes a long way in paying for electricity. Also, if building a new home, build it to be efficient and conditioning will almost be a non-issue.
A common practice these days for new construction is to do the geothermal ground loops around the base of the foundation. It is super cheap to do it this way. It essentially just costs materials as the holes are already there when the foundations are formed.
Obviously this doesn't apply if you don't have a basement and just a slab home.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:30 am to dallastiger55
quote:
ive always slept at 72 but thinking of dropping it down to 70. curious how much more $$ per month eeach degree would be?
its a two story house and this is the upstairs unit.
Would it be like $100+ more per month or $20?
Probably the $10-$20 range.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:37 am to TheAstroTiger
It depends on how well insulated your house is.
Mine isnt insulated well at all so I see big savings by bumping up to about 78 during the day when I'm not home. Sleep with it on 70 because that's about the best it can do in the summer and runs all night.
My old house was well insulated and stayed between 72 and 68 all summer no problem.
Mine isnt insulated well at all so I see big savings by bumping up to about 78 during the day when I'm not home. Sleep with it on 70 because that's about the best it can do in the summer and runs all night.
My old house was well insulated and stayed between 72 and 68 all summer no problem.
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:38 am to notsince98
Goddamn people. I can’t sleep well unless it’s 68-69. I don’t know how the hell you people get quality sleep at temps over 70.
LINK
LINK
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:42 am to Athos
I sleep best at 68ish too but when it’s 96 degrees all day and then 75 and humid at night, you need a very well insulated house with an updated system to maintain 68.
My system struggles to stay at 74 during the summer and the thermostat will read 76-77 by 4pm. It then runs most of the night to keep us at 72 at night. Of course, it’s a complete dump of a house with ductwork that wasn’t measure correctly so my son’s room is ice cold all the time (even with the vent closed) but the other end of the House gets practically no air. It’s a trickle but his room is a hurricane.
My system struggles to stay at 74 during the summer and the thermostat will read 76-77 by 4pm. It then runs most of the night to keep us at 72 at night. Of course, it’s a complete dump of a house with ductwork that wasn’t measure correctly so my son’s room is ice cold all the time (even with the vent closed) but the other end of the House gets practically no air. It’s a trickle but his room is a hurricane.
This post was edited on 5/24/19 at 7:43 am
Posted on 5/24/19 at 7:46 am to Bullfrog
quote:
I bump it up to 80° for the day.
But it only takes an hour or so for the temp to get down to 70°-72°.
The only way this holds true is if you bump it up to 80 but it only goes up to 74 during the day which would then imply that you don't live in Louisiana or you have a 700 SF house.
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News