Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all you keeping your homes at 72. What about climate change?!? We should be considering keeping our ACs at 80 or above. They should only be used to prevent heat related death. Jeez, you all suck and are very selfish.
We have excellent insulation, EV cars, huge solar panels. We make enough electricity to sell it to Pepco. The 72 stays, punk!
Anonymous wrote:For all you keeping your homes at 72. What about climate change?!? We should be considering keeping our ACs at 80 or above. They should only be used to prevent heat related death. Jeez, you all suck and are very selfish.
Anonymous wrote:For all you keeping your homes at 72. What about climate change?!? We should be considering keeping our ACs at 80 or above. They should only be used to prevent heat related death. Jeez, you all suck and are very selfish.
Anonymous wrote:For all you keeping your homes at 72. What about climate change?!? We should be considering keeping our ACs at 80 or above. They should only be used to prevent heat related death. Jeez, you all suck and are very selfish.
Anonymous wrote:For all you keeping your homes at 72. What about climate change?!? We should be considering keeping our ACs at 80 or above. They should only be used to prevent heat related death. Jeez, you all suck and are very selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The outside temperature isn’t so much a problem, but the sun is. My 2 story house doesn’t have any shade on it. Regardless of the temperature (nearly), my AC runs continuously from 7-10am and 4-7pm if there’s full sun.
A properly sized AC should run continuously on the "design day." It's actually better for them to run continuously, starting is what puts the most stress on the motor and compressor. The sizing should account for solar gains.
“Design day” is most of June/July/August. I wish I didn’t need to keep my AC set to 71 all day because otherwise it can’t catch up in the late afternoon/early evening.
I have a 3400-square-foot home on a 5 ton unit. It’s probably a little undersized, but they built the house with only one unit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The outside temperature isn’t so much a problem, but the sun is. My 2 story house doesn’t have any shade on it. Regardless of the temperature (nearly), my AC runs continuously from 7-10am and 4-7pm if there’s full sun.
A properly sized AC should run continuously on the "design day." It's actually better for them to run continuously, starting is what puts the most stress on the motor and compressor. The sizing should account for solar gains.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The outside temperature isn’t so much a problem, but the sun is. My 2 story house doesn’t have any shade on it. Regardless of the temperature (nearly), my AC runs continuously from 7-10am and 4-7pm if there’s full sun.
Do you have good blinds and close them every day? Not just when the sun is shining on those rooms but all the blinds. This is to stop the radiant heat from coming in off the glass on super hot days. It makes a HUGE difference in energy use and costs.
+1Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you need your unit serviced. Our 20+ yo system has no issues.