Aside from 30 minutes to cool down my bedroom on a hot day before bed, my AC essentially never runs. Bungalow with a very cool basement and i run my fan 15 min/hr.
Aside from 30 minutes to cool down my bedroom on a hot day before bed, my AC essentially never runs. Bungalow with a very cool basement and i run my fan 15 min/hr.
Originally posted by Thales of Miletus
If you think I have been trying to present myself as intellectually superior, then you truly are a dimwit.
Originally posted by Toma
fact.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
We have dual pane "Lux" windows, I assume they are decent but not as good as triple pane. I don't know much about windows.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
We have honeycomb blackout blinds on the big window in the bedroom, so there is an air gap in the blind which does add some insulation value but it doesn't really make a difference when the sun is baking that window. The heat radiating off the window/blinds is extremely noticeable in the evenings.
With my GF being a nurse, she will sometimes go to bed at 8pm when at this time of year it's still super bright out, so we have to close the blackout blinds and therefore also the windows, so that doesn't help with the heat. The blinds are closed all the time unless a window is open at all other times of day anyway.
Minimal cooking (try to use things like the instant pot or Door Dash on the hottest days). Main floor never got above 23/24C, upstairs is way worse (bedroom is where I saw 29C). Doesn't matter now that we have AC but it was much worse than expected before. When I used to live downtown, my condo window faced west too and it was 29-30C inside on the hottest evenings. I bought 2 portable AC units after that haha.
I will say that I probably could have turned off the basement floor heating and ran the furnace fan to pump cooler air upstairs from the basement before we got AC, but I was still learning about new home HVAC and didn't really know how to do that at the time. Probably would have helped but not massively.
Last edited by Mitsu3000gt; 06-24-2020 at 04:16 PM.
1 Tower Fan (Vornado) pointed directly at bed on the 2nd floor in my bedroom. 1 Tower Fan on main floor living room. And 1 circulation fan at end of hallway pointed to towards my bedroom.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I'd be dead without that Vornado
Originally posted by GTS Jeff
You know those bored stay at home moms who's entire lives revolve around driving their kids to soccer, various cleaning accessories, and worrying about neighbourhood rapists? The kind of people that watch the View and go "uh huh..." Those unfulfilled people who try to fill the void in their empty lives by writing whiny letters to the editor complaining about shit that no one really cares about?
Well imagine if instead of writing that letter to the editor, she just posts on a car forum for car enthusiasts. That's Kritafo.
Try using all your fans to push hot air out upstairs windows. And run your furnace fan as much as possible to equalize your main floor and upstairs temperatures. And run all your bathroom fans all night long.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
And you have to determine when the outside temps start to creep above your inside temps... its usually as soon as the sun starts coming up. So close everything up around 7am.
Open two windows across from your upstairs and point your strongest fan out one of them. You need to push hot air out and create a pressure differential to bring cold air in. You’re just moving hot airThis quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I tried the fan both ways, and for me personally, it felt cooler with the fan sucking in cool air to blow over me while sleeping. Blowing air out may cool the whole room down better though, but strictly for sleeping comfort, it felt cooler with the fan pointed at me. I think a ceiling fan would be ideal for that, then you could still have another fan blowing air out of the window.
A fan blowing air across you will make you feel cooler.... but it doesn't help cool the room at all.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Like you said ceiling fan above you and window fan blowing air out is best.
Hit 30 in the house today, 2008 Trane xr14 running non stop but we are on a hill with a whack load of windows, Gavin still the man to call for getting my ac unit looked at?
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- tint your windows with IR reflective film (lets in loads of light still)This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
- install attic fan
- save $$$$$
- check temperature of air coming out of the register, it should be something like 10c (at least, thats what we have upstairs)
Sounds like either needs new refrigerant or whole new compressor. Reaaaaally hope it’s refrigerant. #thoughtsandprayers
Gavin called me in his vacation btw, nice guy
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Gavin is a sweetheart, was really helpful for me back in the day.
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Supply air is typically 55°F or 12°C. A little colder is not bad, warmer likely indicative of a problem.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I'm not sure if Gavin deals with Trane units specifically, but I know that W&J does.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
What filter do you have in your furnace? Get the cheapest fiberglass one you can possibly find. If you're using a high MERV filter you are really restricting airflow and probably wrecking your blower mower too.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Yes yes yes. More airflow is the ticket, and a "bad" filter, or even no filter, is the easiest way to accomplish this. I used to have issues with mine freezing off, and the filter was one of the main culprits.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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Thankfully he actually has the same unit on his own house, will wait and see. If I need a new unit, I’ll suffer through the next week or so and treat that as a 2021 spring problem.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Amazon cheapies and replacing frequently because 3 dogs and 2 catsThis quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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It shouldn't be too expensive to upgrade to a larger filter box to maintain airflow and filter efficiency. A bit of tin work and a box is all you need. A lot of the A/C guys might be able to do it when you ask them to check on the thermocouple anyway.
Everything I say is satire.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I have a washable furnace filter that I use in the summer. Very light weight.
I use the cheap fiberglass filters from CT in the summer, as recommended by our installer. I'll switch back to the better filters for winter.